Sunday, May 11, 2008

Sports Gmaes- what discountedgame goes for


A sports game is a computer or video gmaes that simulates the playing of traditional sports. They are extremely popular, the genre including some of the best-selling gmaes .

Almost every familiar sport has been recreated with a gmaes , including baseball, association football, American football, boxing, wrestling, cricket, golf, basketball, ice hockey, tennis, bowling, rugby, hunting, fishing, etc.

Some games emphasize actually playing the sport (such as the Madden NFL series), while others emphasize the strategy behind the sport (such as Championship Manager). Others satirize the sport for comic effect (such as Arch Rivals). This genre has been popular throughout the history of video games and is extremely competitive, just like real-world sports.

A number of gmaes series feature the names and characteristics of real teams and players, and are updated annually to reflect real-world changes.

The genre is not to be confused with electronic sports, which is used to describe computer and video games which are played as competitive sports.

History
Beginnings of sports gmaes

Tennis for Two One of the first video games in history, Tennis for Two (1958), was a sports gmaes.

Computer games prior to the late 1970s were primarily played on university mainframe computers under timesharing systems that supported multiple computer terminals on school campuses. The two dominant systems were the Digital Equipment PDP-10 and the Control Data Corp. PLATO System. These systems displayed no graphics, only text. In the early 1970s they printed the text on teletype machines and line printers, but by the mid-seventies the text printed on single-color CRT screens.

Highlights of this era in sports games include:

Baseball (1971 — Written by Don Daglow at Pomona College, Baseball was the first computer baseball game, now recorded in the baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York. He continued to expand and refine Baseball throughout the 1970s, and its sabermetric approach provided the foundation for Daglow's later commercial games Intellivision World Series Baseball (1983, with Eddie Dombrower), Earl Weaver Baseball (1988, also with Dombrower), Tony La Russa Baseball (1991 through 1996) and Old Time Baseball (1995).
In the late 1970s arcade games began to appear, and sports were a popular genre. Highlights of this era include:

The first racing game was Night Driver (1976).
Atari Golf (1978),

1980
Pole PositionBetween 1980 and 1984 Atari and Intellivision waged a series of high-stakes TV advertising campaigns promoting their respective systems during the first round of console wars. Atari normally prevailed in arcade gmaes and had a deeper installed base due to its lower price, while Mattel's Intellivision touted its visually superior sports gmaes . Sports writer George Plimpton was featured in the Intellivision ads, which showed the parallel games side by side. Both Atari and Mattel fielded at least one game for baseball, football, hockey, basketball, auto racing and soccer.

Activision Tennis (1981)
Track & Field (1982)
Pole Position (1982).
In 1983 EA produced their first sports game Dr. J and Larry Bird Go One on One by Eric Hammond, which was also the first licensed sports game based on the names and likenesses of famous athletes. The gmaes was a major hit.

In 1983 Mattel released Intellivision World Series Baseball by Don Daglow and Eddie Dombrower, the first game to use multiple camera angles to show the action. Games prior to this displayed the entire field on screen, or scrolled across static top-down fields to show the action. IWSB mimicked television baseball coverage by showing the batter from a modified "center field" camera, showing baserunners in corner insets, and showing defensive plays from a camera behind home plate. It was also the first sports gmaes to introduce players with spoken words (as opposed to text) using the Mattel Intellivoice module. It received limited distribution due to the video game crash of 1983, and today is one of the most rare and expensive Intellivision cartridges on the collectibles market.

In 1984 game designer Scott Orr founded GameStar, a gmaes publisher specializing in Commodore 64 sports games, and served as lead designer. GameStar was the most successful sports gmaes company of its era, and Orr sold the company to Activision in 1986. The company's titles included:

On Court Tennis (1984)
Championship Baseball (1984)
GFL Championship Football (1985) -- American Football
Star Rank Boxing (1985)
Gamestar Basketball Association (GBA) Championship Basketball - Two-on-Two (1986)
Star Rank Boxing II (1987)
Top Fuel Eliminator (1987)
Face Off! (1987)
In 1988 EA released Earl Weaver Baseball by Don Daglow and Eddie Dombrower, which for the first time combined a highly accurate sim game with a high quality graphical action-style game. This was also the first game in which an actual baseball manager provided the computer AI. In 1996 Computer Gaming World named 'EWB to the #25 position on its list of the Best 150 Games of All Time, the second highest ranking for any sports game in that 1981-1996 period (after FPS Sports Football).

In 1989, Anco published Kick Off; it was immediately considered the pioneer of computer soccer games due to its many original features.


1990s
16-bit systems

The Creation of EA Sports -- In 1989 EA producer Richard Hilleman hired Gamestar's Scott Orr to re-design John Madden Football, then a disappointing Apple II gmaes , for the fast-growing Sega Genesis. Orr and Hilleman together developed the gmaes that we still recognize today as Madden Football, the best-selling title in the history of gmaes in North America. They focused on producing a great head-to-head two-player game with an intuitive interface and responsive controls. When the gmaes shipped it immediately became a major hit.


