Ace Attorney: Justice for All

Ace Attorney: Justice for All is the second game in the Turnabout Court/Ace Attorney series, starring a lawyer struggling against a fictional version of the corrupt Japanese law system, and his famous "OBJECTIONS!".

Japanese Version Features

 * Gyakuten Saiban 2 was originally released in Japan in 2002 for the Game Boy Advance. If the GBA version is in the GBA slot while opening the Japanese DS version, all of the cases are unlocked from the beginning. A similar feature exists for the first and the third games in the series. The GBA-slot support was removed from international releases.
 * Also notable in the Japanese version of the first three games is that there is an English language function available. Selecting it changes the title screen to the US version, and increases the size of the text boxes for dialogue and the evidence descriptions (which are smaller when selecting Japanese) to accommodate the larger script. The translation itself is an early, far more literal version of the one used in the US version, and has many typos.
 * Other changes pertaining to the localization process exist: most of the evidence graphics which have vertical sheets of paper got changed to a more western-like horizontal orientation, aside from the more obvious text changes.

Objectionable Content

 * In Case 4, a rather...interesting...graphical innuendo appears in the Gatewater Hotel Ballroom, which was edited out of the localized versions. Capcom Japan also put similarly questionable content in Ace Attorney: Trials and Tribulations – in Vegetable Park, there is a toy banana with two oranges on its side. Oddly enough, that one remained in the US release.

The original Japanese version's graphics are present in all releases of Gyakuten Saiban 2 (GBA, DS, WiiWare, and iOS) along with Gyakuten Saiban Encyclopedia (a bonus DS cartridge bundled with Gyakuten Saiban 3 DS). The censored western graphics are present in all international releases.


 * Juan Corrida, the victim from the fourth case, had his last name changed to Rivera in the Spanish version (named after a famous bullfighter). The reason behind this change is that "Corrida" has a vulgar, sexual meaning in Spanish: "ejaculation".