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Archived from the original on 16 December 2004. 'Project Justice Review for Dreamcast on '. Archived from the original on 14 March 2016. Archived from the original on 10 October 2007. Archived from the original on 16 November 2014.

Lastly, Kurow himself plans to destroy Batsu's reputation by disguising himself as Batsu's doppelganger (named Vatsu) so that he can attack the fighters and make them believe that Batsu is behind it. His third plot involves brainwashing Gedo gang leader Daigo Kazama so that he can order him into forcing his gang to attack various schools in order to cause even more tension to occur. Secondly, he sends both his older sister Yurika Kirishima and his loyal subordinate Momo Karuizawa into the ranks of the fighters so that the two of them can cause tension and distrust to occur between the friends. To this end, he attacks Raizo Imawano: the principal of Justice High and father to Batsu, so that he can easily put him out of commission and not have any interference come from him. Kurow Kirishima: a cold-hearted and ruthless ninja assassin from a mysterious group known only as the 'Reverse Society' has his sight set on the Imawano family and plans to eliminate them and their allies so that he can prepare for the advancement of his own ambition to rule Japan. After defeating the boss, the player is shown a screen where the game rates the performance of player, and gives them a ranking named after a character from the game.
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In Free Mode, players select a team of three characters and fight random teams of opponents until getting to fight the boss, similar to selecting two characters from different schools in Rival Schools.After fighting the boss of the game, an ending for the school's story is shown. In some stories, the plot will branch out depending on the results of certain fights or decisions made by the player, changing the fights that the player faces. Like the original game, each fight in story mode is accompanied with 2D cut scenes that advance the story. In Story Mode, players select a portion of story grouped by school and play through a rigid storyline with a limited group of 2 to 6 characters that the player can choose from for each fight.While Rival Schools only plays a story if characters from the same school were selected, the game instead has separate Story and Free modes. Project Justice's single player mode was structured differently from its predecessor.
