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Olympic Summer Games

Moby ID: 20307
Game Boy Specs
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Description

Olympic Summer Games is the 16-bit official videogame of the 1996 Olympic Games held in Atlanta, the third and the last IOC official title to be released on the console. A typical button masher, includes 10 events (100m sprint, 110m hurdles, pole vault, long jump, triple jump, javelin, high jump, discus, skeet and archery) and 32 countries around the world compete in custom or full Olympics, or just practice. Two players can compete head to head in the sprinting events, and a total of eight can play in the same game. Three difficulty levels allow competitive events for both rookies to veterans in the genre.

Sprinting events are a short and straight button mashing frenzy. 4 athletes compete simultaneously, the first winner advancing to the next round (two qualifiers and then the medal run). Only fast fingers and quick shotgun reaction can earn world record times.

Jumping events are a mix of shorter button mashing bursts combined with timely pressed jumps. From the straight forward high and long jump events (run and then set the jump angle) to the more elaborate triple jump (as the name suggests, three jumps must be carefully measured for world class results) and the complex pole vault, where a strong run must be followed by a sharp pole fixation and good a release upwards. Both long jump and triple jump have a first round composed by three jumps, the better eight progress into the second round, where they are given three more jumps. In the high jump and pole vault the competition continues until all athletes miss three consecutive jumps.

The throwing events (discus and javelin) work in the same fashion as the jumping events, although trickier to pull, as the setting of the angle must be followed by a timely release. Each player is entitled to three throws, the top eight allowed three more attempts.

Finally, the shooting events. Archery is a three-round competition where the goal is to amass as many points as possible by shooting at the inner rings of the target. With six arrows per round, each shot must be calculated according to the wind, choosing between steady aim and lower tension (must be aimed upwards and compensating the wind) or higher tension but a jumpy aim (can be aimed directly at the "gold" points). Skeet is a five round competition where the goal is to hit five clay pigeons before they disappear off-screen with two slugs for each.

Groups +

Screenshots

Credits (Game Boy version)

18 People

Vice President of Product Development
Executive Producer
Senior Producer
Producer
Testing Department
Producer
Associate Producer
Programming
Graphics
Music
Testing

Reviews

Critics

Average score: 63% (based on 10 ratings)

Players

Average score: 2.3 out of 5 (based on 8 ratings with 1 reviews)

Could be better, but could be a lot worse

The Good
Graphically the game is OKish. While the running track only has four lanes, each one of the 32 nations has it's own colours, and to top things up, each competitor has its own name. However, this doesn't work as well as in Olympic Gold, where you could expect some of the athletes to perform better on some events and worse on others, but it still remains the last (Nagano'98 is too dire to be mentioned) where your opponents aren't "USA1" or "Computer 3", which has to be worthy of mention. The medal ceremony is well designed, but visually is lacking a bit.

The competition is well also organized. In running competitions, there are two heats and the final, in jumping events, three qualifying jumps and three more for the top eight. Nothing to point fingers at here.

The Bad
Considering the game was released already very late into the console life, I'd expect the game would feature some kind of battery save for the World and Olympic records. It doesn't, so it's pen and paper time again for the records.

The variety and balance of events is also at stake.Out of the 10 events, 8 belong in athletics, leaving two shooting events. I know the athletics are the core of the Summer Olympics, but they are the biggest display of sports in the whole world. Swimming, gymnastics, track cycling, rowing or weightlifting are all events that would have improved the overall experience of the game, and were already featured in one way or the other in the past. Some of the events are also quite unbalanced. The high jump and pole vault are a bit of "hit or miss" events, while in the discus throw - even without any effort - it's possible to reach a 73.55 mark, enough for an Olympic record. Others, like the skeet shooting, suffer from being terribly basic. There's only one position and five skeets on each round, for a total of five. It isn't hard to guess how the difficulty level affects top competitors - In hard they hit all 5, in medium 4 and easy 3. Medal ceremonies here can take more than than some competitions, with sometimes 5 or 6 bronze medal winners.

A final note, making such a game is pretty much a matter of transmitting the Olympic experience. Sadly, a mockup mosaic and a "laser show" for opening and closing ceremonies does a pretty bad job at it. The game is also very poor when it comes to sounds and music - tunes aren't all that inspiring and sounds are pretty much average.

The Bottom Line
While Olympic Summer Games does not offer that much when compared to other button mashers, and does a even worse job at showcasing the Olympics, it gets some extra points for having the two qualifying stages in running and the three extra attempts in long/triple jump/discus/javelin throw.

It pretty much shouts "average" at most times, so it you can rest assured that there's nothing here to be seen that wasn't done before.

Genesis · by Luis Silva (13443) · 2006

Trivia

Athlete names

Quite a few of the names used by athletes in this game were originally used in another game developed by Tiertex for U.S. Gold a couple of years before: World Cup USA '94.

Bugs

Due to some sloppiness while coding the game, it is impossible to break two records: archery and skeet. On the other hand, breaking the Olympic record in Discus throw is quite trivial and can be done without any major effort.

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  • MobyGames ID: 20307
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Contributors to this Entry

Game added by Luis Silva.

SNES, Game Boy added by Charly2.0.

Additional contributors: Alaka.

Game added December 7, 2005. Last modified September 13, 2023.