10 Video Games That Fixed Themselves Too Late
4. Street Fighter V

Street Fighter V was quite rightly ripped apart by fans on launch, because while the core gameplay itself was as solid as ever, the beat 'em up hit stores with an embarrassingly lackluster amount of content.
Between the lack of a proper single-player story mode, an absurdly malnourished roster, and a frustratingly lack of instability, Street Fighter V didn't even deliver the basic goods on release, and fans were furious.
Despite critics lavishing a baffling amount of praise on the game, fans were far less kind, noting that the launch product was blatantly unfinished.
And even accepting the notorious loyalty of the fighting game community, fans actually voted somewhat with their wallets, resulting in the game falling below Capcom's first-year sales target.
Almost two years after its original release, Capcom dropped a free Arcade Edition update, which added a more substantial story mode, Arcade Mode, new moves, and a heap of extra features for genre enthusiasts which clearly should've been ready for launch.
Though Street Fighter V did eventually translate into sales success, two years is a long time to wait for a game to realise its potential, especially with the likes of Tekken 7, The King of Fighters XIV, and Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3 all being released during that time.