Talk:Geese Howard

Terry's ending in Real Bout
http://d.hatena.ne.jp/video/niconico/sm409262

Otherwise known as the intro for Mark of Wolves. Sake neko 00:14, 4 January 2009 (UTC)

Shouldn't Young Geese have his own page?

(77.98.245.57 20:12, November 27, 2010 (UTC)) Maffew
 * I'd think it would be important if they ever put both Young Geese and the normal Geese we see together in one game. As it is, his younger version has never appeared as a "separate" playable character like his Nightmare version does. Kyosei 23:47, November 27, 2010 (UTC)

Retcon characters in KOF main series
Since some characters from other games who appeared in KOF like Geese & Krauser are still alive in the main KOF series, retconning their first game series timeline's death, should the new categories needs to be added? What category should i named for the retcon characters? "Retcon" - ScottKazama, 4:00 PM (18 September, 2016)
 * KOF is an alternate universe canon for these characters. It doesn't matter. Kyosei (talk) 03:50, September 19, 2016 (UTC)


 * Agree, it'd just make the whole things more complicated. Dnoryu (talk) 04:00, September 19, 2016 (UTC)

Talk page trivia
--SneaselSawashiro (talk) 20:45, November 21, 2016 (UTC)
 * Ever since Geese's Deadly Rave input was referenced in many different variations via the Speed Combo/Ranbu Ougi mechanic in The Last Blade series, other games have formed their own references to it:
 * Sol Badguy's past-self, Holy Order-Sol, uses the Dragon Install: Sakkai (Killing Realm) as a more complex version of Deadly Rave from the Guilty Gear XX games developed by Arc System Works. This ties in to the Guilty Gear series' creator Daisuke Ishiwatari's prior affiliation with SNK, which is one of his many callbacks to the prior company he worked with.
 * Via the sequel to Persona 4: Arena (a spin-off of Shin Megami Tensei: Persona 4), Persona 4: The Ultimax, Yuu Narukami uses a hidden super known as Raijin Enbu (Thunder God Stage Dance), which is another Deadly Rave reference and is another Arc System Works proxy.
 * Zen from the Dimps-developed series The Rumble Fish in the second game, has his Gourai Senbu (Booming Thunder Whirling Martial) also styled as a Deadly Rave reference.
 * Ironically, Geese's eternal rival Terry Bogard also has a Deadly Rave-reference of his own, a technique called the Rising Beat which first debuted in SNK vs. Capcom: SvC Chaos.
 * Alternately, Hazama of BlazBlue for his Astral Heat, Senkon Meiraku (Thousand Souls Dark Branding) instead references Geese's Raging Storm via using the very same pretzel command, as well as allowing for the same kind of bypassing overlaps for more simplistic execution. This is also another Arc System Works-callback to Ishiwatari's SNK affiliation.
 * The Samurai Shodown portrayal of Jubei Yagyu has some in-series jokes about him being compared to Geese, due to a few of his moves being modeled after Geese's moveset.


 * I don't know if it is relevant to mention, but also K9999 (or Nameless now I guess) have the Raging Storm input for one of their DM's. Kein Sylvan (talk) 16:21, November 22, 2016 (UTC)

Fatal Fury Special / Real Bout Fatal Fury
"During Fatal Fury Special, an imposter sent by Krauser started to run Geese's company as his own. While Billy went to take care of him, Geese focused his attentions on his recovery and the rumor of the Jin scrolls. Hearing that the scrolls grant immortality, he discreetly searches for them."

Fatal Fury Special doesn't mention that Geese's company is run by an imposter and Billy was in the tournament, so he didn't go to take care of the imposter.

Where are these sourced?

If these aren't sourced, I'll change it to

"During Fatal Fury Special, Geese hears that the scrolls grant immortality, so he discreetly searches for them."

Saltamiya (talk) 00:49, May 25, 2018 (UTC)