Double Dragon Neon/Game Mechanics and Glitches

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Basic Attacks

Weapons

Tapes

All tapes can be gotten both as random drops, with each tape dropping from specific enemies, and also be purchased from specific shops.

Stances

Stance Description
Balanced A bit of everything. Assumed average in each stat.
Training Wheels Extreme HP and defense, slightly poor attack, and horrible mp. Good for learning boss patterns.
Power Gambit Extremely high attack, low HP and MP, and extremely low defense. With gleam up, this is the most damaging stance at any level, and without gleam it still beats out desperation and successive strikes until high tape levels.
Magic Gambit High MP, average attack, low HP and defense. Also increases MP regen rate, so could be a good choice if using skills a lot benefits the situation. Power gambit will still generally get better use of mp just due to its high damage.
Stunner Above average attack, slightly below average MP, HP and defense. Causes enemies to be stunned in 25% less hits, which is actually more of a problem than a blessing.
Rage Slightly low attack, low HP, MP, and defense. Extends the length of time gleam remains active by 3 to 10 seconds, depending on the level. This time bonus remains active if you switch stances, but whether the menu time would make it valuable is questionable.
Weapons Up Good defense, slightly above average HP, average attack, and low MP. Increases the durability of weapons by a maximum of about 50%. Power gambit is generally a better way to get damage out of weapons, but could be useful for novices since it has good defense.
Successive Strikes Low HP and attack, slightly low defense, average MP. For each hit you've done since last getting hit, your power increases. Max 50 hits, and even then the damage doesn't get all that high. The damage bonus for each hit increases with level, but even at level 50 the bonus doesn't get good enough to compare to power gambit and desperation. There's no reason to use this stance except maybe if you want to be showy.
Desperation High defense, slightly low attack, average MP, extremely low HP. Gets a damage boost when under 50% health. The damage bonus is terrible at low levels, but scales up extremely well. Easily the most powerful stance non-gleamed at level 50, and falls just short of power gambit when gleamed. In NG+ with desperation at 50, the damage bonus can be triggered by equipping a level 10 absorb, exiting the menu, then switching back to desperation. Potentially this could be the route for NG+ since this has good MP compared to power gambit, but gleaming doesn't really cost time in many situations so most likely it will not be faster. Plus its mad risky since you effectively will die to most random hits.
Absorb Slightly low to low everything. Recovers some HP each time you hit an enemy, with the amount recovered depending on the level absorb. Can be good for casual play just because of the regen, but not useful for any category of speedrun.

Below is a relative measure of each skill's stats. Keep in mind these are the base stats, and do not reflect conditional damage bonuses (such as from number of hits on successive strikes or being at low health with desperation). All of these are at level 50 (max), with balance being used as default stats.

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Sosetsitsu

Name MP use Description
Knee Drop 14 Can only be used while airborne, even if you are in recoil from getting hit. Billy drops straight down, damaging enemies, and creates an explosion which does additional damage when he lands. The explosion OTGs, but usually misses enemies who float above the ground. This skill does great damage for its cost and speed, and is extremely useful in most areas because of it.
Bro Dozer 10 Billy charges forward with a high elbow. He has armor during this attack. Cancels into itself, and can cause a wall-bounce on airborne enemies. A really cool skill for combos, but generally doesn't do great damage. Having armor means you could potentially go through some boss patterns and platforming sections with it, but taking full damage and the mp use limits this application severely.
Spin Kick 25 Can be used in the air. Billy spins in place with his foot out. Good damage and very difficult to be hit out of. The high MP cost and the long length of the attack limit its usefulness for speed.
Fireball 20 Billy throws fire. Does poor damage, especially at low levels. At high levels, it starts piercing through to hit multiple enemies, but its damage still isn't particularly high for the cost and lack of utility.
Dragon Swarm 50 Billy summons a dragon to damage the entire screen. In theory this could be useful in some of the bigger fights for NG+, but the damage is terrible and the attack takes forever. Not only that, but it potentially will not hit Roxies who are floating too high.
One Inch Punch 20 A very short range, delay strike. The start of the move has some armor, and the move always sends enemies flying and knocks them down. Great move if you really, really want to move people around. Otherwise it's pretty lackluster.
Bomb Toss 20 Billy pulls a bomb out from...somewhere. Effectively, this works the same way as the grenade items, but with a longer fuse and can never hit the player. The bomb always will knock enemies down, and will explode instantly when you OTG an enemy with karate finish while holding it (which will knock them down again for a nice easy loop).
Lightning 7 Directly strikes the nearest enemy for minor damage. At level 30, this targets the nearest 3 enemies instead. Great for cleaning up some fights on NG, and is a completely amazing skill for NG+ since it clears out mobs almost instantly. If there are no enemy targets, it will strike the caster instead.
Healing Touch 25 A delayed punch that heals living targets, friendly or otherwise. Conversely, it damages undead enemies. This move ignores the friendly fire option in the menu, and always knocks down.
Song Snatch 8 A quick backhand. Hitting an enemy with this will sometimes causes them to drop any item they could normally drop when they die. Interesting combo possibilities since you can cancel the recovery in the same way you can cancel a normal moves recovery.

(Note: The MP use is a comparative amount collecting empirically using this formula: 100/# consecutive uses on magic gambit level 5)

Upgrades and Smithing

At the start of the game, up to 10 of each tape can be collected. Mithril, collected from bosses, allows the maximum level of each tape to be increased in increments of 10 up to a maximum of 50. The amount of mithril a boss drops depends on the difficulty being played, and the amount it costs to upgrade a tape depends on its current max level. Tapesmiths can be found only in stages 2 and 9.

Difficulty Mithril dropped
Normal 3
Dragon 7
Double Dragon 14


Current Max Amount to increase
10 2
20 6
30 10
40 12


So, to upgrade a tape to level 50 takes a total of 30 mithril. Keep in mind, this only increases the cap on what you can have, you still have to find or purchase the tapes.

Shop lists and drop tables

Skill Stage Price
Fireball 2 900
Spin Kick 2 900
Dragon Swarm 2 1100
Balance 2 1100
Training Wheels 2 900
Bro Dozer 3 1000
Bomb Toss 3 1000
Magic Gambit 3 1200
Successive Strikes 3 1200
Desperation 3 1300
Spin Kick 5 900
One Inch Punch 5 1000
Song Snatch 5 900
Power Gambit 5 1200
Weapons Up 5 1100
Dragon Swarm 8 1100
Bomb Toss 8 1000
Healing Touch 8 1000
Rage 8 1300
Knee Drop 10 900
Lightning 10 1100
Stunner 10 1200
Successive Strikes 10 1200
Absorb 10 1300


Enemy - Tapes they drop

Williams - Balance, Training Wheels, Knee Drop
Science and Ultimate Williams - Absorb, Lightning
Linda - Spin Kick, Fireball
Red Linda - Stunner
Abobo - Power Gambit, Rage
Hoverbizzle - Successive Strikes
TNT Hoverbizzle - Bomb Toss
Geisha - Magic Gambit, Desperation
Shinobi - Weapons Up, One Inch Punch
Black Suit Shinobi - Song Snatch
Roxy - Bro Dozer
Bimmy and Jammy - Knee Drop
Zombies - Healing Touch
Bao Boshi - Lightning, Magic Gambit

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