TNN Bass Tournament of Champions

TNN Bass Tournament of Champions
Larry Nixon's Super Bass Fishing

North America cover art (Sega Genesis version)
Developer(s) American Softworks
Imagitec
Publisher(s)
Series TNN Bass Fishing
Platform(s) Super Nintendo Entertainment System
Mega Drive/Genesis
Release date(s)
Genre(s) Nature sports[1]
Mode(s) Single-player
Co-operative multiplayer
Rating(s) VRC: GA (General Audiences)
  • ESRB: E (Everyone)
Media/distribution 12-megabit cartridge

TNN Bass Tournament of Champions is a Super Nintendo Entertainment System and Mega Drive/Genesis fishing game based on the defunct Nashville Network (now known as Spike). It is known in Japan as Larry Nixon's Super Bass Fishing (ラリー・ニクソン・スーパー・バスフィッシング?).[2] It was followed by the sequel TNN Outdoors Bass Tournament '96.

Contents

Gameplay

The object of the game is to catch as much large bass as possible so that the player can advance through the tournaments and eventually win the championship.[3] The player has from sunrise to sunset to fish, thus giving him the necessary time to develop strategies related to participating in a virtual fishing derby. Changes in the season and the weather will try to impede the player's progress as he attempts to win the championship.[3]

Other fish (besides bass) can be accidentally caught as well, but they will not count towards the final score. Only bass will count towards the player's progression throughout the game. During the 1990s, this game attracted rural and suburban teenagers (who usually ignored The Nashville Network's more bucolic-oriented shows like The Real McCoys and the Grand Ole Opry).

Reason for name change

While Larry Nixon was a notable professional fisherman in his own right, the Nashville Network picked up sponsorship for the North American version of the game and dropped an individual's endorsement for the sponsorship of a then-rural oriented cable television channel. The Japanese (Larry Nixon's Super Bass Fishing) version was sponsored by the Nippon Bass Club.

References

External links