Harman Patil (Editor)

Jack (Tekken)

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First game
  
Tekken (1994)

Birthplace
  
Fighting style
  
Brute Force

Weight
  
168 kg (370 lbs)

Created by
  
Nationality
  
Russia

Height
  
235 cm (7′ 8½″)

Species
  
Android

Jack (Tekken) Jack Jack2 Jack5 Jack6 Jack7 JackX

Voiced by (English)
  
Mark O'Brien (Tekken: The Motion Picture) (Jack-2)Jordan Byrne (Street Fighter X Tekken) (Jack-X)

Voiced by (Japanese)
  
Banjō Ginga (Tekken - Tekken 5: Dark Resurrection)Akio Ōtsuka (Tekken: The Motion Picture) (Jack-2)Kenichiro Matsuda (Street Fighter X Tekken) (Jack-X)

Game appearances
  
Similar
  
Armor King II, Ogre, King, Heihachi Mishima, Bryan Fury

Jack (Japanese: ジャック, Hepburn: Jakku) refers to multiple fictional characters in the game Tekken. The character is an android, first introduced under the name "Jack" in the original video game Tekken. Subsequent Tekken games feature an upgraded model with a slightly different name, with the exception of Tekken 4, in which he makes no appearance. There is also a prototype model under the name "Prototype Jack".

Contents

Jack (Tekken) Jack Jack2 Jack5 Jack6 Jack7 JackX

In video games

The various Jack models were originally created by the Mishima Zaibatsu and G Corporation for different purposes:


  • Jack (introduced in Tekken) is the original model, created by the Heihachi's Mishima Zaibatsu in order to counter a coup from Kazuya Mishima in the King of Iron Fist Tournament. In-game, the player is one of these machines.
  • Jack-2 (introduced in Tekken 2) is a direct upgrade of the Jack model, also created by the Mishima Zaibatsu. Once Jack witnesses a young girl named Jane lose her mother during a battle, he takes it upon himself to look after her, until he is destroyed by Dr. Abel.
  • Prototype Jack (or P. Jack) (introduced in Tekken) is a prototype created to combat both Jack and Jack-2. After the first King of Iron Fist Tournament, the remains of Prototype Jack are almost destroyed by Jack's combat abilities. His body is later remodeled by Dr. Bosconovitch and goes on to combat Jack-2. P. Jack is seemingly destroyed by Jack-2 in the second tournament. This is the only Jack to appear in more than three games, appearing in the original Tekken, Tekken 2, Tekken Tag Tournament, and the console version of Tekken Tag Tournament 2.
  • Gun Jack (introduced in Tekken 3) is a more advanced prototype, created by Jane in an attempt to revive her friend, Jack-2. While she is successful in implanting Jack-2's memories inside him, he is destroyed by gunfire by the Tekken Force when he and Jane attempt to break into the Mishima Zaibatsu labs.
  • Jack-4 (introduced in Tekken 4 ) is an upgrade of Gun Jack, created by G Corporation. Like P. Jack, this model has a separate personality. Unlike other models in the Jack series, this one is mass-produced to serve as the foot soldiers of the G Corporation. While these never participate in any tournament, they are sent by G Corporation to kill Kazuya Mishima after they no longer need him, and the subsequent battle in Hon-Maru almost results in the death of Heihachi Mishima. These specific models have a self-destruct device embedded in them, indicated when one of them peels away its face to reveal a countdown. They also appear as enemies in the Scenario Campaign mode in Tekken 6.
  • Jack-5 (introduced in Tekken 5) is an upgrade of Jack-4, created by Jane to participate in the King of Iron Fist Tournament 5. Currently upgraded into Jack-6 after Kazuya's take over.
  • Jack-6 (introduced in Tekken 6) is an upgrade of Jack-5, upgraded from Jack-5 with same model of previous version by G Corporation with the mission of destroying the Mishima Zaibatsu in the King of Iron Fist Tournament 6.
  • Jack-X (introduced in Street Fighter X Tekken) and his official tag partner, Bryan Fury were released on July 31, 2012, as downloadable content. Unlike Jack-5 - 6, this Jack can talk. Although it was revealed to be in prototype stage between both of these main Jack series.
  • Jack-7 (introduced in Tekken 7) is an upgrade of Jack-6. It finally has a model modification since it was ended with Jack-5.
  • Jack-999 (mentioned in Hyperdimension Neptunia Victory) is one of the Jack robots that appear off-screen in one of the events of the DLC character, Tekken. The robot crashes near Neptune, Noire and Tekken and proceeds to target the girls. Neptune and Noire transforms into their HDD forms but realizes that any of their attacks doesn't damage the robot. Tekken proceeds to fight the robot instead, and became successful at destroying the robot. However, as a result of the event, Planeptune was now engulfed into the flames of war between the G-Corporation and some conglomerate, possibly the Mishima Zaibatsu. While the scene is voiceless in the English voice track, the Japanese voice track reads the name as "Jack Three-Nines".
  • The Jack series robots also appear in Tekken Tag Tournament (Jack-2, Gun Jack, and Prototype Jack) and Tekken Tag Tournament 2 (Jack-6 and Prototype Jack).

