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Baseball Mogul 2002: 2001/03/31 PC: Sports Mogul: Sports Mogul: Out of the Park Baseball II: 2001/03/31 PC: Out of the Park: Out of the Park: MLB 2002: 2001/05/07 PlayStation: 989 Sports: SCEA: Yes Yes Season Ticket Baseball: 2001/06/19 PC: Out of the Park: WizardWorks: All-Star Baseball 2003: 2002
Earl Weaver Baseball is a baseball video game designed by Don Daglow and Eddie Dombrower and published in 1987 by Electronic Arts.The artificial intelligence for the computer manager was provided by Baseball Hall of Fame member Earl Weaver, then manager of the Baltimore Orioles, based on a lengthy series of interviews. [1]
Backyard Baseball is a baseball video game developed and published by Humongous Entertainment. It is the first video game released for the Backyard Sports franchise (originally known as the Junior Sports series) [2] and the long-running Backyard Baseball series. The game was released on a hybrid Windows and Macintosh CD-ROM on October 10, 1997.
The gameplay of Backyard Baseball 2001 is mostly the same as in the first Backyard Baseball title and retains all of the original game's modes: Single Game (formerly Pick-Up Play), Season Play (formerly League Play), Batting Practice, Spectator, and Tee-Ball, with the addition of a mode called Online Play, which allows players to compete with each other worldwide; this mode is only available ...
Pablo Sanchez, one of the fictional playable characters in the game, has been regarded as one of the strongest athletes in video game history. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] [ 6 ] The game has also been noted for its diversity (gender, race, disability, etc.) of characters, both in ratio of white to non-white and male to female, as well as skill level and the ...
The series began in late 1997 when Humongous Entertainment, owned by GT Interactive, created the first game in the franchise: Backyard Baseball. [3] Later, GT Interactive was purchased by Infogrames and was renamed as Infogrames, Inc. [4] Infogrames allowed Humongous Entertainment to expand the series, and Humongous later developed more titles such as Backyard Soccer, Backyard Football ...
If you like your baseball served up arcade-style, MLB '98 is the only game you need to order." [ 7 ] Just a few months after MLB '98 was released, Electronic Gaming Monthly listed it as number 97 on their "100 Best Games of All Time", saying it "has its minor flaws and bugs, but overall it's the best 32-Bit baseball game."
A reviewer for Electronic Gaming Monthly gave La Russa Baseball '95 a 70%, commenting that "The controls for the pitcher and the batter need some work. Animations of players are neat, but they slow down a bit. An okay revision from last year." [3] In 1996, Computer Gaming World declared Tony La Russa Baseball 3 the 128th-best computer game ever ...