In this game Virtua Tennis 4 player gets into the courts of tennis and his aim is that beat all of his opponents. This game is not easy to play. Because player need to control so many things in very little time. Player need very high quality skills to beat hi opponents. Graphically, the conversion may look crisper than its Dreamcast counterpart, but seems to have lost some of its subtleties, such as the motion blur in the replays and the barely discernible cloud shadows, which appear here as if the apocalypse were pending.
It came from the East, but it has now firmly gone west. Of course it has its fair share of stinkers -not unlike the PC - but the console undeniably boasts a number of genuinely classic titles. Virtua Tennis lives on though, and has recently spawned a sequel, which, were it still in existence, ODM would have inevitably showered with much-deserved "best just got better"-style plaudits.
Empire promises that the brilliantly simple, yet wholly addictive, gameplay will remain intact, and is also boasting of an improved graphics engine, although the DC version is certainly no slouch.
The PC game will feature seven famous male tennis players, plus ten hidden characters, and an array of tournaments will be available, with singles and doubles up for grabs. It should also be possible to play a four-man doubles match over a LAN. Not the most obvious use for the office network, but you never know, it might just work.
Retro-bores may bang on about Smash Tennis on the Super Nintendo, but Virtua really is the definitive game of the sport, with the Dreamcast version improving hugely on the arcade original.
One to look forward to then, although that said, you can probably buy a Dreamcast and a copy of the game for a tenner. Tennis Games on the PC are generally treated with the same disdain as films on Channel Five, but occasionally a nugget of competence comes along that bucks the trend. Virtua Tennis was one such exception, and went down a storm here at PC, prompting frenetic two-player action for almost half an hour, once we'd managed to get the controllers to work.
That was more than enough to impress us though, and the game promptly walked off with the coveted Sports Game Supertest award, as voted for by an esteemed panel of experts ie me and a couple of other slugabeds. It was largely deserved, and it remains a supremely playable game, having now made the smooth transition from arcade to Dreamcast to PC to bargain bucket.
Hinging around a simplistic yet intuitive control system, it's easy to pick up, with concerted play revealing further subtleties.
There are a host of options and mini-games, and even if you don't like tennis and who does? Audio Software icon An illustration of a 3. Software Images icon An illustration of two photographs. Images Donate icon An illustration of a heart shape Donate Ellipses icon An illustration of text ellipses. Virtua Tennis 3 Item Preview. EMBED for wordpress.
Virtua Tennis 3 is a sports game on tennis. It is developed under the banner of Sumo Digital. It was released on 3. Virtua Tennis 3 gives you three types of shot - slice, top spin and lob - although the timing and the ability to 'charge up' shots allows you to pull off a huge array of different ones, which is where the skill of a master player is revealed.
Like PES, Sega's sports game just feels right - you get real satisfaction when you hit a perfect return from a serve, or smash a crucial backhand into the corner to win a point, and the improved animation adds to the fluidity of the action.
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