    In-game, the Jacks have traditionally shared a number of their moves with Kuma/Panda and Ganryu. In Tekken 5, however, Namco made a pronounced effort to differentiate all the shared moves between characters: the fighters still have a few similar moves, but their executions are completely different. In Tekken 5, Jack-5 is considered one of the most difficult characters to play. Inversely, in Tekken 6, Jack-6 is considered one of the easiest characters to learn.

    In other media

    Jack-2 appears in Tekken: The Motion Picture as a main character, with slight modifications to his Tekken 2 storyline. This time, he is in search of a cure for Jane's illness. Jack-6's dossier is briefly seen in the CGI film Tekken: Blood Vengeance when Anna Williams opens a file containing dossiers on various persons of interest.

    Reception

    GameDaily ranked Jack as the 24th top video game robot, stating, "While not the most popular character in the Tekken series, Jack punched its way to become a worthy opponent". Jack was featured on a list of the best video game robots by Now Gamer, placing him second out of 10, and adding "He's like the Terminator, if Drago-era Dolph Lundgren played the Terminator instead of that other guy" and ranking him at number 7. UGO Networks featured him in the article "We Love These Video Game Robots Even Though They Can't Love Back". PopCrunch ranked Jack ninth on their list of the best AI characters in video games.

    GamesRadar mentioned him in the "Robots that don't make any sense" article, questioning "Another Jack? Is that a popular robot name?". In GamesRadar article for Street Fighter X Tekken, they stated "Jack-X seems to be one of the newest models in the series, the buff robot sometimes works for the Mishimas, other times he competes to learn something about himself." Complex compared Jack and Yoshimitsu to Seth and Cycloid-Y from the Street Fighter series, predicting the former two would win in a fight. In 2012, Complex also listed Prototype Jack as the 15th coolest robot in video games. Gaming Target listed Jack as the ninth best Tekken character. GameSpy named Jack as one of the "25 Extremely Rough Brawlers" in video gaming, commenting "Featuring massive metal arms that are as big as its entire body, Jack simply and unemotionally crushes the competition." PlayStation Official Magazine listed Jack as one of "The best PlayStation robots," stating, "the reason we like Jack, all the Jacks, is their simplicity. They are massive and can batter people around the face with swooping mechanized doom fists". WhatCulture listed Jack as the 12th best robot in video games, adding, "He can be useful to experts and beginners, but has made it onto this list based upon his ability to fly before dropping down on your opponent's fragile head." In 2014, Jack was one of the "honorable mention" characters in WatchMojo list "Top 10 Video Game Robots".

    References

    Jack (Tekken) Wikipedia