List of J.League licensed video games
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 season.
Since then, other titles were released for many other platforms. Popular franchises include: Pro Striker,[1] Excite Stage, Prime Goal, Victory Goal,[2][3] Perfect Striker, Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! and Winning Eleven.
In 2002, Konami released Captain Tsubasa: Eikou no Kiseki for the Game Boy Advance, the only game from the Captain Tsubasa series which is licensed by J.League.
These games are based exclusively on the J.League, however the titles released more recently also contain other leagues.
The recent Winning Eleven titles (2012, 2013) are fully licensed by the J.League.
With EA Sports acquiring the license for the league for FIFA 17, the J.League will make its first real appearance in a football game by Western developers.
3DO
edit- J-League Virtual Stadium (11/03/94, published by Electronic Arts Victor)
- J-League Virtual Stadium '95 (10/27/95, published by Electronic Arts Victor)
Arcade
edit- J-League Soccer V-Shoot (1994, published by Namco)
- J-League Prime Goal EX (1996, published by Namco)
Dreamcast
edit- J-League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! (09/30/99, developed by Smilebit and published by Sega)
- Soccer Tsuku Tokudai Gou J-League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! (12/21/00, published by Sega)
- Soccer Tsuku Tokudai Gou 2: J-League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! (12/13/01, published by Sega)
- J-League Spectacle Soccer (02/07/02, developed by Smilebit and published by Sega)
Family Computer
edit- J-League Fighting Soccer (06/19/93, developed by Graphic Research and published by IGS)
- J-League Super Top Players (04/22/94, developed by Tose and published by Bandai)
- J-League Winning Goal (05/27/94, developed by Graphic Research and published by Electronic Arts Victor)
FM Towns
edit- J.League Professional Soccer 1994 (1994, published by Victor Entertainment)
Game Boy
edit- J-League Fighting Soccer (12/27/92, developed by Graphic Research and published by IGS)
- J-League Winning Goal (04/02/94, developed by Graphic Research and published by Electronic Arts Victor)
- J-League Live '95 (04/21/95, developed by Graphic Research and published by Electronic Arts Victor)
- J-League Big Wave Soccer[4] (11/24/95, developed by Jupiter Multimedia and published by Tomy Corporation)
- Nihon Daihyou Team France de Ganbare!: J-League Supporter Soccer (06/26/98, published by J-Wing)
Game Boy Advance
edit- J-League Pocket (03/21/01, developed and published by Konami)
- Captain Tsubasa: Eikou no Kiseki[5] (02/21/02, published by Konami)
- J-League Pocket 2 (02/28/02, developed and published by Konami)
- J-League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! Advance (09/05/02, developed by Smilebit and published by Sega)
- J-League Winning Eleven Advance 2002 (10/10/02, developed and published by Konami)
Game Boy Color
edit- J-League Excite Stage GB (08/13/99, published by Epoch)
- J-League Excite Stage Tactics (07/20/01, published by Epoch)
NEC PC-9801
edit- J. League Hyper Soccer: Wave no Arashi[6] (06/25/93, published by C^2 World Ltd.)
- J. League Professional Soccer 1993[7] (07/16/93, published by Victor Entertainment)
- J. League Professional Soccer 1994[8] (07/22/94, published by Victor Entertainment)
- J. League Professional Soccer 1995[9] (07/21/95, published by Victor Entertainment)
Nintendo 64
edit- Jikkyō J-League: Perfect Striker[10] (12/20/96, developed and published by Konami)
- J-League Live 64 (03/28/97, published by Electronic Arts Victor)
- J-League Dynamite Soccer 64 (09/05/97, developed by A-Max and published by Imagineer)
- J-League Eleven Beat 1997 (10/24/97, published by Hudson Soft)
- J-League Tactics Soccer (01/15/99, published by ASCII Entertainment)[11]
- Jikkyou J-League 1999 Perfect Striker 2 (07/29/99, developed and published by Konami)
Nintendo DS
edit- Soccer Tsuku DS: Touch and Direct[12] (11/20/08, published by Sega)
- Soccer Tsuku DS: World Challenge 2010[13] (05/27/10, published by Sega)
PC Engine
edit- J-League Greatest Eleven (05/14/93, developed by Cream and published by Nichibutsu)
- Formation Soccer on J-League (01/15/94, published by Human Entertainment)
- J-League Tremendous Soccer '94[14] (12/23/94, developed by HuneX and published by NEC Home Electronics)
PlayStation
edit- J-League Jikkyō Winning Eleven (07/21/95, developed and published by Konami)
- J-League Soccer Prime Goal EX[15] (09/29/95, published by Namco)
