Introduction: The End of an Era Before the cinematic reboot of Mortal Kombat (2011) changed fighting games forever, there was Mortal Kombat: Armageddon . Released in 2006 for the PS2 and Xbox, and later ported to the PlayStation 3 (as part of the Mortal Kombat Kollection ), Armageddon was designed as a "greatest hits" finale. It featured the largest roster in fighting game history at the time—over 62 characters, including every single fighter from MK1 through Deception .
Seek the Mortal Kombat Kollection PKG. It is a more polished digital release with trophy support and better compatibility on HEN systems. Is It Worth Playing in 2025? Let’s be honest: Mortal Kombat Armageddon has aged poorly in terms of gameplay. The combat system stripped away unique character move speeds (everyone ran the same speed) and replaced unique Fatalities with a generic "create-a-fatality" system that usually looks like a chaotic flailing of limbs.
, for the $0 cost (if you already own the disc) and the novelty, it remains a fascinating time capsule. The Motor Kombat mode alone is worth the installation—a chaotic, Mario Kart-style game with fatalities on the finish line. Furthermore, the Konquest mode is an open-world beat-em-up that predates MK: Deception’s adventure mode.
By following this guide, you should be able to install, troubleshoot, and enjoy Konquest, Motor Kombat, and the epic battle against Blaze on your jailbroken PS3. Just remember to keep your PS3 cool, backup your NAND, and always finish your opponent with a Fatality.