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The game is available in three languages (German, English and French) and also gives an insight into a history of game statistics (wins, losses). There are community made mods available for the game. For instance Quick Game is a modification for Blobby Volley which speeds up the game and reduces the winning number of points to 10.
This is a list of volleyball sports video games. ... Arcade Volleyball (1988), IBM PC; COMPUTE! Kings of the Beach (1988), NES, IBM PC, Commodore 64; Electronic Arts;
Arcade Volleyball is a sports video game written by Rhett Anderson for the Commodore 64 and published as a type-in program in the June 1988 issue of COMPUTE!'s Gazette. It was ported to Amiga and MS-DOS by different programmers and was included in a 12-game collection called Best Gazette Games. [1] The author released the game later into the ...
Volleyball is a sports video game that follows the rules of volleyball. [1] The player controls a team of six players, three at the net and three in back. The player serves the ball into play by pressing the same button twice. [2] The game is a six player-a-side volleyball simulation.
In volleyball, teams must have their players in a specific formation. [2] The players then rotate around the court clockwise whenever the team performs a side-out. There is a penalty for being out of rotation and the opposing team receives a point. There are three formations that are widely used in the sport, each having advantages and ...
Beach Volleyball, released as Beach 'n Ball on the Game Boy Color, and as Power Spike: Pro Beach Volleyball in North America, is a Volleyball video game developed by French [4] studio Carapace Game Development and Spark Creative SARL, and published by Infogrames for Game Boy Color, PlayStation and Microsoft Windows in 2000.
Similar to Sega's Virtua sports games, most of the gameplay in Beach Spikers is based around the concept of "charging" the strength of moves, judged by how long the button is held prior to release at the point of which the move is executed. There is a button for setting (passing) and a button for rallying (sending the ball over the net) which ...
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