Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The next major traditional publisher to take a crack at sports-themed social games is, well, the only one left. 2K Games has revealed to San Jose Mercury News NBA 2K MyLife, a simulator-style ...
NBA Live 96 is the second installment of the NBA Live video game series published by EA Sports and released on November 30, 1995. The PC and PlayStation covers feature Shaquille O'Neal of the Orlando Magic, while the Super Nintendo Entertainment System, Sega Genesis and European PlayStation box covers feature a photo of the tip-off to Game 1 of the 1995 NBA Finals.
NBA Jam is a basketball video game series based on the National Basketball Association (NBA). Initially developed as arcade games by Midway , the game found popularity with its photorealistic digitized graphics, over-the-top presentation and exaggerated style of two-on-two basketball play.
SIMSCRIPT is a free-form, English-like general-purpose simulation language conceived by Harry Markowitz and Bernard Hausner at the RAND Corporation in 1962. It was implemented as a Fortran preprocessor on the IBM 7090 [1] [2] and was designed for large discrete event simulations. It influenced Simula. [3]
Boston became the fourth NBA team ever to force a Game 7 after trailing a series 3-0, and the first to host that chance to snap the winless streak for teams in that situation at 0-150.
In server-side simulation, the numerical calculations and visualization (generation of plots and other computer graphics) is carried out on the web server, while the interactive graphical user interface (GUI) often partly is provided by the client-side, for example using server-side scripting such as PHP or CGI scripts, interactive services ...
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.
NBA Live 2004 is the 2004 installment of the NBA Live sports video game series. The game was developed by EA Canada and released in 2003. It is graphically similar to NCAA March Madness 2004 and has the same create-a-player models. It was the last EA game to include Michael Jordan.