- J-League Virtual Stadium '96 (04/26/96, developed by EA Sports and published by Electronic Arts Victor)
- J-League Jikkyō Winning Eleven 97 (11/22/96, developed and published by Konami)
- J-League Jikkyō Winning Eleven 3 (12/11/97, developed and published by Konami)
- Combination Pro Soccer: J.League no Kantoku ni Natte Sekai wo Mezase![16] (06/18/98, developed by Kuusoukagaku and published by Axela)
- J-League Jikkyō Winning Eleven '98-'99 (12/03/98, developed and published by Konami)
- Jikkyō J-League 1999 Perfect Striker (12/02/99, developed and published by Konami)
- J-League Soccer: Jikkyō Survival League (12/22/99, published by Tecmo)
- J-League Jikkyō Winning Eleven 2000 (06/29/00, developed and published by Konami)
- J-League Jikkyō Winning Eleven 2000 2nd (11/30/00, developed and published by Konami)
- J-League Jikkyō Winning Eleven 2001 (06/21/01, developed and published by Konami)
PlayStation 2
edit- Jikkyō J-League Perfect Striker 3 (03/22/01, developed and published by Konami)
- J-League Winning Eleven 5 (10/25/01, developed and published by Konami)
- Jikkyō J-League Perfect Striker 4 (12/27/01, developed and published by Konami)
- Soccer Tsuku 2002: J-League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! (03/07/02, developed by Smilebit and published by Sega)
- Jikkyō J-League Perfect Striker 5 (07/25/02, developed and published by Konami)
- J-League Winning Eleven 6 (09/19/02, developed and published by Konami)
- J-League Tactics Manager (02/13/03, published by Sammy Studios)
- J-League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! 3 (06/05/03, developed by Smilebit and published by Sega)
- J-League Winning Eleven Tactics (12/11/03, developed and published by Konami)
- J-League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! '04 (06/24/04, developed by Smilebit and published by Sega)
- J-League Winning Eleven 8: Asia Championship (11/18/04, developed and published by Konami)
- J-League Winning Eleven 9: Asia Championship (11/17/05, developed and published by Konami)
- J-League Winning Eleven 10 + Europa League 06-07 (11/22/06, developed and published by Konami)
- J-League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! 5 (02/01/07, published by Sega)
- J-League Winning Eleven 2007 Club Championship (08/02/07, developed and published by Konami)
- J-League Winning Eleven 2008 Club Championship (08/21/08, developed and published by Konami)
- J-League Winning Eleven 2009 Club Championship (08/06/09, developed and published by Konami)
- J-League Winning Eleven 2010 Club Championship (08/05/10, developed and published by Konami)
PlayStation 3
edit- World Soccer Winning Eleven 2012[17] (2011, developed and published by Konami)
- World Soccer Winning Eleven 2013
- World Soccer Winning Eleven 2014
- FIFA 17
- FIFA 18
- FIFA 19
PlayStation 4
editPlayStation Portable
edit- J-League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! 6: Pride of J (11/12/09, published by Sega)
- J-League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! 7: Euro Plus (08/04/11, published by Sega)
- J-League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! 8: Euro Plus (10/17/13, published by Sega)
Game Gear
edit- J-League GG Pro Striker '94 (07/22/94, developed by Sims and published by Sega)
- J-League Soccer: Dream Eleven (11/24/95, developed by Sims and published by Sega)
Mega Drive
edit- J-League Champion Soccer[18] (02/26/93, developed by Krisalis Software and published by Game Arts/Shogakukan)
- J-League Pro Striker[19] (06/18/93, published by Sega)
- J-League Pro Striker Kanzenban[20] (12/17/93, published by Sega)
- J-League Pro Striker 2[21] (07/15/94, published by Sega)
- Pro Striker Final Stage[22] (08/04/95, developed by NexTech and published by Sega)
Saturn
edit- J-League Victory Goal[23] (01/20/95, published by Sega)
- J-League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! (02/23/96, published by Sega)
- J-League Victory Goal '96[24] (03/22/96, published by Sega)
- J-League Victory Goal '97[25] (03/14/97, developed by Sims and published by Sega)
- J-League Go Go Goal! (05/30/97, published by Tecmo)
- J-League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! 2 (11/20/97, 02/04/99, published by Sega)
- J-League Jikkyō Honoo no Striker (02/26/98, developed and published by Konami)
Super Famicom
edit- J.League Soccer Prime Goal (08/06/93, published by Namco)
- J-League Super Soccer[26] (03/18/94, developed by Probe Entertainment and published by Hudson Soft)
- J.League Excite Stage '94[27] (05/01/94, developed by A-Max and published by Epoch)
