Football Champ

Summary

Football Champ is an arcade-style football (soccer) video game produced by Team Dogyan developers in Japan, and originally released in the arcades by Taito in 1990. European Football Champ and Hat Trick Hero, released in 1992, are versions of this game with minor variations.[1]

Football Champ
Football Champ Arcade poster
Developer(s)Taito
Publisher(s)Domark
Director(s)Takeshi Kobori
Designer(s)Takeshi Kobori
Programmer(s)Tatsuo Nakamura
Yuji Iwasaki
Shinji Soyano
Artist(s)Takeshi Kobori
Tsutomu Sekimoto
Nobuhiro Hiramatsu
Composer(s)Hisayoshi Ogura
Yasuhisa Watanabe
Platform(s)Arcade, Amiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, Super NES, PlayStation 2, MS-DOS, Xbox
Release1990
Genre(s)Sports
Mode(s)1 or 2 players

Subsequent arcade releases of this game include Hat Trick Hero '93 (Japan) and Hat Trick Hero '95 (Japan, also released as Taito Power Goal).

Gameplay edit

 
In-game screenshot

The player must first choose one of eight national football teams, followed by a star player from a choice of four available for each team. In the game, a win is needed to progress to the next game. A draw will end as a 'game over', with no option for penalties, but a chance to continue by restarting the game in which a win was not achieved. Each opposition team is chosen according to a tier strategy, with the player's team removed:

  • 1. Spain and France.
  • 2. Netherlands and Brazil.
  • 3. England and Italy.
  • 4. Argentina and Germany.

Thus, playing with Germany, the first two games will be Spain and France in some order, the second two games will be Netherlands and Brazil in some order, the third two games will be England and Italy in some order, and the seventh game will be Argentina. The game is completed when all seven other teams have been beaten. The level of difficulty increases the further the game progresses. The game notices when individual team players score a hat trick. Scoring hat tricks has the effect of increasing the difficulty as well.

The game gained some notoriety for giving players the ability to use violence (including punches, flying kicks and shirt pulling). Players could get away with this without giving away a free kick as long as the referee was either far enough away or knocked onto the floor. The referee punishes every foul with a yellow card. Red cards occur at the third, seventh and eleventh fouls, although every so often the game appears to miscount. No fourth red card is given by the referee. Besides the rough play, the game introduced the super shot, which occurs with 30 seconds remaining or less and when the score is tied or the player is losing by 1 goal. The star player chosen kicks a shot that pushes the goalkeeper into the stands.

The original eight national teams in the game are:

Some versions of the game use Japan and USA (e.g. Hat Trick Hero) instead of Spain and France (e.g. Euro Football Champ).

Home releases edit

A version of the game was released on the Super NES and Amiga by Domark.[1] A ZX Spectrum version was planned but never released.[2] The game was released in its original arcade form on the Taito Legends 2 compilation for the Windows PC, PlayStation 2 and Xbox. The game was also re-released in 2023 on a handheld manufactured by Taito containing their arcade games.[3]

Reception edit

The arcade version was ranked highly, with magazine Zero giving it a 4/5.[4] The Amiga version was given a 64% by Amiga Power, calling the gameplay simple and noting the graphics were not as good as the arcade version.[5] The One Amiga gave it a 71% saying that the Amiga version did not match the smoothness and speed of the original arcade version.[6]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Scullion, Chris (2020-10-19). The SNES Encyclopedia: Every Game Released for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. White Owl. ISBN 978-1-5267-3784-7.
  2. ^ "World of Spectrum - Euro Football Champ". World of Spectrum. Retrieved 2024-03-20.
  3. ^ Gander, Matt (2023-08-30). "Evercade compatible Taito and Capcom arcade handhelds revealed – Games Asylum". Retrieved 2024-03-20.
  4. ^ Wilson, David (June 1991). "Euro Football Champ". Zero (20): 24.
  5. ^ West, Neil (July 1992). "European Football Champ". Amiga Power (15): 80–81.
  6. ^ Broughton, Matt (August 1994). "European Football Champ". The One Amiga (71): 79–80.

External links edit