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N. File:National Basketball Association logo.svg; File:NBA 75th anniversary logo.svg; File:NBA All Star Game 2002.png; File:NBA All Star Game 2003.gif
The players each control a basketball team competing in four timed quarters of game play. Mattel obtained a license from National Basketball Association and used the NBA logo in its box art, making it the first basketball video game to be licensed by the NBA. NBA Basketball does not use any official team or
NBA Live 14: November 19, 2013 PlayStation 4 Xbox One: EA Tiburon: EA Sports: NBA Rush: January 4, 2014: iOS: Other Ocean Interactive: RenRen Games USA: NBA 2K15: October 7, 2014: Windows PlayStation 3 Xbox 360 PlayStation 4 Xbox One: Visual Concepts: 2K Sports: NBA Live 15: October 28, 2014 PlayStation 4 Xbox One: EA Tiburon: EA Sports: NBA ...
These video games uses licensed teams from the National Basketball Association; an American-based professional basketball organization. Subcategories This category has the following 6 subcategories, out of 6 total.
NBA Live 98 is a basketball video game based on the National Basketball Association and the fourth installment of the NBA Live series. Its cover art features Tim Hardaway of the Miami Heat . The game was developed by EA Sports in 1997 for Windows , PlayStation , and Sega Saturn , while also being the final NBA Live game released for the Super ...
ESPN NBA Basketball (alternatively known as NBA 2K4, and sometimes mislabeled as ESPN NBA Basketball 2K4 [1]) is a 2003 basketball simulation video game developed by Visual Concepts and published by Sega. It is the fifth installment in the NBA 2K franchise and the successor to NBA 2K3. It was released in 2003 for PlayStation 2 and Xbox.
The games are licensed by the National Basketball Association (NBA), and are one of several different NBA-focused basketball video game series. The games released in the series are NBA, NBA '06, NBA '07, NBA '08, NBA 09: The Inside, and NBA 10: The Inside. It is the successor to the NBA ShootOut series.
The project leader for this game was Mark Turmell. NBA Jam was the third basketball video game released by Midway, after TV Basketball (1974) and Arch Rivals (1989). [5] The gameplay of NBA Jam is based on Arch Rivals, which was also a 2-on-2 basketball game. However, it was the release of NBA Jam that brought mainstream success to the genre.