- J.League Soccer Prime Goal 2[28] (08/05/94, published by Namco)
- J.League Super Soccer '95 Jikkyō Stadium (03/17/95, published by Hudson Soft)
- J.League Excite Stage '95 (04/28/95, developed by A-Max and published by Epoch)
- J-League Soccer: Prime Goal 3 (08/04/95, published by Namco)
- J.League Excite Stage '96 (04/26/96, developed by A-Max and published by Epoch)
- J.League '96 Dream Stadium (06/01/96, published by Hudson Soft)
- J.League Soccer Ole! Supporters[29] (Unreleased)
Mobile
edit- J-League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! Mobile (2004)
- J-League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! Mobile 2 (2005)
- J-League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! Mobile 3 (2008)
- FIFA Mobile (2016, introduced 2017)
- Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! Road to World (2018)
- PES 2019 Mobile (2018)
- eFootball PES 2020 Mobile (2019)
Windows
edit- J-League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! (06/06/02)
- Power-up kit (12/09/02)
- J-League Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! Online (2009/2010)
- FIFA 17
- FIFA 18
- FIFA 19
- FIFA 20
Multiple systems
edit- World Soccer Winning Eleven (Japanese version)
- FIFA 17 (for Microsoft Windows, Xbox One, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, iOS and Android; 2016)
- FIFA 18
- FIFA 19
- FIFA 20
See also
edit- Zico Soccer (features Kashima Antlers)
- Let's Make a Soccer Team! (known in Japan as Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! Euro Championship, part of the Pro Soccer Club o Tsukurou! series)
- Wave Master, created music for many J.League games released by Sega
- List of association football video games
References
edit- ^ Pro Striker series Archived 2011-10-21 at the Wayback Machine at MobyGames
- ^ Victory Goal series Archived 2014-05-09 at the Wayback Machine at MobyGames
- ^ J-League Victory Goal (Sega Saturn titles) Archived 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine at GameFAQs
- ^ J-League Big Wave Soccer Archived 2013-09-27 at the Wayback Machine at MobyGames
- ^ Captain Tsubasa: Eikou no Kiseki Archived 2012-02-13 at the Wayback Machine at GameFAQs
- ^ J. League Hyper Soccer: Wave no Arashi Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine at PC98DB
- ^ J. League Professional Soccer 1993 Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine at PC98DB
- ^ J. League Professional Soccer 1994 Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine at PC98DB
- ^ J. League Professional Soccer 1995 Archived 2017-05-16 at the Wayback Machine at PC98DB
- ^ Jikkyō J-League: Perfect Striker Archived 2012-04-13 at the Wayback Machine at MobyGames
- ^ Scullion, Chris (2022-12-29). The N64 Encyclopedia: Every Game Released for the Nintendo 64. White Owl. p. 238. ISBN 978-1-5267-7221-3.
- ^ Soccer Tsuku DS: Touch and Direct Archived 2012-11-16 at the Wayback Machine at Official website
- ^ Soccer Tsuku DS: World Challenge 2010 Archived 2012-03-10 at the Wayback Machine at Official website
- ^ J-League Tremendous Soccer '94 Archived 2012-04-14 at the Wayback Machine at MobyGames
- ^ J-League Prime Goal EX Archived 2013-10-05 at the Wayback Machine at MobyGames
- ^ Combination Pro Soccer: J.League no Kantoku ni Natte Sekai wo Mezase! Archived 2010-11-23 at the Wayback Machine at GameFAQs
- ^ Winning Eleven 2012 + J.League Archived 2012-07-07 at the Wayback Machine at Official website
- ^ J-League Champion Soccer Archived 2011-12-22 at the Wayback Machine at MobyGames
- ^ J-League Pro Striker Archived 2012-04-12 at the Wayback Machine at MobyGames
- ^ J-League Pro Striker Kanzenban Archived 2012-04-12 at the Wayback Machine at MobyGames
- ^ J-League Pro Striker 2 Archived 2011-12-22 at the Wayback Machine at MobyGames
- ^ Pro Striker Final Stage Archived 2011-12-22 at the Wayback Machine at MobyGames
- ^ J-League Victory Goal Archived 2014-04-06 at the Wayback Machine at MobyGames
- ^ J-League Victory Goal '96 Archived 2015-06-05 at the Wayback Machine at MobyGames
- ^ J-League Victory Goal '97 Archived 2015-03-25 at the Wayback Machine at MobyGames
- ^ J-League Super Soccer Archived 2012-11-12 at the Wayback Machine at MobyGames
- ^ J.League Excite Stage '94 Archived 2012-09-02 at the Wayback Machine at MobyGames
- ^ J.League Soccer Prime Goal 2 Archived 2011-07-29 at the Wayback Machine at Giant Bomb
- ^ J.League Soccer Ole! Supporters Archived 2012-10-23 at the Wayback Machine at Giant Bomb
External links
edit- J. League games at MobyGames
- List of PlayStation Japanese games at The PlayStation Datacenter