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Virtua Tennis 2

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Virtua Tennis 2
European Dreamcast cover art
Developer(s)Hitmaker
Publisher(s)Sega
Acclaim Entertainment (Europe, PS2)
Director(s)Katsumoto Tatsukawa
SeriesVirtua Tennis
Platform(s)Arcade
Dreamcast
PlayStation 2
ReleaseArcade
2001
Dreamcast
  • NA: October 24, 2001
  • JP: November 15, 2001
  • EU: November 23, 2001
PlayStation 2
  • NA: July 30, 2002
  • JP: November 7, 2002
  • EU: November 29, 2002
Genre(s)Sports
Mode(s)Single player, multiplayer

Virtua Tennis 2 (known as Tennis 2K2 in North America and Power Smash 2 in Japan) is a sequel to Virtua Tennis that was released for the Sega Dreamcast, Sega NAOMI arcade unit and Sony's PlayStation 2 (known as Sega Sports Tennis in North America) in 2001. New features included the ability to slice and play as female players such as Monica Seles, Serena Williams, Venus Williams and Lindsay Davenport and the males such as Patrick Rafter, Magnus Norman, Thomas Enqvist and Carlos Moya and mixed doubles matches. The game was created and produced by Hitmaker, with Acclaim Entertainment publishing it in Europe for the PS2. This was the last Virtua Tennis game to be released for the Dreamcast following its discontinuation.

Game Modes

Candy crush game Chess Kabaddi

Exhibition

This is a single match in which the options are customizable.

World Tour

This is the main mode of the game. For the first time in the Virtua Tennis series, the World Tour mode features yearly based and calendarized seasons. Users have to play and win tournaments throughout the seasons, as well as to complete training exercises, in order to progress. Also, unlike any other Virtua Tennis game in the series, the World Tour mode on Virtua Tennis 2 requires the user to play and train both a male and a female players simultaneously, who can also team up to play in mixed doubles tournaments. The user enters with a rank of 300th for both male and female players, which improves as matches and tournaments are won. In addition, the players' abilities can be improved by completing different training exercises. The focus of the training exercises are to be fun, rather than realistic. Each exercise has four levels, with the difficulty increasing progressively. By completing the hardest difficulty with a certain amount of time left or points scored, an outfit is unlocked, which players can wear in all modes.

Reception

On release, Famitsu magazine scored the Dreamcast version of the game a 31 out of 40.[3] On Metacritic the Dreamcast version got 90%,[4] and the PS2 version got 83%.[5]

References

  1. ^ Kristan Reed (2012-11-19). "Virtua Tennis 2". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2018-01-14.
  2. ^ Ryan Davis (2001-10-24). "Sega Sports Tennis 2K2 Review". GameSpot. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2018-01-14.
  3. ^ ドリームキャスト - POWER SMASH 2. Weekly Famitsu. No.915 Pt.2. Pg.54. 2006-06-30.
  4. ^ "Tennis 2K2". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2018-01-14.
  5. ^ "Sega Sports Tennis". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2018-01-14.