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North & South - Wakuwaku Nanboku Sensou (Japan)

also known as North & South
NES / Famicom
🇯🇵
Reviewed in
1991
84
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✪ Reviewed on August 24, 2025
78

A humorous NES strategy game on the American Civil War. Strategy maps and interspersed action phases. Sharp humor, explosive two-player. An unjustly forgotten classic.

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Category
Strategy 4 players 7+
Description
Japanese version of the North & South strategy game about the American Civil War. Published by Kemco, released in Japan in 1991. Japanese version of North & South on Famicom.

North & South - Wakuwaku Nanboku Sensou review

3/5
Art direction
"Polished"
3/5
Music
"Memorable"
2/5
Story
"Classic"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Addictiveness
"Engaging"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Average"
Technical info
💾0,11 MB 📅08/02/1991
Published by Kemco

North & South - Wakuwaku Nanboku Sensou (NES) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

The Japanese Famicom version of the Infogrames game, Japan-exclusive under this subtitle, a rare event for a Franco-Belgian licence at the time. The cart is valued for that Famicom localisation singularity, and intact boxed CIB with cardboard sleeve and manual is markedly rarer than the PAL version. The Japanese cote climbs steadily, sustained by foreign curiosity for the absolute rarity of a French-language comic licence on Famicom.

Better with friends

A blend of strategy and action set against the Civil War, where two sides grab territory before settling it in chaotic assaults. The competition swings between planning on the map and hands-on skill during the pitched battles. Madcap and full of humor, it flips the game on a stroke of luck or a heroic charge, sparking shouts and laughter at every clash.

Is North & South - Wakuwaku Nanboku Sensou still worth playing in 2026?

North & South is a humorous strategy game about the American Civil War on NES. Strategic maps with regiment movements and side-scrolling action phases alternate for short, surprisingly deep matches. Infogrames's sharp humour translates surprisingly well to pixels, and the two-player mode is explosive. An unjustly forgotten console classic, especially satisfying for those who enjoy mixing reflection and arcade. Still a genuinely excellent detour today.

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