The game punished predictable play. Passing lanes had to be opened naturally, sprinting mindlessly down the wing would result in losing the ball to a tracking defender, and scoring required a genuine understanding of angles and goalkeeper positioning. A Lasting Retro Legacy
《2nd》版更像是一个年度重大数据更新,主要带来了两大变化:
: The iconic Jon Kabira provided the play-by-play commentary, a voice that became synonymous with the "story" of Japanese soccer for a generation of gamers. 2nd Edition Evolution j league jikkyou winning eleven 2000
J.League Jikkyou Winning Eleven 2000 was not just a regional success; it was a engineering blueprint. The polished engine used for this title laid the direct groundwork for International Superstar Soccer Pro Evolution 2 and the subsequent PlayStation 2 masterpieces. It proved that football games could be sophisticated, rewarding patience, spatial awareness, and genuine football knowledge over button-mashing. Today, it remains a nostalgic treasure for retro gaming collectors and football historians alike.
Fully licensed kits, accurate club crests, and authentic sponsor logos for both J1 and J2 (the second tier) clubs populated the menus. The game punished predictable play
Star players felt distinct. Shunsuke Nakamura’s mesmerizing free-kicks, Shinji Ono's vision, and Masashi Nakayama’s aggressive poaching instincts were clearly reflected in their digital counterparts' stats and animations. The "Jikkyou" Experience: Broadcast Realism
Honestly? Yes. If you love retro football games, this is a hidden treasure. The lack of licenses for European teams (mostly fake names) is irrelevant because the gameplay is so pure. Plus, you can still edit everything with the famous in-game editor. 2nd Edition Evolution J
made its debut here, allowing fans to customize players and teams for the first time. Gameplay & Mechanics Built on the robust engine of Winning Eleven 4
This title was the first in the J.League series to introduce several franchise staples: The Debut of Edit Mode
Jon Kabira, the iconic voice of the series, provided high-energy, rapid-fire commentary alongside match analyst Tetsuo Nakanishi. Kabira’s enthusiastic shouts of "Goooal!" and emphatic delivery injected an unmatched sense of televised broadcast urgency into every match. Combined with authentic stadium chants, drum rhythms unique to J-League ultras, and television-style overlays, the game offered an immersive atmosphere that pushed the original PlayStation hardware to its absolute absolute limits. Game Modes and the J-League License
: Win the Masters Cup on any difficulty. These include seven "Big" teams like Manchester United, Juventus, and AC Milan.