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Tennis (1981 video game) Tennis (1984 video game) Tennis Arena; Tennis Cup; Tennis Elbow (video game) Tennis for Two; Tennis Master; Tennis World Tour; Tie Break (video game) Top Players' Tennis; Top Rank Tennis; Top Spin (video game) Top Spin 2; Top Spin 3; Top Spin 4; TopSpin 2K25
Power Serve 3D Tennis [a] is a video game developed by SPS of Japan and published worldwide by Ocean Software for the PlayStation in 1995.
Amiga Action called the game "average" and said Pro Tennis Tour 2 is a better game. [4] Amiga Power liked the graphics but didn't like the "muddy controls". They called the game frustrating and "a tad dull". [5] Aktueller Software Markt called the game fast and extremely playable tennis sim. [6] The ST version was said to be not as fast as the ...
Virtua Tennis (Power Smash in Japan) is a series of tennis simulation video games started in 1999 by Sega AM3. The player competes through tennis tournaments and various arcade modes. While originally released for arcades, all games in the series have been ported to other platforms, including most major consoles.
The game is simulation oriented, and is often seen as being the one offering the most realistic tennis experience in term of rallies [3] and tennis sensations. [ 4 ] The most noticeable particularity of its gameplay is that the users have to hold down the strike button till their player actually strikes the ball, unlike most other tennis games ...
GameSpot gave the game a score of 5.9 out of 10' stating: "Tennis Master Series gets the basics right, but for $45, it should do a lot more than that" [7] References [ edit ]
Game trainers are programs made to modify memory of a computer game thereby modifying its behavior using addresses and values, in order to allow cheating. It can "freeze" a memory address disallowing the game from lowering or changing the information stored at that memory address (e.g. health meter, ammo counter, etc.) or manipulate the data at the memory addresses specified to suit the needs ...
It was released on PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Microsoft Windows, Wii and PlayStation Vita (the latter as Virtua Tennis 4: World Tour Edition). This is the first main series Virtua Tennis game to not have an arcade release before the console releases. An arcade version was also released, which is powered by the PC-based Sega RingEdge arcade system.