Captain Tsubasa 5: Hasha no Shōgō Campione

Captain Tsubasa 5: Hasha no Shōgō Campione

Cover art
Developer(s) Tecmo
Publisher(s) Tecmo
Programmer(s) Hiromitsu Mikawa
Hiroyuki Matsumoto
Makoto Yazaki
Composer(s) Hiroshi Miyazaki
Chinatsu Okayasu
Series Captain Tsubasa
Platform(s) Super Famicom[1]
Release
  • JP: December 9, 1994
Genre(s) Traditional soccer simulation
Mode(s) Single-player
Multiplayer

Captain Tsubasa 5: Hasha no Shōgō Campione (キャプテン翼Ⅴ 覇者の称号カンピオーネ, "Captain Tsubasa V Campione Champion Title")[2] is the fifth and final instalment of the original Captain Tsubasa video game series by Tecmo. It's a sequel of Captain Tsubasa 4: Pro no Rival Tachi and was released exclusively in Japan for Nintendo's Super Famicom on December 9, 1994.

Summary

The game differs greatly from its "Cinematic Soccer" oriented predecessors. It adopts a new gameplay with a classic view of the pitch and improved graphics. It features various RPG elements with special techniques of characters, known from Captain Tsubasa manga and anime series. Players strongly resembling real-life stars of the time: Thomas Häßler, Júlio César da Silva, Jean-Pierre Papin, Peter Schmeichel, Franco Baresi, Ronald Koeman, Tomas Brolin, Dennis Bergkamp, or Gabriel Batistuta are present in the game. Tecmo also introduced its own characters, like Brazilian ace Signori, skilful forward Alcion, and world class goalkeeper Savičević, among others.

The game's story mode focuses mainly on Tsubasa's Serie A season with Lecce and international campaign with Japan. In addition, other characters like Kojiro Hyuga, Genzo Wakabayashi, Lui Napoleón, Carlos Santana or Karl-Heinz Schneider have their less-expanded scenarios as well. The competitions in the game are based on real major international tournaments, like Asian Cup, Copa América and World Cup. In the All-star mode, the players can create new characters, arrange a friendly match (with all the teams, or by composing an own squad from all the players available in the game) and create a league with national or club teams.

Selected characters

Signori featured in the game's manual.

Teams

Original Captain Tsubasa teams

Club teams

National teams

CONMEBOL

CONCACAF

UEFA

CAF

AFC

Others

Voices

Critical reception

The Japanese website Wazap! gave this game a total score of 78.7 out of 100.[4]

Guide book

On January 15, 1995, Shueisha published a 104 pages guide book[5] from V Jump, featuring players' profiles, extensive in-game strategies, and a fold-out mini-poster.

Translations

The game was unofficially translated into various languages: English, Brazilian Portuguese, Italian, Spanish, Chinese or Arabic. The translations were not authorized by Nintendo.

See also

References

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