Welcome to Virtual League Baseball for Nintendo's Virtual Boy, the 3D baseball game that lets you experience the exciting action of world class International Virtual League Baseball competition!
Grab a racket and experience virtual tennis how it was meant to be played.
Boasting the most advanced 3D Game design ever seen on a sports title, Power Serve 3D Tennis utilizes the full potential of the PlayStation console's powerful new generation technology - to deliver a benchmark event in interactive sporting.
Large, life-like players put you right on the court. Smooth, full-motion character movement allows you free 360 mobility. A.I. motivated competitors keep you at the top of your game.
So real, you can't play it sitting down.
Super Power League 3 is the third Power League game to be released on the Super Famicom and the ninth overall. The series is once again endorsed by Fuji Television, after the second game went with a different sponsor, with play-by-play commentary from Kenji Fukui, an announcer from that network.
It features the standard gameplay modes: A single Open game, a multi-game Pennant mode, an All-Stars mode with special teams, a Home Run Derby mode (named "Race"), and an opportunity to watch a match between two CPU teams.
The Power League series would see one more Super Famicom sequel in 1996 (Super Power League 4) before the series moved onto the next generation of consoles.
A late entry in what was once the premiere football simulation, TSB III has updated rosters and teams for the 1994-1995 season and is licensed by both the NFL and the Players group. This game features real NFLP players and photos, the real NFL schedule, and weekly standings. You can change defensive and offensive formations, create your own Pro Bowl, fake punts and field goals, go for the two point conversion, and call audibles. Updates to the game itself include new cinema screens, superstar mode, free agency system, improved graphics, larger field simulation, passing modes, and improved speech and music.
Inazuma Serve Da!! Super Beach Volley ("It's a Lightning Serve!! Super Beach Volley") is a 2D volleyball game from Virgin Interactive Entertainment that was released exclusively in Japan.
The player selects their volleyball players from a group of twenty-four characters, each with their own stats and idiosyncratic appearances, and takes on another team in various beach volleyball venues across the world including California, Hawaii, Japan, Brazil, Australia and India. Twenty of the characters belong to ten separate nationalities for the world cup mode, while the remaining four are female competitors who are unaffiliated with any country.
The game features a standalone "free battle" versus match, a world cup elimination tournament and a professional league.
This game revolves on the popular Susono Country Club at Mount Fuji featuring many photos and multimedia of the actual place. Players utilize in-depth golf physics and rules in three different field locations to hit the ball into the hole within the par limit.
Focused on national teams (12, including Italy, Spain, Denmark, Netherlands, England, Argentina, France, USA, Germany, Romania, Belgium and Brazil), the game offers a 2.5D environment (polygonal stadium and sprites for players) and three camera angles (back, isometric and side) with four zooming levels. Modes include Exhibition, World League (either single or double, with 44 matches and a grand final to crown the Grand Champion), S-League (just one round, 11 matches), cup knockout and penalty shootout, the game keeping track of statistical information of each competition. Gameplay is regular arcade, with simplicity being privileged over tactical knowledge or complex controls, with the game offering the possibility to choose between three types of controls. Other options include the ability to choose one of four difficulty levels, length of each half (3, 6 or 15 minutes) and weather conditions (fine, rain or random).
Ultra League: Moero! Soccer Daikessen!! (lit. Ultra League Moero! Roll-up Soccer!!) is a 1995 Japan-exclusive soccer-based video game released for the Super Famicom. The game features the Japanese super hero Ultraman, among other monsters and aliens.
Chou Kyuukai Miracle Nine is an isometric-projection baseball game. When batting, the D-pad moves around and A and C swing. When pitching, Left and Right move around and C pitches. You can also take control of the rest of the team when the ball has been hit: you control the player with the ball; the D-pad moves around and C throws the ball.
Mario's Tennis is a tennis game that was released as a launch title for the Virtual Boy. It is the first tennis-related Mario game, and would later be followed by the Mario Tennis series. You get to choose from seven different characters, all with different ability levels, to play against each other in either singles or doubles matches. You can also play in an exhibition or tournament mode.
Action-oriented baseball sim. Hardball 5 is mainly an update to Hardball 4, with the additions coming in the form of adjustable difficulty settings, sharper graphics, more comments by Al Michaels and improved league play which comes with a full set of 1994 major leaguers plus a bonus "legends" league. Includes multiplayer support for up to 2 players.
Tatakae! Pro Yakyuu Twin League is an NPB baseball game for the Sega Game Gear. It features all of the teams in the Central and Pacific Leagues of NPB in 1995 and features several game modes.
Jikkyou Powerful Pro Yakyuu '95: Kaimaku-ban is a baseball game for the Sega Saturn released as part of Konami's Jikkyou Powerful Pro Yakyuu series. It was only released in Japan.