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Unlike games, set scores are counted in the ordinary manner (1, 2, 3, etc.), except that the state of having won zero games is called "love". The score is called at the end of each game, with the leading player's score first (e.g. "A leads 3–2"), or as "X–all". When a player wins a set, it is called as "game and first set", "game and second ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Tennis Masters Series is a 2001 tennis video game from Microids. ... GameSpot gave the game a score of 5.9 out of 10' stating: ...
Amiga Format called the game "an impressive-looking and polished tennis simulation". [8] Zero didn't like the overhead view because the player can see only three quarters of the court, the reviewer concluded: "This strange perspective combined with a really dodgy soundtrack means that despite some good features Tie Break doesn't quite make the grade."
Tennis (1981 video game) Tennis (1984 video game) Tennis Arena; Tennis Cup; Tennis Elbow (video game) Tennis for Two; Tennis Master; Tennis World Tour; Tie Break (video game) Top Players' Tennis; Top Rank Tennis; Top Spin (video game) Top Spin 2; Top Spin 3; Top Spin 4; TopSpin 2K25
ATP Tour is the main mode of the game, starts with the user creating a player and customizing attributes such as birth date, nationality, height, weight, and gameplay-related such as making the player right or left-handed, and choosing two moves for backhand and forehand each. Once the game starts, the user is placed at the bottom of the rankings.
While Pete Sampras Tennis uses all three control pad buttons, the game play remains simple yet realistic, for its time. While serving, the A button sends the ball automatically, and B allows the player to control the ball speed and direction, and is the only way to score aces against the best players.
Davis Cup Tennis (known in Europe as Davis Cup) is a 2002 tennis video game for the Game Boy Advance developed by Hokus Pokus Games and published by Ubisoft.. In the game's two game modes, the player assumes control of either a tennis player during a single match or an entire country's team in the Davis Cup, an international competition.
Before the game starts, players have to name their character, a first for an Atari 2600 game, [6] and choose between one and two player mode and the two pre-set difficulty levels ("slow" and "fast"). In the game, one player with a blue shirt plays tennis against an AI enemy portrayed by a non-player character (NPC) with a red shirt. In the two ...