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The following video games include multiple sports. Subcategories. ... Wii Sports; Wii Sports Club; Wii Sports Resort; World Games (video game) World Sports Competition
Active Life: Outdoor Challenge (Family Trainer: Athletic World in Japan and Family Trainer in Europe) is a 2008 video game for the Wii produced by Namco Bandai Games. Players use a mat similar to the Power Pad in conjunction with the Wii Remote in order to complete a variety of mini-games. The game is comparable to Wii Fit.
List of American football video games; List of association football video games; List of Australian rules football video games; List of baseball video games; List of basketball video games; List of cricket video games; List of ice hockey video games; List of rugby union video games; List of volleyball video games
GameCube ports on the top of the Wii unit. This is a list of Wii games with traditional control schemes. Nintendo's Wii video game console, released in 2006, primarily focuses on the use of an unconventional video game controller, in the form of the Wii Remote.
It is the first game to be officially licensed by Little League Baseball for the seventh generation of consoles. [1] The gameplay is also similar to the baseball game in Wii Sports and Mario Super Sluggers. The game is a part of Activision's Fun4All-brand in Europe. The game begins when a player is taken to a main menu.
Since the Nintendo DS lacks a native Mii Maker, the following games support Miis through the ability to import them from a Wii console. All of the games except for Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: Echoes of Time also feature in-game Mii Makers.
Lit (stylized as LIT) and also known as School of Darkness (スクール オブ ダークネス, Sukūru obu Dākunesu) in Japan, [1] is a puzzle video game developed and published by WayForward Technologies for WiiWare. The game is directed by Adam Tierney and co-designed by Tierney and Mark Bozon. [2] It was released in North America on ...
In 2006, Nintendo released Wii Sports, a sports game for the Wii console in which the player had to physically move their Wii Remote to move their avatar known as a Mii. [136] The game contained five different sports—boxing, bowling, golf, tennis, and baseball—which could all be played individually or with multiple players.