On occasion, this aspect of fighting games has caused particular attention, such as when the 2015 game Street Fighter V had the fighter Chun-Li's breasts move like large water balloons when she was chosen as the second player's character in the selection screen. The Dead or Alive series (1996–), in particular, has become identified with the 'outlandish' physics of both its fighting moves and its female characters' breasts its developer Team Ninja created the term 'breast physics'. Pronounced breast physics have since remained a staple feature of many fighting games, perhaps in part because these games contain fewer character models than other games and can therefore afford to animate their characters in more detail.
The first video game in which breast physics were a notable feature was the fighting game Fatal Fury 2 (1992), which featured the fighter Mai Shiranui, who had noticeably jiggly breasts. A fan dressed as Mai Shiranui, a popular fighting game character who is a notable early demonstration of breast physics technology