Super Sidekicks
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Super Sidekicks, is a series of football (soccer) video games made by SNK for its console, the Neo-Geo.
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[edit] Original Super Sidekicks
Published in 1992, the original Super Sidekicks (known as Tokuten Ou, "Goal-Scoring King" in Japan) was SNK's first soccer video game. It features 12 teams divided into two groups which compete for the "SNK Cup" (the main differences between teams is their formations on the field):
- Group A: Germany, Italy, Spain, England, Mexico, Japan
- Group B: Argentina, Holland, Brazil, France, United States, South Korea
Your team plays against all the others in your group, then it goes into an elimination tournament's semifinals and then the final to win the cup. There was also a hidden feature in the game, which wasn't documented, and affects a single player game. During a free kick for the CPU if the player has tapped button A for player two, the cpu performed a short-shot, while pressing the button A performed a longer kick.
[edit] Super Sidekicks 2: The World Championship
Published in 1994 (Japanese title: Tokuten Ou 2 - Real Fight Football), the sequel corrected most of the flaws in the original's design, including the ability to switch players' control during the game, a smaller goal, and no more long shots taken (in Super Sidekicks 1 the simple long shot was sometimes too long, leading into a throw-in situation). It increased the number of teams to 48 and divided them into 6 geographical "regions" (new teams underlined):
- Europe A: Italy, England, Spain, Holland, Switzerland, Norway, Turkey, Ireland
- Europe B: Germany, France, Bulgaria, Sweden, Russia, Greece, Belgium, Romania
- Americas/Oceania: United States, Mexico, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Guatemala, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Honduras
- Asia: South Korea, Japan, Saudi Arabia, Taiwan (as Republic of China), China, Iran, Hong Kong, United Arab Emirates
- South America: Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, Colombia, Bolivia, Uruguay, Peru, Ecuador
- Africa: Cameroon, Morocco, Nigeria, Egypt, South Africa, Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea, Zambia
When you start the game, you go into a "Regional Qualifying Round Final" against another team from your region. After beating it, your team goes into the World (Cup) Tournament, in which you are grouped with 4 other countries in a round-robin. After winning against all of them, you go into an elimination tournament: the quarterfinals, semifinals, and the final for the World Cup. This type of tournament thus is more reminiscent of the real-life World Cup. If a match ends in a draw, you also have the option of replaying a full game, go to the penalty kick tiebreaker, or play a sudden death (golden goal) game (the golden goal feature was not present in the original Super Sidekicks).
All subsequent Super Sidekicks games followed the same design and gameplay as Super Sidekicks 2.
[edit] Super Sidekicks 3: The Next Glory
Published in 1995 (Japanese title: Tokuten Ou 3 - Eikoue no Michi, "Goal-Scoring King 3: Path to the Glory"), the third game features 64 national teams divided into 8 regions:
- Europe A: Italy, Holland, Switzerland, Norway, England, Turkey, Portugal, Poland
- Europe B: Germany, Spain, Ireland, Belgium, Romania, Denmark, Wales, Czech Republic
- Europe C: France, Sweden, Bulgaria, Russia, Greece, Austria, Hungary, Finland
- Africa: Nigeria, Morocco, Cameroon, Egypt, South Africa, Zambia, Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea
- Americas: United States, Canada, Guatemala, Mexico, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Puerto Rico, Panama
- South America: Brazil, Colombia, Argentina, Bolivia, Uruguay, Ecuador, Peru, Chile (replaces Paraguay)
- Asia A: Australia, New Zealand, China, Taiwan, Iran, Vietnam, Iraq, Singapore
- Asia B: Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Japan, U. A. E., Hong Kong, India, Thailand, Malaysia
The World Tournament mode is the same as Super Sidekicks 2, above.
The new features in this game include naming the player scoring goals for his team and keeping score of how many goals he scores during his team's use by the player. Alongside the "Top Teams" ranking which serves as a high score table for teams, there is a "Top Scorer" table for individual players. The name and use of scoring players is random, however.
The second new feature include regional tournaments, in which a team (from any region) can enter a tournament within its own region or other regions. This is good for those players who like a particular team but don't want to be facing the same opponents every time, as they would if they played the World tournament.
The game was re-released three years later under the name NeoGeo Cup '98: The Road To The Victory. In order to mirror the 1998 FIFA World Cup, some player names and teams were changed:
- Croatia replaced Poland
- Scotland replaced Wales
- Yugoslavia replaced Finland
- Tunisia replaced Guinea
- Jamaica replaced Panama
- Paraguay returned and replaced Bolivia
However, the game played and looked exactly like the original Super Sidekicks 3. Even the goal animations remained unchanged.
[edit] The Ultimate 11: SNK Football Championship
Published in 1996 (Japanese title: Tokuten Ou - Honoo no Libero, "Goal-Scoring King: The Flaming Sweeper"; despite the international title, it is still considered the fourth game in the series), it features 80 national teams divided into 8 regions:
- Europe A: Italy, Spain, Portugal, Wales, France, England, Ireland, Scotland, Northern Ireland (as North Ireland), Iceland
- Europe B: Germany, Sweden, Belgium, Denmark, Austria, Holland, Switzerland, Norway, Finland, Croatia
- Europe C: Bulgaria, Russia, Turkey, Czech Republic, Romania, Greece, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia, Israel
- Africa: Nigeria, Cameroon, Zambia, Côte d'Ivoire, South Africa, Egypt, Morocco, Zimbabwe, Tunisia, Algeria
- Americas/Caribbean Sea: United States, Canada, El Salvador, Panama, Guatemala, Mexico, Puerto Rico, Costa Rica, Jamaica, Honduras
- South America: Brazil, Colombia, Bolivia, Paraguay (returns from Super Sidekicks 2), Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, Ecuador, Peru, Venezuela
- Asia/Oceania A: Saudi Arabia, India, Iraq, U. A. E., Iran, Qatar, Oman, Bahrain, Kuwait, Uzbekistan
- Asia/Oceania B: Australia, China, Taiwan, Thailand, New Zealand, South Korea, Japan, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Singapore
The players scoring the goals are still named, but individual scores are no longer kept. The regional tournaments have been eliminated and replaced with alternate mode the SNK Football Championship, which is the game's namesake, an elimination tournament in which your team can select any one opponent from any region to play (similar to fighting games in which you face another character after beating a previous one until you reach the boss). The last region you play is the deciding match. If you're good and can make a lot of goals on your opponents, you can play a hidden boss team called the SNK Superstars, which features characters from SNK's fighting games as players (you can tell them when their names are called, as during fouls).
It's in the basic game play where The Ultimate 11 has its most deciding improvement. Teams now have a charge bar (similar to the one in fighting games), which is charged depending on how long you can keep the ball under your team's control. When the bar is fully charged and flashing, if you're near the goal, you can take a shot that is virtually unblockable, depending on the opposing team. Teams are "ranked" from 1 to 80 mirroring their real-life counterparts.
The Ultimate 11 was one of the few Neo-Geo games to feature a corporate sponsor: Akai.
[edit] External links
- Super Sidekicks 2: The World Championship at the Killer List of Videogames
- Super Sidekicks 2: The World Championship at GameFAQs