No extra Japan-exclusive cars or tracks—what you see is the same underwhelming story (familiar “cop turned rogue” tropes) and uninspired open world. The “Heroic Driving Engine” still feels gimmicky, and rubberband AI is as frustrating as ever.
As a niche, region-specific release, this Japanese version of NFS: Undercover (updated to v1.01) offers a few subtle tweaks over the standard Western release. The most notable change is the addition of Japanese UI text and localized voiceovers—though purists may still prefer English audio with JP subtitles. Need for Speed - Undercover -Japan- -v1.01-
Unless you’re a collector or need Japanese localization, this version doesn’t salvage Undercover ’s flaws. The patch stabilizes performance but can’t fix the lackluster design. 5/10 — play Most Wanted (2005) or Hot Pursuit instead. No extra Japan-exclusive cars or tracks—what you see
The v1.01 patch smooths out some of the original game’s notorious framerate drops, particularly during highway chases and rainy night races. Load times are slightly improved, but the core physics remain the same floaty, drift-heavy handling that divided fans. The most notable change is the addition of
Here’s a concise review of Need for Speed: Undercover - Japan - v1.01 :