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Project Justice JP Sega Dreamcast Price Guide & Value

Project Justice

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Details

Console
JP Sega Dreamcast
Genre
Fighting
Release
2000

🌍 Market Value

Last update: 1/31/2026
LOOSE
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HOT
COMPLETE (CIB)
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NEW (SEALED)
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GRADED
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Price History

Expert Analysis Project Justice

Market data for Project Justice on JP Sega Dreamcast. This fighting game is appreciated by genre enthusiasts. Prices are updated daily based on verified sales. The current average price for a complete copy (CIB) is €61.38. Check our price history chart below to track market trends and find the best time to buy or sell.

Is Project Justice Rare?

Released in 2000 for JP Sega Dreamcast, this fighting game that represents an interesting piece for any collector.

The price stability makes this a reliable choice for collectors. The demand for JP Sega Dreamcast games, combined with the appeal of the fighting genre, makes it a solid addition to any JP Sega Dreamcast collection.

Description

Project Justice is the sequel to Rival Schools: United By Fate. Project Justice's fighting system is lifted from the original Rival Schools, with some notable changes. The game continues to be a team fighter, but has teams of three characters instead of two. This allows another Team-Up attack to be used in a fight, but also adds a new type of attack, the Party-Up, initiated by pressing any three attack buttons. The Party-Up is a three-person attack that varies based on what school the character initiating the attack is from. The additional partner also allows players to cancel an opponent's Team-Up Special by inputting a Team-Up command of their own. This initiates a short fighting sequence between one character from each team. If the person initiating the sequence gets the first successful hit in during the sequence before time runs out, the Team-Up they are caught in will be canceled, and the game switches back to the main fight; if the opposing player gets the first hit or time runs out, the Team-Up continues as usual. Additionally, the 'vigor' meter in Project Justice is limited to 5 levels (down from 9 in Rival Schools), with Party-Ups requiring all 5 levels, Team-Ups continuing to cost two levels, and any attempts (successful or not) to cancel a Team-Up costing one level. Also carrying over from the first game, the Dreamcast port of Project Justice in Japan includes a character creation mode that allows a player to create their own fighters who can be used in all modes except for single-player. However, the character creation in Project Justice is packaged as a board game, taking place during an inter-school festival, rather than a date sim game like in Rival Schools. As with School Life Mode in the original Rival Schools, though, this boardgame is not included in non-Japanese ports of Project Justice due to the amount of time it would take to translate the mode. Instead, several unlockable sub-characters were included in these ports, built from the character creation parts in the Japanese version.