Baseball
- Baseball (1967 on Mainframe)
- Baseball (1971 on Mainframe)
- Baseball (1972 on Odyssey)
- Baseball (1973 on Mainframe)
- Baseball (1974 on Terminal)
- Baseball (1974 on Arcade)
- Baseball (1976 on Dedicated console)
- Baseball (1976 on TI Programmable Calculator)
- Baseball (1977 on Commodore PET/CBM)
- Baseball (1977 on Mainframe, 1979 on Commodore PET/CBM)
- Baseball (1978 on APF MP1000/Imagination Machine)
- Baseball (1978 on TRS-80)
- Baseball (1978 on Dedicated handheld)
- Baseball (1978 on Dedicated handheld)
- Baseball (1979 on Commodore PET/CBM)
- Baseball (1979 on Apple II)
- Baseball (1979 on Apple II)
- Baseball (1979 on COSMAC)
- Baseball (1980 on Microvision)
- Baseball (1982 on TRS-80)
- Baseball (1982 on Arcadia 2001)
- Baseball (1983 on Atari 8-bit)
- Baseball (1983 on DOS)
Description official descriptions
Baseball is a game where the player can pitch, hit, field, and run just like in a real baseball game. The player can choose between USA and Japan modes, two different teams, and among a line-up of unique players. In the 1-player game, the player is against the computer, and the in the 2-player game, their friend is their opponent.
Spellings
- アーケードアーカイブス VS. ベースボール - Japanese Switch spelling
- ベースボール - Japanese spelling
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Credits (NES version)
6 People
Executive Producer (uncredited) | |
Producer (uncredited) | |
Director (uncredited) | |
Game Design (uncredited) | |
Character Design (uncredited) | |
Design (uncredited) | |
Sound (uncredited) |
Reviews
Critics
Average score: 41% (based on 22 ratings)
Players
Average score: 2.5 out of 5 (based on 62 ratings with 2 reviews)
The most in-depth game you'll get with a simple NES controller
The Good
When I first booted up this game on my Nintendo I was sorely disappointed. The team selection consisted of a number of different colored guys, and that was that. After that it all just seemed pretty random. I’d bash the buttons and the players would sometimes just stand there, doing nothing, or run in a totally different direction than I had intended. It was a disaster. Nothing like what I’d imagined a baseball game on a computer would be like. I thought that, like most of the basic NES games, it would probably be much more fun in multiplayer. I was wrong. It just became even more chaotic, with each and everyone on the screen doing something completely random. I put the game in a dark and gloomy drawer where it was to lie for years to come.
Fast forward to the present day, a few days back. I thought I heard a cry for help, when I was strolling around the apartment. I brushed off the idea that it had come out of a drawer in my room, reasoning that ‘that would be silly’. Still, the drawer peaked my interest and I decided to have a look. There lay a computer game, by the name of Baseball. I blew off the layer of dust and popped it in my Nintendo. Me and my friend had been dying to try out some new game, being bored to death, and had seemingly no recollection of ever playing this game before. So, we started playing. And then another friend joined in. Of course, that meant there was always one of us watching the other two play.
That’s when I realized how deep this game was. I sat there watching my two friends play, and I began to memorize a bunch of tactics. We finally figured out how to make players run forward to the next base. We even discovered that we could have them running before the pitch. The sheer depth that the developers managed to pack into this small cartridge, and the NES’ two button controller, without the use of in-game menus was amazing. Sure, now you can find more complex baseball games, complete with inane uses of a bloated up user interface, with more in-game menus than a five-star restaurant. But no baseball game will top this game in its simple, yet deep gameplay.
The Bad
However, after three evenings jam-packed with Baseball sessions the game really started to tire us. Not that it was boring, it just really strains your mind to sit through nine rounds of what can sometimes be a really tight game. If your opponent’s good enough, you’ll end up having round upon round, getting none of your men to home base. And the more strategy you put into it, all the more time the game will take. Hardly a failure on the game’s end, but it’s still worth mentioning.
The Bottom Line
The game would hardly be worth a full price nowadays, but if you’re looking for something on the NES, aren’t too picky about graphics and enjoy depth of gameplay then look no further. This one will keep you busy for a while, so long as you give it a break every once in a while.
NES · by BigJKO (64) · 2005
The Good
It was one of the first games released for the game boy system. It's difficult enough to be a challenge for you but the problem is that there's no competition available, just one match against the CPU or the 2 player mode. The graphics are good, but simple, and it has different music during the match which is its only remarkable characteristic.
The Bad
The game is simple from the beginning to the end. Just one mode, an exhibition mode and nothing more. You don't have any cup or league, play the game, win the CPU and you beat it in a simple match. The gameplay is bad too, you cannot do anything with your players beside pitching and striking. You don't need to follow the ball and catch it because the console makes it for you. Anyway the AI is really bad and you'll be frustrated many times during the game 'till you take control of the movements.
The Bottom Line
There are a hundred better baseball games than this one for the game boy system. Don't waste too much time playing this game (anyway, if you want to, you can't because you only can play just a single match...)
Game Boy · by NeoJ (398) · 2009
Discussion
Subject | By | Date |
---|---|---|
Split GB and NES? | Игги Друге (46649) | Jul 23, 2008 |
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Contributors to this Entry
Game added by Frumple.
Wii added by Corn Popper. Wii U, Arcade added by Michael Cassidy. Nintendo 3DS added by CrankyStorming. Nintendo Switch added by Kam1Kaz3NL77. Game Boy Advance added by Kartanym. NES added by Servo.
Additional contributors: Kartanym, gamewarrior, GTramp, Rik Hideto.
Game added July 15, 2001. Last modified August 2, 2024.