International Superstar Soccer Deluxe
International Superstar Soccer Deluxe (known as Jikkyou World Soccer 2: Fighting Eleven in Japan) is a football video game and the sequel to International Superstar Soccer developed and published by Konami. The Deluxe version was published first to the SNES, then the Mega Drive (developed by Factor 5) and finally the PlayStation.
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Developer(s) | Konami (SNES) Factor 5 (MD) |
Publisher(s) | Konami |
Series | International Superstar Soccer |
Platform(s) | SNES, Mega Drive, PlayStation |
Release | SNES Mega Drive PlayStation |
Genre(s) | Sports |
Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
The game features 16 different formations, and 8 strategies, and includes 36 national sides. However, all players have fictitious names, due to licensing restrictions.
Game Modes
There are 6 different game modes. A password system allows to restore a previews game.
Open Game: friendly game against a human player or CPU with the option to choose a stadium, weather conditions, player's conditions handicap, number of players on the pitch and goal keeper skill. It's possible to spectate a CPU vs CPU match.
There's a "Short League" mode where you can play in a 24 teams mini-league, and a "Short Tournament" with 64 teams competing in a knockout tournament.
International Cup: a World Cup mode starting from a regional qualifying round.
Euro Cup: a Euro Cup mode starting from a regional qualifying round.
World League: a 211 teams league playing home and away.
Scenario: 12 scenarios covering historical matches. The game starts during the match in different conditions, and the player has to defend the result or make a comback depdending on the difficulty level.
Penalty kicks: the standard 5 penalty kicks mode with sudden death if both teams are tied.
Training: there are different training modes. Free training where you can try the game controls on the pitch, free kick training and corner kick training. There's also a "challenge mode" where you can beat records in different skills.
Gameplay
The game contains eight different stadiums, and all vary in the fabric of the pitch and the surrounding décor, and are all of different sizes. The game can be played in many weather conditions. Below is a list of the different dimensions of the eight national stadiums in-game:
United States: 82 x 118 (yards) 74.62 x 107.38 (meters) Spain: 90 x 126 (yards) 81.9 x 114.61 (meters) Italy: 82 x 132 (yards) 74.62 x 120.12 (meters) England: 82 x 122 (yards) 74.62 x 111 (meters) Germany: 74 x 122 (yards) 67.34 x 111 (meters) Brazil: 90 x 114 (yards) 81.9 x 103.74 (meters) Nigeria: 90 x 138 (yards) 81.9 x 125.58 (meters) Japan: 74 x 114 (yards) 67.34 x 103.74 (meters)
Teams
This game has 211 teams Divide into six Regions 14 teams: 52 European divided into 12 Regions, 14 new teams include: Croatia, Czech Republic, Belgium, Greece, Northern Ireland, Poland and Portugal. 56 African and Asians including: Japan, Turkey Afghanistan United Arab Emirates Uzbekistan and Morocco. Mali South Africa Guinea Tunisia and Angola. 56 American teams including: Uruguay.
In the Japanese version had only 18 European teams in Asia Oceania had 6 selections including: China, Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan Afghanistan Iraq Australia New Zealand Iran North Korea and United Arab Emirates. Canada Jamaica Trinidad and Tobago had in North America, Bolivia Venezuela Ecuador Chile and Paraguay had in South America.
Europe (UEFA), (56 teams ISSD) (56 teams JWS 2)
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Africa (CAF), (56 teams ISSD) (56 teams JWS 2)
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Asia (AFC), Oceania (OFC), (56 teams ISSD) (56 teams JWS 2)
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Americas (CONCACAF and CONMEBOL), (56 teams ISSD) (56 teams JWS 2)
Scenario
Besides friendly matches and tournaments, the player also could choose the Scenario mode, where he would resume a game with his team either losing and tying to win it within the few time left on the clock. The matches in the Scenario mode were heavily influenced by real matches with similar score.
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Reception
Reviewing the Super NES version, Videohead of GamePro said International Superstar Soccer Deluxe, while not one of the best soccer games, is "respectable". He said the game has easy controls with a short learning curve, but that manual goalie control is difficult and high kicks tend to send the ball off-screen due to the large sprites and close-in side view. He praised the announcer's voice and crowd chants.[3]
Next Generation reviewed the Super NES version of the game, rating it three stars out of five, and stated that "Overall, this particular stab at the Soccer genre is slightly above average, but not by much."[4]
References
- "Checkpoint: Christmas Events and Software Releases". Computer and Video Games. No. 182. United Kingdom: EMAP. January 1997. p. 53.
- "Checkpoint: Events and Software Releases". Computer and Video Games. No. 184. United Kingdom: EMAP. March 1997. p. 53.
- "Solid International Soccer for SNES Sports-Sim Fans". GamePro. No. 88. IDG. January 1996. p. 122.
- "Finals". Next Generation. No. 13. Imagine Media. January 1996. pp. 170, 173.
External links
- International Superstar Soccer Deluxe at MobyGames
- The Guardian "The Beautiful Game" – Round-up of retro (or "old school") soccer video games, with a mini-review of ISS Deluxe on the SNES.