Sensible SoccerOrr joined EA full-time in 1991 after the success of Madden on the Genesis, and began a ten-year period of his career when he personally supervised the production of Madden Football. During this time Hilleman, Orr and their EA teams also created the following EA Sports hits, each of which was updated annually:

NHLPA Hockey
NCAA Football
Andretti Racing
NASCAR Racing (later called NASCAR Thunder)
Knockout Kings
Sensible Software's Sensible Soccer (1992) still retains a cult following today. The 16-bit era also saw the launch of many of the EA Sports sports franchises, including the FIFA, NHL, NBA Live and Madden NFL series.

32-bit / 64-bit systems The arrival of Sony's PlayStation and 3D graphics cards on the PC enabled sports games to make the leap into 3D. Actua Soccer was the first soccer game to make use of a 3D engine.

On PC

In 1995 Sierra released FPS Sports Football. The next year Computer Gaming World named it to the #12 position on its list of the Best 150 gmaes of All Time, the highest ranking for any sports game in that 1981-1996 period.
Comodore Amiga Cinemaware TV Sports Basketball 1990

Sports gaming becomes big business
On 13 December 2004, Electronic Arts began a string of deals that granted exclusive rights to several prominent sports organizations, starting with the NFL. This was quickly followed with two deals in January securing rights to the AFL and ESPN licenses. This was a particularly hard blow to Sega, the previous holder of the ESPN license, who had already been affected by EA's NFL deal. As the market for football brands was being quickly taken by EA, Take-Two Interactive responded by contacting the Major League Baseball Players Association and signing a deal that granted exclusive third-party major-league baseball rights; a deal not as restrictive, as first-party projects were still allowed. The NBA was then approached by several developers, but declined to enter into an exclusivity agreement, instead granting long-term licenses to Electronic Arts, Take-Two Interactive, Midway gmaes , Sony, and Atari. In April, EA furthered its hold on football licensing by securing rights to all NCAA football brands.


Types of sports gmaes

Arcade
Sports gmaes have traditionally been very popular arcade games. The competitive nature of sports lends itself well to the arcades where the main objective is usually to obtain a high score. The arcade style of play is generally more unrealistic and focuses on a quicker gameplay experience. Examples of this include the NFL Blitz and NBA Jam series.


Simulation
In comparison to arcade sports gmaes , the simulation style of play is a usually a more realistic rendition of the real-life sport it emulates. Examples include the Madden NFL series and the NBA Live series.


Management
Sports management games put players into the role of team manager. Whereas fantasy games are often played online against other players, management gmaes usually pit the player against AI controlled teams. Players are expected to handle strategy, tactics, transfers, and financial issues. Examples include Football Manager and Computer Simulated Fantasy Baseball League, known in the vernacular as CSFBL.


Fantasy
A Fantasy sport is a gmaes where fantasy owners build a team that competes against other fantasy owners based on the statistics generated by individual players or teams of a professional sport. Fantasy can also refer to fictional sports, see The fantasy element below.


Sports RPG
Sports Role-playing games are games which combines RPG elements into any sports genre. Level-5's upcoming Soccer RPG gmaes , Inazuma Eleven, is one of the many sports RPG's that define the sub-genre. Namco's racing RPG gmaes , Final Lap Twin, is another game which defines the sub-genre. Camelot's GBC versions of gmaes such as Mario Golf and Mario Tennis also has RPG elements in it's single player modes.


gmaes and televised sports
More and more, video sports games are starting to look and act like their TV counterparts. Additionally, televised sports, namely American football, have added Madden-style cameras to their coverage, further blurring the line between fantasy and reality. Sports commentators will often play a game of Madden Football before a big game (such as the Super Bowl), to help gain insight on the outcome.


Sports gmaes today
The sports genre is currently dominated by EA Sports and 2K Sports, who hold licenses to produce gmaes based on official leagues. EA's franchises include the FIFA Soccer series, the NBA Live series, the Madden Football series, the NASCAR series and Tiger Woods series. All of these games feature real leagues, competitions and players. These games continue to sell well today despite many of the product lines being over a decade old, and receive, for the most part, consistently good reviews. EA Games' Need for Speed series continues to be one of the best-selling in the racing genre, although it is not based on a license.

With EA Sports' domination, the market has become very difficult to enter; competing gmaes in any of the above genres, with the exception of racing games, tend to be unsuccessful. This has led to a sharp drop in sports-themed titles over recent years. One of the most notable exceptions is Konami's Pro Evolution Soccer series, which is often hailed as an alternative to the FIFA series, but does not contain as many licensed teams, players, kits, or competitions. Racing gmaes , due to the variation that the sport can offer in terms of tracks, cars and styles, offer more room for competition and the selection of games on offer has been considerably greater. Sports management gmaes , while not as popular as they used to be, live on through small and independent software development houses. Management titles today have transitioned to the very popular fantasy sports leagues, which are available through many websites such as Yahoo.

