Street Fighter X Tekken Change Language Russian To English Exclusive
This guide explains how to change the in-game language in Street Fighter X Tekken from Russian to English. It covers common platforms (PC/Steam, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360), likely causes for language being locked to Russian, and step-by-step solutions — including game settings, platform region/settings, and file edits where applicable.
Some Russian retail copies (e.g., 1C–SoftClub releases) have the English language completely removed from the executable. In this case:
The PS Vita version of Street Fighter X Tekken is arguably the worst for language switching. The handheld’s region lock is tighter. This guide explains how to change the in-game
This method involves manually swapping the game's localization files. By replacing the Russian text and audio files with English versions, the game is forced to run in English.
| Method | Success Rate | Difficulty | |--------|--------------|------------| | In-game menu | Low (often absent) | Easy | | Steam properties | Medium | Easy | | Edit config.ini | High | Easy | | Replace localization | High | Advanced | | Command line | Medium | Easy | | Buy global key | 100% | $€£ | The PS Vita version of Street Fighter X
Start with Method C (config.ini), as it bypasses most region locks without downloading files. If that fails, your copy is truly exclusive, and you’ll need to replace language files or get a different version.
Exclusive Tip: For physical discs marked “RU” or “CIS” on the disc label, the game will ignore locale settings. In that case, you need to install the game to the HDD, then download the Title Update 1.08 from Xbox Live. This update accidentally overwrites the Russian language pointers with English ones. To force the update, clear your system cache (Settings → System → Storage → Press Y on Hard Drive → Clear System Cache) and relaunch the game while connected to Xbox Live. The Config Edit: Sometimes, swapping files isn't enough;
For three months, the community tried everything.
The message was clear: You saved ten dollars. Now pay the price.
That was until a user known only as "NeonPunch" —a reclusive Ukrainian-British firmware engineer—decided to fight back.