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

  • 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

Dreamcast

  • 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

FM Towns

Game Boy

Game Boy Advance

  • 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

  • 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

  • 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

Nintendo DS

PC Engine

PlayStation

PlayStation 2

PlayStation 3

PlayStation 4

PlayStation Portable

  • 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

  • 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

Saturn

Super Famicom

  • J.League Soccer Prime Goal (08/06/93, published by Namco)
  • J-League Super Soccer[25] (03/18/94, developed by Probe Entertainment and published by Hudson Soft)
  • J.League Excite Stage '94[26] (05/01/94, developed by A-Max and published by Epoch)
  • J.League Soccer Prime Goal 2[27] (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[28] (Unreleased)

Mobile

  • 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

  • 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

See also

References

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