A Capcom Japanese 3D versus, explosive and team based, mixing schoolgirls and super powers. The cast is cult, controls are snappy and the humor irresistible. A classic worth rediscovering.
Your verdict
Category
Fighting2 players12+
Description
Justice Academy students fight with martial arts to protect their school in this Capcom Rival Schools sequel. Published by Capcom, released in Japan in September 1999. 3D fighting game with students of varied martial styles, double two-fighter team, new mechanics. Japanese edition.
Moero! Justice Gakuen review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
3/5
Music
★★★★★
"Memorable"
3/5
Story
★★★★★
"Solid"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Addictiveness
"Captivating"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Average"
Technical info
💾0,97 GB📅09/09/1999
Published by Capcom
Moero! Justice Gakuen (Dreamcast) price, value & rarity
Complete: box, manual and disc/cart very clean. Lightly handled.
Q1 damagedQ6 completeQ10 new
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Collector interest
Moero! Justice Gakuen is the original Japanese edition of Project Justice, the 2.5D Capcom fighter by Hideaki Itsuno extending the Rival Schools sub-series. Collector value comes from the limited local print, the specific Japanese sleeve and from the Dreamcast version being the only major console release of the game, never reissued in this form since.
An underrated gem
A wild sequel to Rival Schools, this three-on-three fighting game pits high-schoolers against each other with spectacular moves and gloriously over-the-top team-up attacks. Capcom released it late in the Dreamcast's life with little fanfare, which cost it an audience. Bursting with personality and surprisingly deep, it'll delight fans of generous, colourful versus.
Better with friends
A schoolyard brawl in three-on-three where team attacks and paired combos give the clashes a flavor all their own. The competition blends technique and coordination: managing your partners matters as much as reading the foe. Colorful and chatty, it serves up goofy humor that loosens up evenings, and the collective reversals breed great rivalries among friends.
Is Moero! Justice Gakuen still worth playing in 2026?
A sequel to Rival Schools released on Naomi then Dreamcast, Project Justice adds three person team attacks for the spectacular assaults that mark the series. The hyped up schoolkid roster, the tag in techniques and the support strikes craft a very readable versus full of surprises. Visually more mature than the first game, the title retains a striking freshness. For anyone hunting for a lesser known Capcom 3D fighter brimming with personality, the experience remains entirely recommendable today.