Nintendo has been able to make an impact upon the sports market by producing several Mario-themed titles, such as Super Mario Strikers and Mario Tennis. These titles sell respectfully, but are only available on Nintendo's video gmaes consoles, the GameCube, Nintendo 64, and Wii; in 2006, they launched Wii Sports for Wii, which uses the Wii Remote to simulate movement.


The fantasy element
Some sports gmaes are based on fictional sports, usually of a fantasy or science fiction nature. One of the most notable examples of this is the Speedball series; Speedball 2 was a huge success, particularly on the Commodore Amiga. Bearing some similarities to Team handball, the gmaes introduces a number of futuristic gadgets that affect the gameplay immensely. Brutality is permitted; it is considered legal and acceptable to bash opponents with a metal ball. A number of sports have received the sci-fi treatment over the years, most frequently in the racing genre. F-Zero popularized the futuristic racing genre, and was followed by a number of sequels.

A number of games introduce fantasy elements to existing sports, subtle or otherwise, to add comedic effect to a gmaes , such as Brutal Sports Football, released by Millennium in 1992. Like Speedball, the gmaes was inspired by American football, but placed a larger focus on injuring, maiming, and even killing opponents. It is possible to win a match by simply decapitating the entire opposing team.

In some titles contained within this extended genre, the fantasy element is less prominent, particularly in titles such as Ready 2 Rumble and Outlaw Golf — games that, while strategically true to the sport, introduce comedy elements that would not realistically be seen in a serious simulation. For example, in Outlaw Golf, the choice of characters includes a stripper, a rapper, a Latin American Casanova-style figure and a mad scientist. Golf balls leave trails of smoke and fire when hit hard and the gmaes features an over-enthusiastic and sarcastic commentator.


Notable sports games by type

Team Sports
Baseball – MLB: The Show series, MLB 2K Series

Basketball

NBA – NBA Live series, NBA 2K
NCAA – NCAA March Madness series, College Hoops 2K series
FIBA – Charazay Basketball Manager
Other – NBA Street, NBA Ballers
Cricket – Brian Lara Cricket series, Cricket 07, EA Sports Cricket 2005, Allan Border's Cricket, Shane Warne Cricket, Ian Botham's Cricket, Cricket 2004

Dodgeball – Super Dodge Ball, Super Dodge Ball Advance

Football (American)

NFL – Madden NFL
AFL - Arena Football: Road to Glory
NCAA – NCAA Football series
Australian Football – AFL Live Premiership Edition
Other - NFL Street series
Football (Soccer) – Hattrick, PC FĂștbol, FIFA Series, Winning Eleven, Pro Evolution Soccer, International Superstar Soccer, Sensible Soccer, Kick Off, Virtua Striker, Actua Soccer, Football Manager, Championship Manager, Trophy Manager

Hockey – NHL series, Blades of Steel, Ice Hockey, SuperStar Ice Hockey, Faceoff!, Actua Ice Hockey, NHL 2K

Lacrosse – Blast Lacrosse, Brine Lacrosse

Rugby – EA Sports Rugby 2005, M.U.D.S., Australian Rugby League

Volleyball – Dead or Alive Xtreme Beach Volleyball, Kings of the Beach, Power Spike Pro Beach Volleyball, Summer Heat Beach Volleyball, Beach Spikers


Versus Sports

Combat Sports
Boxing – Punch-Out!!, Knockout Kings, Fight Night, Wii Sports

Karate (tournament style) – Karate Master, Yi-ar Kung Fu, World Karate Championship

Ultimate fighting – Ultimate Fighting Championship

Wrestling

Arm Wrestling – Arm Wrestling
Professional Wrestling – WWE SmackDown!, M.U.S.C.L.E., Galactic Wrestling: Featuring Ultimate Muscle

Racquet Sports
Badminton – Super Dynamix Badminton

Table Tennis – Pong, Konami's Ping Pong, Rockstar Games presents Table Tennis

Tennis – Virtua Tennis, Top Spin Tennis, Tennis Arena, Wii Sports


General Competition

Racing

Automobile Racing

NASCAR – NASCAR video games (Lists games from multiple publishers)
Motorcycle racing – Moto Racer
Motocross – Motocross Madness, Motocross, Racing Destruction Set, Excitebike
ATV Racing – ATV Offroad Fury
Watercraft Racing

Boat racing – Hydro Thunder
Jet-ski Racing – Wave Race 64
Aircraft Racing

Aircraft racing – Gee Bee Air Rally
Aerobatics – AeroWings
Horse Racing – Quarterpole, Sport of Kings (a.k.a. Omni-play Horse Racing), G1 Jockey 3, Track King

