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NCAA GameBreaker 99 is a 1998 American football video game developed by Red Zone Interactive and published by 989 Studios for the PlayStation. It was released only in North America. It was released only in North America.
The 989 Sports name developed from a long history of name changes and corporate shuffling within Sony centered around operations in Foster City, California.In August 1995, the video game business of Sony Imagesoft was merged with the product development branch of SCEA, becoming Sony Interactive Studios America (SISA) [1] In 1998, SISA was spun off from SCEA and was renamed 989 Studios.
NCAA Football Gamebreaker, also known as NCAA Gamebreaker, is a 1996 American football video game developed by Sony Interactive Studios America and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation. It was released only in North America. The cover athlete is the 1995 Heisman winning Ohio State running back Eddie George.
NCAA GameBreaker 2000 is a 1999 American football video game developed by Red Zone Entertainment and published by 989 Sports for the PlayStation. The game featured former UCLA Bruins quarterback Cade McNown on the cover.
NCAA Gamebreaker 98 has a game engine that is based on the NFL GameDay 98 engine, [2] but uses the appearance and playing styles involved in college football. [3] The game includes the Division I-A teams with their real rosters for the 1997/98 season, along with some historical teams such as the 1972 USC Gamecocks. [4]
The game received "mixed" reviews according to the review aggregation website Metacritic. [2] Dr. Zombie of GamePro said of the game, "It doesn't deserve starter status because its competition has a bigger head start with their titles, but it's definitely a big step in the right direction to contend for console dominance next year and beyond."
NFL GameDay 2001 is the sixth video game in the NFL GameDay series, and the first to be released on the PlayStation 2. It was released October 30, 2000 on the PlayStation, and November 20, 2000 on the PlayStation 2, both by 989 Sports. On the cover is Marshall Faulk. [5]
[3] [4] Dan Egger of NextGen said of the PlayStation 2 version, "Football fans would be best served by waiting until next year." [ 19 ] (Ironically, the next PlayStation 2 game was not NCAA GameBreaker 2002 but NCAA GameBreaker 2003 , which was released two years after this game.)