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Triple Play 2001 is a 2000 baseball sports game released for the PlayStation, Microsoft Windows, and Game Boy Color in 2000.. Due to complaints about chopping frame rate issues from previous games, EA Sports was able to make the previous Triple Play game at a full 30 FPS but this game fell short and received heavy criticism for taking a step back.
Microsoft Baseball 2001 is a baseball game made for the 2000 Major League Baseball season. It was developed and published by Microsoft , following the earlier games Microsoft Baseball 3D 1998 Edition and Microsoft Baseball 2000 .
Triple Play 2000 is a baseball sports game released for the PlayStation, Nintendo 64 and Microsoft Windows in 1999. It is the only game of the Triple Play series released for the Nintendo 64 where it was released in North America.
Triple Play 98 is a baseball sports video game which was released in 1997 on the PlayStation and Microsoft Windows. The game was developed and published by EA Sports, and the next entry in the Triple Play series after Triple Play 97. The cover of the game features St. Louis Cardinals player Brian Jordan.
The game received above-average reviews according to the review aggregation website GameRankings. [12] The game was praised for its graphics. [2] [7] [6] [4] [10] [3] [16] [17] Scott May of Computer Gaming World praised the animation and considered the graphics to be the best of any computer baseball game to date. [2]
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.
Triple Play is a series of video games based on Major League Baseball, published by EA Sports until their replacement by the MVP Baseball in 2003. GameSpot stated that other simulations (for example, Sega's version) were superior to Triple Play, while GamePro greeted it as "the best baseball simulation so far". [1]
It was published by Microsoft for Windows. [4] The game was priced at $19.95 in an effort to appeal to a wide demographic. [11] [14] Baseball player Al Leiter is featured on the game's cover. [15] Later in 1999, an updated MLB player roster was released for download through the game's website. [16] A patch was also released that allowed for ...