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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; Tennis World Tour 2; Tie Break (video game) Tiebreak: Official game of the ATP and WTA; Top Players' Tennis; Top Rank Tennis; Top Spin (video game) Top Spin 2; Top Spin 3; Top Spin 4; TopSpin 2K25
Mario Tennis [a] is a 2000 sports video game developed by Camelot Software Planning and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo 64 (N64). Following Mario's Tennis, it is the second game in the Mario Tennis series. The game is known for being the introduction of Luigi's arch-rival, Waluigi, and the re-introduction of Princess Daisy and Birdo.
The game environment was rendered as a horizontal line, representing the tennis court, and a short vertical line in the center, representing the tennis net as viewed edge-on. The first player would press the button on their controller to send the ball, a point of light, over the net, and it would either hit the net, reach the other side of the ...
At least eight players are needed for this game. Two players start on the baseline, the back line of the tennis court, of each side with the court split in half vertically. Two tennis balls are played simultaneously on each half of the court starting with a drop hit. A drop hit is an underhand hit by bouncing the ball first.
In this tennis manager game, you take control of a tennis coach and his player, and your goal is to reach the Number One ranking in the world, to stay there as long as possible and win as many Grand Slam titles as possible. Men or Women Tour; 3500 players evolving over 38 years, from 1990 to 2027; More than 300 tournaments; World Team Cup and ...
In August 1988, the game was ported to the PC Engine console, [2] in which a new tennis-based role-playing quest mode was added, [3] and was later ported to the North American TurboGrafx-16 console by NEC under the title of World Court Tennis in 1989. [2] Up to four players could play simultaneously. A sequel named Super World Court was ...
On-Court Tennis is a tennis simulation in which the player can challenge either the computer or another player. [1] The game automatically moves the avatar to the ball; the player controls the swing and timing.