TCEAM is a fan-made crossover fighting game built on the Mugen engine. Unlike official games such as Jump Force or Dragon Ball FighterZ, TCEAM is not bound by licensing restrictions, which means creators can add hundreds of characters from virtually any anime, manga, or even video games. The project has grown through community contributions, with each version adding more characters, stages, and gameplay improvements.
Previous versions suffered from crashes on low-end Android devices. The V9 update optimizes memory usage, reduces lag, and fixes the infamous “infinite loading” bug when selecting certain characters.
The latest Android update (released in late 2024/early 2025) brings several major improvements:
The update includes three graphics presets:
After installation, do not open the app yet. Using a file manager (like ZArchiver or Solid Explorer):
His opponent was Gojo Satoru, the V9 version. The sprite work was noticeably sharper than before. Gojo's blindfold had a subtle shimmer effect, and when he activated Infinity, the space around him actually distorted the background.
Kai tested his usual opener — dash forward, crouching light kick into sharingan-activated combo. Madara's moveset felt the same, mostly. Slightly faster input window. The air juggle had been tweaked.
He won the first round cleanly.
Second round, Gojo's AI shifted. It started reading his inputs — not in the predictable way Mugen AI usually did, where it just reacts frame-perfectly to certain attacks. This felt different. Gojo began baiting his dash, stepping just outside range, punishing the whiff with a delayed Blue attack. Anime Crossover TCEAM 2.7 V9 Mugen Android Upda...
Kai lost the second round.
"Okay," he muttered, sitting up straighter. "They actually improved the AI this time."
Third round was a war. Both characters were in their awakened states — Madara in Six Paths mode, Gojo with Red and Blue swirling around his hands. The screen shook with every exchange. Kai landed his secret Ultimate — the one he'd spent hours perfecting the input for — and it connected.
Gojo's health dropped to zero.
But then something happened that Kai had never seen in any Mugen build, on any platform, in four years of playing.
I’ll assume you want a feature design (spec/specification) for an Android Mugen fan-game update titled “Anime Crossover TCEAM 2.7 V9.” Here’s a concise, actionable feature spec you can use for planning, development, and QA.
The original TCEAM 2.7 already had over four hundred characters. Naruto, Goku, Luffy, Ichigo — the pillars were all there. But the V9 update promised something different.
New framework. New sprites. New mechanics. TCEAM is a fan-made crossover fighting game built
The forum moderator, a user who went by VoidCompiler, had posted a cryptic message three days before launch:
"This isn't just a roster update. The engine itself has been rewritten from the ground up. Characters won't just fight anymore. They'll remember."
Nobody knew what that meant. Most people assumed it was lore-fluff for the new story mode.
Kai didn't care about lore. He cared about frame data.
He'd been a competitive Mugen player for four years — ever since he discovered you could pit cheap-overpowered characters against each other in wild, unpredictable clashes. His main was a custom edit of Madara Uchiha with modified hitboxes and a secret second Ultimate that most opponents never saw coming.
He'd won three local tournaments with that build.
The update finished downloading at 4:51 AM. Kai's hands were trembling as he opened the app.
The title screen was different. Gone was the familiar fiery background with the mismatched anime logos slapped together. Instead, there was a single image: a cracked mirror floating in black space, and reflected in each shard was a different anime world. "This isn't just a roster update
The menu music was a slow piano melody that Kai didn't recognize from any show. It felt... sad.
He tapped Arcade Mode.
The character select screen loaded — and Kai's breath stopped.
The roster had been completely reorganized. Instead of the usual grid sorted by series, the characters were arranged in a spiral, with the newest additions at the center. Kai scrolled inward, past the Jujutsu Kaisen roster, past the Demon Slayer additions, past characters from shows he'd never even heard of—
And at the very center of the spiral, there was a single slot.
No portrait. No name. Just a question mark and the label: [???]
Kai selected Madara, as always. Then he chose a random stage — "Shattered Horizon" — and queued up his first match.