MLBPA Baseball

MLBPA Baseball
Fighting Baseball

Cover art of MLBPA Baseball
Developer(s) High Score Productions
Visual Concepts (SNES)[1]
Beam Software (Game Gear)
Publisher(s)
Director(s) Happy Keller [1]
Platform(s) Super Famicom
Mega Drive/Genesis
Sega Game Gear
Release date(s)
Genre(s) Sports (professional baseball)
Mode(s) Single-player
multiplayer
Rating(s)
  • CERO: n/a (not rated)
  • ESRB: n/a (not rated)

MLBPA Baseball, known in Japan as Fighting Baseball (ファイティングベースボール Faitingu Besuboru?, "Fighting Baseball")[2], is a baseball video game for the Super NES, Mega Drive/Genesis, and Game Gear.

Contents

Summary

The game included the 1993 season's major league players and stats thanks to its MLBPA license, but could not use team names for lack of an MLB license. The game got around this by using the city names of each team with matching colors, and using terms "A League", "N League", and "The Series". Players are allowed to play a single game (with the default teams being Philadelphia at Toronto, the 1993 league champs), a full season based on the 1994 schedule (with wins and losses recorded by password in the SNES version, battery back-up for Genesis), playoffs, and a World Series. Though the full season mode is based on the 1994 schedule, it does NOT include the new (and current) three divisions/wild card format introduced for the 1994 season; instead it uses the old two division (per league) format.

Couched in what the packaging billed as "huge arcade style graphics," games could be played on either natural or artificial grass (depending on the home team) during day or night. The game also featured scoreboard animations for double and triple plays, home runs, grand slams, pitching changes, pinch hitters, and sometimes strike outs.

The SNES version is the first ever baseball video game to include the Atlanta Braves' distinctive Tomahawk Chop theme song, which is actually advertised on the back of the game box.

See also: other 1994 baseball games

External links

References