Bicycle-style Racing

BMX (biking) – Dave Mirra's BMX Biking, Mat Hoffman Pro BMX, BMX XXX
Unicycle racing – Uniracers

Olympic/Event gmaes
Winter Olympics

1994 Winter Olympics – Winter Olympics: Lillehammer 94 (Downhill, Giant Slalom, Super G, Slalom, Bobsled, Luge, Freestyle moguls, Ski jumping, Biathlon, Short track)
1998 Winter Olympics – Nagano Winter Olympics '98 (skating, skiing, luge, bobsleigh, slalom, curling, halfpipe, snowboarding)
2002 Winter Olympics – Salt Lake 2002 (Alpine Skiing Downhill, Alpine Skiing Slalom, Freestyle Skiing Aerials, Ski Jump K120 Individual, Two-man Bobsleigh, Snowboard Parallel Giant Slalom)
2006 Winter Olympics – Torino 2006 (luge, bobsleigh, biathlon, speed skating, ski jumping, alpine skiing, cross-country skiing, Nordic combined)
Other – Winter Games, The Games: Winter Challenge
Summer Olympics

1992 Summer Olympics – Olympic Gold (100 m, Hammer throw, Archery, 110 m hurdles, Pole vault, 200 m freestyle swimming, 3 m springboard diving)
1996 Summer Olympics – Olympic Summer Games (100 m sprint, 110 m hurdles, Pole vault, High jump, Long Jump, Triple Jump, Javelin, Discus, Archery, Skeet), Olympic Games: Atlanta 1996, (100 meters, 400 meters, 100M crawl, Javelin, Hammer, Discus, Long Jump, Triple Jump, High Jump, Pole Vault, Fencing, Rapid Fire Pistol, Weight Lifting, Archery, Skeet Shooting)
2000 Summer Olympics – Sydney 2000 (100 m sprint, 110 m hurdles, Javelin, Hammer, Triple Jump, High Jump, Skeet shooting, Super Heavyweight Weight Lifting, 100 m Freestyle Swimming, 10 m Platform Diving, Chase Cycling, Kayak K1 Slalom)
2004 Summer Olympics – Athens 2004 (100 metres sprint, 200 metres sprint, 400 metres sprint, 800 metres middle distance, 1500 metres middle distance, 100 metres hurdles, 110 metres hurdles, Long jump, triple jump, high jump, pole vault, Discus throw, javelin throw, shot put, 100 metres breaststroke, freestyle, backstroke, butterfly, Floor exercise, still rings, vault, Show jumping, +105 kg. clean and jerk, 70 m individual archery, Skeet shooting)
2008 Summer Olympics – Mario & Sonic at the Olympic gmaes
Other – World Class Track Meet, Hyper Sports, Hyper Athlete, Summer gmaes
Miscellaneous Events –

California gmaes (Halfpipe, Footbag, Surfing, Roller Skating, BMX, Flying Disc)
California gmaes 2 (Hang gliding, Jet ski, Snowboarding, Bodysurfing, Skateboarding)
Coleco Telstar Marksman (Skeet, Target, Tennis, Hockey, Handball, Jai alai)
Crash 'n the Boys: Street Challenge (400 metres hurdles, Hammer throw, Swimming, Roof Top Jumping, Fighting Scene)

Target Sports
Billiards/Pool/Snooker – Virtual Pool, Jimmy White's Whirlwind Snooker, Pool Challenge

Bowling – King Pin, 10th Frame Bowling, PBA Bowling, Brunswick Circuit Pro Bowling, Bowling Evolution, Wii Sports

Darts – World Darts, Bully's Sporting Darts

Fishing – Sega Bass Fishing, Gone Fishin', BassTour, BassDuel, Reel Fish'n,Trophy Bass

Golf – Nintendo Golf, World Tour Golf, Links 386 Golf, Tiger Woods PGA Tour, Golden Tee, Outlaw Golf, Hot Shots Golf, Shot-Online

Hunting – Duck Hunt, Ultimate Duck Hunting, Big Buck Hunter, Safari Hunt, Deer Hunter

Paintball – Ultimate Paintball, Greg Hastings Tournament Paintball MAX'D

Skeet/Trap Shooting – Trap Shooting, Duck Hunt, Clay Pigeon


Balance Sports
Skateboarding – Tony Hawk's Pro Skater, Skate, Skate or Die!

Skiing/Snowboarding – SSX, Amped, Ski or Die, Massive Snowboarding

Surfing – Kelly Slater's Pro Surfer, Surf Ninjas

Wakeboarding– Wakeboarding Unleashed featuring Shaun Murray


Miscellaneous sports
Poker – Pokerstars.net, World Series of Poker



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