fuzzone Posted September 4, 2005 Share Posted September 4, 2005 oops, sorry man, it's late, i misread the topic. virtual valerie sure was hot though. Better than "Bringing Teresa Home." best BASEBALL GAME : WORLD SERIES BASEBALL 2k1 for the Dreamcast. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sidewinder Posted September 4, 2005 Share Posted September 4, 2005 Well, I have really enjoyed MVP 2k5 and all the High Heat games, but for its day, Earl Weaver Baseball on the Commodore Amiga was groundbreaking. We are talking 1987 with real rosters and all time players, great stat engine with mouse control, real stadiums and stadium modification, robotic announcer of names with great crowd noise and game effects, , and a great pitcher/batter interface. I walked into a software store in '87 and saw this game on the Amiga being played over a 27" TV and immediately set about how to buy an Amiga. It was that incredible. Before that, I was playing alot of the original Hardball on a Commodore 64. I enjoyed Tony LaRussa and Oldtime Baseball too in the '90s. Had a blast with Sega's World Series Baseball on the Genesis. TriplePlay was crap IMHO. I wanted to like it but the backwards batted ball physics always bugged the heck out of me as did alot of other things. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SwinginSoriano Posted September 4, 2005 Share Posted September 4, 2005 I always felt the Griffey games were overrated. I could never really get into them. My friends though cream their pants over Griffey... Despite the **** poor graphics and really high scoring games. That and Clemens and Randy throwing over 100 mph. There is one memorable quote from slugfest: "GET OUT THE RYE BREAD AND MUSTARD GRANDMA IT'S GRAND SALAMI TIME! MY OH MY!" That call is so stupid it makes me laugh when I hear it. It'd suck when I would wake up and hear it at 2 am because my suitemate felt like playing Griffey at some abnormal time. Good times good times. ----------- World Series Baseball for Sega Gamegear was also a good game, and unlike most it is close to impossible to hit a homerun. The only way to score is smallball and singles. Plus, it was the only game I ever played with realisitc pitch counts. Clemens-Mussina-Guzman-Maddux-Brown and whoever was good in 1992 would all have 100+ pitches before they tired. Though since it was a videogame, 100 pitches would last you until the 15th inning if they had to! You could start a game with a closer if you felt like it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mazzlow Posted September 4, 2005 Share Posted September 4, 2005 Hm, what the about All-Star Baseball series for the 64? I remember playing that with my friends in the late 90's Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TobiasLS Posted September 4, 2005 Share Posted September 4, 2005 And there's another one besides that little league game, which I owned also by the way. I loved that game. NES had a game called "Baseball Stars" and it was pretty good. Here's a screenie: This one gets my vote for sure... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
krawhitham Posted September 7, 2005 Share Posted September 7, 2005 That's what it's meant for! Last one, this is it. No worries. Call me burd from now on. I think we all have heard that at least once before Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
alcoholicstepfather Posted September 7, 2005 Share Posted September 7, 2005 That was the greatest game of all time. It had the original owner mode. You could make money during games and use it to buy star players. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
duckdodger215 Posted September 7, 2005 Share Posted September 7, 2005 ol roger clemen's mvp baseball for NES!!! had the bootleg players and team names because they didnt get mlbpa approval. it was cool because when there's a play at a base, you can choose to slide to the left, middle, or right to try to avoid the tag Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CardsFan4Ever Posted September 7, 2005 Share Posted September 7, 2005 High Heat 2K2 and 2K3: Custom leagues -ability to have two 8, or 10, team leagues with no divisions and only WS. Ability to set up leagues and playoffs anyway you wanted. Use of custom leagues with Lahman DB to basically recreate any past season in MLB that you wanted with an accurate set-up. Incredible amount of fantastic mods from the many talented modders, many of which are now here, real faces of past greats, uniforms, stadiums etc. etc. making the old school feeling come alive and even better. Huge number of classic stadiums came default with the game. Manage only mode. Ability to play at 1600x1200 32 bit awesome resolution with all details high on even average level PC cards and machines. These are all just some of the reasons why High Heat is still not beat as the greatest ever. MLB 2004 and 2005- Best ever for graphics and game play but that is it. Until it allows the custom leagues and true manager mode options that HH allowed then it is still only number two and will not have the replay value that HH has. I play MVP for exhibition games strictly for the good graphics and it gets dull quick. I always go back to a heavily modded HH 2K3 for whatever fantastic season recreations of 1950s and 60's MLB. Oldtime Baseball- for the ability to simulate any past season in history if you do not care all that much about fancy graphics. Strat-o-matic- also deserves honorable mention for simulation as both computer and traditional board dice game. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
carter Posted September 8, 2005 Share Posted September 8, 2005 Tony Larussa 3 It was revolutionary. I must have drafted and simmed hundreds of seasons. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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