From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Virtual Soccer
J.League Super Soccer
Japanese box art
Developer(s) Probe Entertainment [2]
Publisher(s) Hudson Soft [1]
Composer(s)Andy Brock
SeriesJ.League Super Soccer
Platform(s) Super NES [3]
Release
Genre(s) Traditional soccer simulation [2]
Mode(s) Single-player [3]
Multiplayer [3] (up to five players)

Virtual Soccer – known in Japan as J.League Super Soccer (Jリーグスーパーサッカー) – is a 1994 football video game published by Hudson Soft.

Summary

The Japanese version featured all clubs from the top division of Japan Professional Football League J.League Division 1 ( 1994 J.League season), while the European version featured national teams. The player can choose two views, from a left-right perspective or with top-down perspective. [2] There are many other options such as wind control, weather, environment, pitch type and player's velocity. [2]

Cancelled sequel

After the success of Mega Bomberman (1994), Hudson Soft announced their intention to develop more titles for Sega platforms. One of which was a sequel to Virtual Soccer. The title initially went by Virtual Soccer 2, before it was changed to Hudson Soft's Soccer. It was scheduled for release very late in the Sega CD's lifespan - March 1995 - but never materialized. [4] [5]

See also

References


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Virtual Soccer
J.League Super Soccer
Japanese box art
Developer(s) Probe Entertainment [2]
Publisher(s) Hudson Soft [1]
Composer(s)Andy Brock
SeriesJ.League Super Soccer
Platform(s) Super NES [3]
Release
Genre(s) Traditional soccer simulation [2]
Mode(s) Single-player [3]
Multiplayer [3] (up to five players)

Virtual Soccer – known in Japan as J.League Super Soccer (Jリーグスーパーサッカー) – is a 1994 football video game published by Hudson Soft.

Summary

The Japanese version featured all clubs from the top division of Japan Professional Football League J.League Division 1 ( 1994 J.League season), while the European version featured national teams. The player can choose two views, from a left-right perspective or with top-down perspective. [2] There are many other options such as wind control, weather, environment, pitch type and player's velocity. [2]

Cancelled sequel

After the success of Mega Bomberman (1994), Hudson Soft announced their intention to develop more titles for Sega platforms. One of which was a sequel to Virtual Soccer. The title initially went by Virtual Soccer 2, before it was changed to Hudson Soft's Soccer. It was scheduled for release very late in the Sega CD's lifespan - March 1995 - but never materialized. [4] [5]

See also

References



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