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Golf [a] is a video game developed and published by T&E Soft for the Virtual Boy. It was released in August 1995 in Japan and by Nintendo in November 1995 in North America. Golf uses standard golf rules and is set in the fictional 18-hole Papillion Golf & Country Club. Hazards include water, sand traps, trees, and deep rough grass.
Players can play on the golf course they have designed or play the two existing courses designed by American golf course architect Robert Trent Jones Jr. [4] The mouseswing interface lets the player use their mouse to hit the ball, and leaves the driving, chipping and putting to the player. (The traditional "power bar" option is also available ...
EA Sports PGA Tour is a sports video game developed by EA Tiburon and published by EA Sports for PlayStation 5, Windows and Xbox Series X/S. It is an entry in the EA Sports PGA Tour franchise, the first since 2015’s Rory McIlroy PGA Tour. It is also the first in the series not to bear an athlete’s name in the title since PGA Tour 98.
Jack Nicklaus 6: Golden Bear Challenge is a golf video game developed by Hypnos Entertainment and published by Activision for Microsoft Windows.It is part of a series of golfing games named after golfer Jack Nicklaus, and is the first in the series to feature him as a playable golfer.
Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2004 is a sports video game developed by EA Redwood Shores for the GameCube, PlayStation 2 and Xbox versions, Headgate Studios for the Microsoft Windows version, and Backbone Emeryville for the Game Boy Advance and N-Gage versions, and published by EA Sports for GameCube, PlayStation 2, Windows, Xbox, Game Boy Advance and N-Gage.
The game takes place in an endless side-scrolling desert, where the player can shoot a golf ball using a one finger swipe to determine direction and power. [4] The entirety of the "golf course" is made of sand, making the physics of the golf ball more difficult to predict and control, as if from a bunker. [4]
"PGA Tour Golf 486" received mixed reviews upon its release. **Next Generation** reviewed the game, giving it two stars out of five, and commented that "the near continual access delays from both the CD-ROM and unnecessary user prompts, along with a frustrating targeting system, will keep all but the most die-hard golfers from ever being entertained."
As the game progresses, more skilled caddies can give distances to various landmarks and information about how the ball is lying. The player then selects which club to use during the shot. After this, the player can adjust their golfer's stance in order to put a draw or fade on the ball (all golfers in the game are right-handed).