European Club Soccer

European Club Soccer

European cover art
Developer(s) Krisalis Software
Game Arts (Japanese version)
Publisher(s) Virgin Games
Shogakukan
Composer(s) Matt Furniss
Platform(s) Sega Mega Drive/Genesis1
Release date(s)
  • JP: February 26, 1993
Genre(s) Sports (football/soccer)
Mode(s) 1-2 players

European Club Soccer (known as World Trophy Soccer in North America and J-League Champion Soccer (Jリーグチャンピオンサッカー) in Japan) is a 1992 soccer/football video game by Krisalis Software released for the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis and is mostly based on Manchester United Europe, released one year before for the Commodore Amiga, among other platforms. Like the previously endorsed game, European Club Soccer focus on European competitions, but with only on the European Champions Cup, which can be explained by the lower capacity of the console and the lack of differences between competitions other than the number of teams. If the player won the Champions Cup, the ending credits will only appear if the player beats a South American team in the Intercontinental Cup. The game was a bestseller in the UK charts for three months.[1]

Game modes and options

The game allows the player to play friendlies or the Champions' Cup. Options allow choosing game length (from 4 to 90 minutes), difficulty and player change control.

Teams

Kit design

European Club Soccer has dozens of teams from all across Europe (around 170), and each country is represented by at least two teams. In addition to correct club names, it also has recognizable imitations of team badges and kits; although more elaborate kits (such as those worn by Juventus, F.C. Porto or Celtic FC) are simplified (Juventus have a silver shirt, Porto light blue and Celtic light green, to make up for the white stripes in each of these). Player names, on the other hand, were made by mixing names found on real squads. Portuguese teams, for instance, had a large number of Yugoslavian players in the early 1990s, and that was reflected by players with names such as Valentim Ivic (of Valentim Loureiro and Tomislav Ivic, then Boavista FC chairman and S.L. Benfica manager, respectively). Names could not be changed, and since the game lacked a battery, it does not store changes done to kits and passwords were used to resume tournaments (example of a password sheet). Rotherham United are included amongst the English clubs despite never playing in the top tier of English football, this is due to the developer, Krisalis Software, being based in Rotherham. All other clubs have played in their own country's top tier.

Albania Albania

Austria Austria

Belgium Belgium

Bulgaria Bulgaria

Cyprus Cyprus

Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia

Denmark Denmark

England England

Finland Finland

France France

Germany Germany

Greece Greece

Netherlands Netherlands

Hungary Hungary

Iceland Iceland

Italy Italy

Republic of Ireland Republic of Ireland

Northern Ireland Northern Ireland

Luxembourg Luxembourg

Malta Malta

Norway Norway

Poland Poland

Portugal Portugal

Romania Romania

Scotland Scotland

Spain Spain

Sweden Sweden

Switzerland Switzerland

Turkey Turkey

Soviet Union USSR

Wales Wales

Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavia

The international version, World Trophy Soccer, features 32 national teams in place of the European clubs, divided into five continental zones. Like in European Club Soccer, the teams' kits are customizable and true to their real-life counterparts within the hardware's possibilities (the exception being Japan, whose default home kit is red rather than blue).

Europe

South America

Africa

North America

  •  Canada
  •  Mexico
  •  United States

Asia

Gameplay

Gameplay is simple, and works only with two of the buttons of the gamepad – "B" is used to pass the ball low, and "C" to lob the ball. While a button to shoot is absent, if a button is held pressed, when released the ball goes at a much higher speed. The directional button can also be used to give the aftertouch to lobbed balls and change direction or touching the ball backwards with the heel in low passes. Optionally, the "A" button can be used to swap to the nearest player, if the automatic option is disabled.

The game puts several tactics at the disposal of the player, while the computer has a predefined tactic for each team. Each tactic has its own advantage: the 4–3–3 tactic using a sweeper is the only one that allows a player to recover if the goalkeeper is beaten and 4–4–2 allows midfield control from the wings, for instance.

Alternate versions

While European Club Soccer was only released for the European market, the Japanese market received J-League Champion Soccer, and North America yielded World Trophy Soccer. The Japanese port, as the name points out, is based on a league system with J-League teams. The North American version replaced European clubs with worldwide national teams, but with a much more limited selection. The winning screens on both games feature a player and a goalkeeper raising the champions cup, which indicates the original title.

Similar game title

In 1989, Arcadia Systems released an arcade game entitled "World Trophy Soccer", this being the same exact title as European Club Soccer's North American port. Though the two games are similar, the arcade game shows the point of view of the runner heading towards the opponents goal while the other shows a sideways pan of the field. In 1988, Arcadia Systems' parent company, Mastertronic, was merged with Virgin Games thus Virgin had access to that particular game title. It was released on Amiga, Atari ST and Commodore 64. When Virgin obtained the official licence for the 1990 World Cup, the game was reworked into World Cup Soccer: Italia '90.

See also

References

  1. Official Gallup UK Mega Drive sales chart, January 1993, published in Mega (magazine) issue 4
Preceded by
Taz-Mania
UK number-one Mega Drive game
November 1992-January 1993
Succeeded by
Sonic 2
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