International Superstar Soccer (video game)

This article is about the 1994 video game. For the whole series, see International Superstar Soccer.
International Superstar Soccer

Box art
Developer(s) Konami Deutschland[1]
Publisher(s) Konami Computer Entertainment Osaka[1]
Director(s) Yasuo Okuda[1]
Programmer(s) Yasuo Okuda
Eiji Nakagawa[1]
Composer(s) Harumi Ueko
Hideyuki Eto[2]
Series International Superstar Soccer
Platform(s) SNES
Release date(s)
  • JP: November 11, 1994[3]
  • NA: June 1995
  • EU: May 23, 1995
Genre(s) Football (Sports)
Mode(s) Single-player
Multiplayer

International Superstar Soccer (実況ワールドサッカーパーフェクトイレブン Jikkyō Wārudo Sakkā Pāfekuto Irebun, "Live World Soccer Perfect Eleven" in Japan) is a football video game developed by Konami for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. It is known as the best soccer game available for any 16-bit systems, mostly due to its lifelike approach, innovative for the time, that showed diversified players in the same team, with an adult look and back numbers on their respective jerseys, corresponding to real-life players of the time.

Content

Game modes

The game uses a password system in order to save and load International Cup and World Series matches.

Teams

The game features 27 national teams, all of which based on their real-life counterparts as of the 1994 FIFA World Cup, even in the case of non-entrants Austria, Denmark, France, Wales, Scotland and England, which are represented by their line-ups from the qualifiers. Of these teams, 20 made it into the real FIFA World Cup. Bolivia, Saudi Arabia, Greece and Morocco do not appear in the game, despite having qualified for the tournament. The Japanese version has only 24 teams which include 5 Asian teams: Iran, Iraq, North Korea, Saudi Arabia and Japan. England participates with the flag of Great Britain.

Reception

On release, Famicom Tsūshin scored the game a 29 out of 40.[4] GamePro commented that though it fails to dethrone FIFA International Soccer as the best soccer simulator for the SNES because of its less precise controls and weaker sounds, International Superstar Soccer is a solid game due to its detailed and "lifelike" graphics, numerous options, and particularly its training mode.[5] The two sports reviewers of Electronic Gaming Monthly both gave it a 7 out of 10 rating. Similar to GamePro, they remarked that the controls are imperfect but praised the graphics and play options. One of the reviewers complained that the enjoyable play-by-play feature of the Japanese version was taken out of the North American release.[6] A reviewer for Next Generation assessed that "Providing fast action, a reasonably good commentator and pretty good graphics, International Super Star Soccer is a solid effort if not exactly special." He gave it three out of five stars.[7]

Allejo

Due to lack of licenses of FIFA, Konami created fictional names to represent real players. One of them is Allejo, modeled after Bebeto. Seen by some as a Brazilian meme, Allejo gained popularity as a skilled player capable of impossible moves and goals. He was pointed as national phenomenon [8] and he's been actually considered one of the best Brazilian footballers of all times.[9][10]

Alternate games

There are two identical versions of the game, a translation to Spanish called FUTBOL EXCITANTE the translation was for the Japanese version and included Peru team, in Brazil was called Super Campeonato Brasileiro which only involved local clubs including the Brazil team.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 International Superstar Soccer at MobyGames
  2. Game profile of International Superstar Soccer at SNES Music
  3. International Superstar Soccer at GameFAQs
  4. NEW GAMES CROSS REVIEW: 実況ワールドサッカー PERFECT ELEVEN. Weekly Famicom Tsūshin. No.309. Pg.38. 11–18 November 1994.
  5. "Konami Soccer Comes Close". GamePro. No. 69. IDG. April 1995. p. 100.
  6. "Team EGM: International Superstar Soccer (SNES) by Konami". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 68. Sendai Publishing. March 1995. p. 102.
  7. "International Super Star Soccer". Next Generation. No. 13. Imagine Media. January 1996. pp. 170, 173.
  8. "Fenômeno Allejo prova que caráter oficial não garante sucesso de games".
  9. "Que Fim Levou? – Allejo".
  10. "Que Messi, que Neymar, que Pandolfo, que Cristiano Ronaldo, que Iniesta? O melhor jogador do mundo foi, e sempre será, ALLEJO!".
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