Ballz

Ballz

The Mega Drive cover of the game is the only one which gave a clue that it was a fighting game (pictured is the EU version; the US Genesis version says "Ballz 3D: Fighting at Its Ballziest")
Developer(s) PF Magic
Publisher(s) Accolade

3D Ballz is a two player 3D action fighting game for the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis, the Super NES (SNES) and the 3DO. It was developed by PF Magic and published by Accolade in 1994. The 3DO version was released as a director's cut in 1995. Ballz offered three difficulty levels over a total of 21 matches. Its distinguishing quality was that each of the characters were composed completely of balls, with a pseudo-3D look.

Contents

Development and publishing

The opening PF Magic developed for the game stated "To be the champion, you gotta have Ballz!" Due to its racy double-entendre ("balls" may be used as a slang term for testicles), Nintendo demanded the wording be changed for the SNES version. The SNES version of the game states, "...you gotta play Ballz," while the Sega version uses the original intro. The game was also notably bizarre for its lineup of fighters, which included a farting monkey, a jumping clown, a sumo wrestler, a caveman, a bodybuilder, a ballerina, a rhinoceros, and a "superhero".

Fighters

These are the characters in the game's lineup of fighters:

Bosses

These are the bosses who appear in One-Player mode. Each boss defeated earns a different colored belt.

Reception

Ballz did relatively poorly in the marketplace. Some attribute this to botched marketing. Accolade gave it little print advertising, but even the ads it did for the game gave little clue as to what type of game Ballz was. One just had an image of a Christmas Tree made of balls and contained the caption "Tell your mom you want Ballz for Christmas."

The box of the Ballz, which depicted just a jumbled image of numerous balls, also gave little hint of the type of game it was. Some consumers likely assumed it was some sort of Tetris clone or a similar puzzle game.

Balls was ranked seventh in a 2011 list of Top Ten Fighting Games We'd Like to Forget, compiled by Game Informer. The author of the list, Dan Ryckert, widely criticized it for including what he claimed to be "sexual innuendo" references, and having its design representing more of a 2-D look.[1]

Games in the series

See also

References

  1. ^ Ryckert, Dan. Top Ten Fighting Games We'd Like to Forget. Game Informer (April 2011). Retrieved 2011-06-02.

External links