Released during the twilight of the Super Famicom’s lifespan, Winning Post 2: Program 96 represents the pinnacle of Koei’s horse racing simulation efforts on 16-bit hardware. As an iterative update to the original Winning Post 2, this version incorporates real-world 1996 data, refined menus, and an expanded roster of legendary stallions and broodmares. While Western audiences were largely ignored by this niche genre, Koei managed to create a surprisingly deep RPG-lite experience that focuses on the prestige and lineage of thoroughbred racing rather than just the gambling aspect.
The gameplay loop is a methodical blend of long-term strategy and micro-management. Players step into the shoes of a rising horse owner, tasked with navigating the complex "Silk Road" of the Japanese racing circuit. Success requires a keen eye for pedigree and an understanding of how different training regimens affect a horse’s stamina and speed. Unlike more arcade-oriented titles, Program 96 demands patience; watching your stable grow from unproven colts to G1 champions is a slow-burn reward that remains one of the most satisfying loops in the Koei library.
Visually, the game utilizes the console’s high-resolution text modes and clean, digitised portraits to present an immense amount of data without overwhelming the player. The race sequences themselves are functional rather than spectacular, utilizing a side-scrolling perspective that lacks the Mode 7 flair seen in other contemporary titles, yet the tension is palpable as the finish line nears. For the modern importer, the language barrier is formidable, as the game is almost entirely text-driven, but for those who can navigate the kanji, it stands as the definitive horse racing sim of the era.
