Project Justice Game Sample - Dreamcast
Original Air Date: April 28th, 2009 (Revised Today!)
NOTE: Game has high volume. Lower volume accordingly.
Sooo... we have some good news for fans of our channel. On our ever-changing quest to improve the quality of our videos, we finally got a progressive scan / VGA box for our Sega Dreamcast (The "Hanzo" to be specific), a VGA-to-HDMI convertor box, multiple HDMI cables, and the proper connectors to output the signal through our Hauppauge 2 to reach our greatest DC video quality yet! This means that in addition to cranking out new DC videos from original hardware from our (slightly larger since) DC collection, we'll be re-doing some of our old videos to catch up with the times (primarily some of our favorites like Power Stone 1 /2, Project Justice, Maken X, Illbleed, Time Stalkers, etc.). It's still a little experimental right now, so we're testing out different games (and I couldn't get "TrickStyle" to boot up by default, so... yah.) This game seems to act strangely with my Hanzo... the brightness levels constantly change, so it took longer to make this video look decent through edits. Overall, the quality is nice though.
Anyway, it's all about teamwork and school spirit! Yeah!! Project Justice is the third game in the "Schools/Justice" series and the first real sequel to Rival Schools. There exists a Japan-only expansion of Rival Schools for Playstation that included an expanded character simulation mode (that was in the original game as well, but removed during localization overseas) as well as Ran and Nagare, who make their first appearance outside of Japan in this game. I learned of it years back from a friend who owned it.
To be honest, while Project Justice is a pretty good Dreamcast fighting game, I don't think it compares to Rival Schools for Playstation. The exclusion of lots of fun school-orientated mini-games, cool anime movies, Sakura Kasugano and the removal ONCE AGAIN of the character sim mode (yes, a modified version of the one from Rival Schools was here and removed again) in favor of three person team-ups and a expanded character roster is nice, but it took away some of the game's personality IMO. However, this game does possess a greater emphasis on story and still has lots of replayability through its branching paths and various character unlocking conditions.
It's not considered the greatest fighting series, but I like it. I have the main games and Japanese soundtrack for the original Playstation game. Just about everyone qualifies as my favorite character, lol. This video has been upgraded at much higher quality from our original video back in April of 2009. The original has been kept and listed as "Outdated" for our archives. Enjoy.