Streets of Rage Saga/YMMV


 * Big Lipped Alligator Moment: Blaze has a dream in Project Y where she has rough sex with at a bus stop in the rain, following which she gets consumed by her growing powers and proceeds to lay waste to everything in sight. Upon waking up, she concedes that it was a really messed-up dream, and it never gets referenced again for the rest of the saga (although it was partially influenced by her legitimate worry about whether she'd be able to control her developing Ki Attacks).
 * Complete Monster: Several examples throughout the saga, all associated (directly or indirectly) with the Syndicate.
 * Mr. X, even more so than how he's portrayed in canon. ...and that's just what's revealed in the second story, Origins.
 * Dr. Simon Jerrin, one of the asylum's resident doctors in Origins..
 * Dreadnought, the titular villain in The Rise of Dreadnought. He was a Mad Scientist who performed vile experiments on captives of the Nazi regime during World War 2, and in the present day he's an Omnicidal Maniac who seeks to bomb strategic locations as a way of asserting his power.
 * Shiva in Duality. He's prepared to throw Blaze to the Syndicate mooks to be gang-raped, plus he's quite willing to fire a black-hole-causing cannon that will cause Earth to implode on itself. Oh, and blowing up an entire city in The New Syndicate would qualify, too.
 * Enigma, the final Big Bad of the saga. When your master plan is to merge Earth with a hellish dimension, you qualify.
 * Ensemble Darkhorse: Joe Musashi is quite popular with fans of the saga, which in turn influenced his many recurring appearances.
 * Moral Event Horizon:
 * Shiva has three moments that arguably qualify him as having crossed this line:
 * In Project Y, he engineers a plane crash in an attempt to kill Axel and Blaze, who are passengers on board. Both of them survive; many of the other passengers and crew don't.
 * In The New Syndicate, he unleashes a nuclear warhead that completely obliterates the city of London, killing at least several million in the process.
 * The aforementioned gang-rape scenario in Duality.
 * Enigma is already established as being a crazed murderer, but he most arguably crosses the point of no return when he.
 * True Art Is Angsty: Matthew Drury's admitted philosophy regarding stories in general; hence, why the saga on a whole ends the way it does (particularly Behind the World).
 * What Do You Mean It's Not for Kids?: Although based on the popular Beat'Em Up game series (which itself got various kid-friendly ratings from being for all ages to being for ages 12 and up), this entire saga is decidedly not child-friendly, what with its raw adult language, explicit sexual activity (consensual and not), graphic descriptions of death, blood and gore, Nightmare Fuel-inducing mutilations...yeah. There's even an advisory at the Streets of Rage Online website, where the story can be downloaded, expressedly warning visitors under age 18 not to download or read the story.