Why don't sports games get much attention in retro world?
Posted: Mon Feb 25, 2008 2:44 pm
Some of my fondest memories of my Genesis back in the day when it was the hottest thing going was playing multiple unbeaten seasons in Sports Talk Football '93 Starring Joe Montana. Later my favorite was College Football's National Championship and College Football's National Championship II. I never played much video baseball, hockey or basketball because even in "real life" those sports don't appeal to me that much but I sure played a LOT of football and maybe a little golf here and there. I now probably have 15-20 sports games for my Genesis and Sega CD alone. I know I can't be alone in this.
Yet, I rarely see a thread or even a comment concerning great retro sports games. Is this because sports games are all about the latest iteration and thus retro sports games are simply obsolete chunks of plastic and circuits destined to waste space in the bargain bins or storage boxes? Maybe sports games are relegated to multiplayer environments? I enjoyed them all by myself but maybe I'm weird.
I can still fondly remember the play I found in College Football's National Championship II that while playing as my once mighty Huskers no one, AI or human, could stop more than one out of every four attempts unless you simply ran it too often. Call the Hail Mary by starting in the shotgun with four wide receivers, put the right side tightend in motion to the left, hike the ball when the motion man has split the DBs, wait until he is 30 yards downfield and throw to him on the run with no defenders in sight! Instant 6 points! Running that play to perfection was still a challenge and setting it up right always ran right up against the play clock but when it worked, it worked! Almost as fun as the real thing!
I've personally never really considered racing games as sports games, since so many of them are more arcade-y than sports-y, but I also really enjoy racing games. That said, I'd also say that racing games seem to suffer the same "yeah, so what?" lack of attention suffered by sports games. I got seriously hooked on video game racing with Virtua Racing Deluxe and the whole Gran Turismo series consumed a good portion of my life. In fact, the first Gran Turismo for the PS2 is what drove me to buy a PS2 in the first place, just like Tomb Raider is what drove me to by my PS1 and Sonic was what drove me to want a Genesis in the first place and Shenmue was what drove me to get a Dreamcast. Once the hardware was in my hands many other avenues of enjoyment came to my attention but sports and driving were a big influence.
Yet, I rarely see a thread or even a comment concerning great retro sports games. Is this because sports games are all about the latest iteration and thus retro sports games are simply obsolete chunks of plastic and circuits destined to waste space in the bargain bins or storage boxes? Maybe sports games are relegated to multiplayer environments? I enjoyed them all by myself but maybe I'm weird.
I can still fondly remember the play I found in College Football's National Championship II that while playing as my once mighty Huskers no one, AI or human, could stop more than one out of every four attempts unless you simply ran it too often. Call the Hail Mary by starting in the shotgun with four wide receivers, put the right side tightend in motion to the left, hike the ball when the motion man has split the DBs, wait until he is 30 yards downfield and throw to him on the run with no defenders in sight! Instant 6 points! Running that play to perfection was still a challenge and setting it up right always ran right up against the play clock but when it worked, it worked! Almost as fun as the real thing!
I've personally never really considered racing games as sports games, since so many of them are more arcade-y than sports-y, but I also really enjoy racing games. That said, I'd also say that racing games seem to suffer the same "yeah, so what?" lack of attention suffered by sports games. I got seriously hooked on video game racing with Virtua Racing Deluxe and the whole Gran Turismo series consumed a good portion of my life. In fact, the first Gran Turismo for the PS2 is what drove me to buy a PS2 in the first place, just like Tomb Raider is what drove me to by my PS1 and Sonic was what drove me to want a Genesis in the first place and Shenmue was what drove me to get a Dreamcast. Once the hardware was in my hands many other avenues of enjoyment came to my attention but sports and driving were a big influence.