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This is a list of soccer video games based on/licensed by the J.League. The first licensed game, J-League Fighting Soccer, was released for the Game Boy on December 27, 1992. Two months later J-League Champion Soccer was released for the Mega Drive. J-League Greatest Eleven was released for the PC Engine a day before the start of the inaugural ...
Known as Winning Eleven 2016 myClub in Japan. As well as a mode inside the game, the myClub mode (an online mode in which the player assembles their own "dream team" from the game's database in the form of trading cards, akin to the FIFA series Ultimate Team mode) is also available as a stand-alone, free-to-play game, [9] having been released on December 8, 2015, for the PlayStation 3 and ...
eFootball is a series of association football simulation video games developed and published by Konami. It has been completely rebranded from the original Pro Evolution Soccer series (known as Winning Eleven in Japan). [1] The game's first year, entitled eFootball 2022, was released on 30 September 2021.
The original Saturn release was met with critical acclaim. Tom Hall of GameSpot said it "may be the best soccer game ever released"; [7] GamePro called it "a completely fresh, must-play gaming experience"; [10] Rob Alsetter wrote in Sega Saturn Magazine that it was "perhaps the best soccer sim yet"; [9] and Next Generation ' s review concluded, "Quite simply, WWS '97 is the best recreation of ...
Master League match between Barcelona and Torino. One of the main new features of ISS Pro Evolution is a new game mode named the Master League. The Master League is an exclusive league consisting of 16 club teams included in the game reflecting the best European clubs of that time.
The game was a commercial success, selling over 1 million units in Europe. [23] The game met with critical acclaim in Japan. [24] In an interview around the time of the game's release in the region, Shigeru Miyamoto said that "Konami's soccer game may be better than [Nintendo's N64] games. It looks really good."
The game shares the same cover arts and North American release date with the Nintendo 64 game International Superstar Soccer 98 (and Game Boy's International Superstar Soccer) [1] but they are individual iterations of different game franchises, only released with similar name. This is a characteristic also shared with the previous game, ISS Pro.
Like the 1986 game, this was actually a reworked existing game (World Trophy Soccer). The game is presented in a bird's-eye view but when the player gets near the goal, it switches to a 3D view of the penalty area and the player must try to score before a defender arrives on screen. The player can only choose to play as England, Belgium, Italy ...