NHL 99

NHL 99

Cover art featuring Eric Lindros
Developer(s) EA Canada
Publisher(s) EA Sports
Series NHL series
Platform(s) Nintendo 64, PlayStation, Microsoft Windows
Release date(s) PlayStation, Windows
  • NA September 30, 1998
  • PAL 1998
Nintendo 64
  • NA October 1, 1998
  • PAL November 30, 1998
Genre(s) Sports - Ice Hockey Sim
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer, multiplayer online
Distribution CD
Reception
Aggregate scores
AggregatorScore
GameRankings88.1%
Review scores
PublicationScore
GameSpot8.4/10
IGN9/10
PlayStation Magazine8/10[1]
PlayStation Power74%[2]

NHL 99 is an ice hockey video game developed by Electronic Arts Canada. It was released on September 28, 1998 and was the successor to NHL 98. The game boasted great improvements to the game from NHL 98. However the next two editions features small improvements from this game thus making this game similar to NHL 2000 and NHL 2001.

Features

Starting with NHL 99 up to NHL 2001 there were very few large 'improvements' to the game, though some would call them regressions. NHL 99 for the PlayStation boasted higher-resolution graphics than NHL 98, but the framerate and unresponsive controls (especially in 2+ player modes) hindered its playability. A career mode (later developed into a Franchise mode) with a retirement feature, drafting, and player trades were added to the game. Furthermore, created players can use any photo for their face which is textured onto the head. Online leagues of the game also became more organized. Daryl Reaugh left the series as color commentator following NHL 99. Jim Hughson remained as play-by-play announcer in the game. In the Nintendo 64 version of NHL 99, based on the console version of NHL 98 (old-style goalie crease and all), Bill Clement is the only one providing commentary.

Intro

The introduction features various highlights from the previous season accompanied by Heroes by David Bowie.

Soundtrack

NHL 1999 Soundtrack
Artist Song
David Bowie "Heroes"
Gravity Kills "Guilty"
Noise Therapy "Down"
Jeff van Dyck (Various tracks)

References

  1. NHL 99 review, Official UK PlayStation Magazine, Future Publishing issue 39, November 1998
  2. PlayStation Power #33 (December 1998), p. 122