Neha Patil (Editor)

Champion Baseball

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Release date(s)
  
1983

Initial release date
  
1983

Genre
  
Sports game

Developers
  
Sega, ADK

Cabinet
  
Upright

Publisher
  
Sega

Platforms
  
Arcade game, SG-1000, MSX

Mode(s)
  
Up to 2 players, alternating turns

Arcade system
  
CPU: Z80 3.072 MHz and AY-8910 sound chip

Display
  
Raster resolution 256 x 224 (Horizontal)

Similar
  
ADK games, Sports games

Arcade game champion baseball 1 2 1983 alpha denshi co sega license


Champion Baseball (チャンピオン ベースボール) is a 1983 baseball arcade game developed by Alpha Denshi and published by Sega. The game was a sophisticated sports game for its time, displaying the playfield using multiple camera angles, including a close-up shot of the batter and pitcher, and giving players the option of selecting relief pitchers or pinch hitters, while an umpire looks on attentively to make the game calls. The game became very popular in Japanese arcades when released in 1983, at one point enjoying a level of popularity comparable to Space Invaders according to Sega.

Contents

1983 sega champion baseball up right arcade game


Gameplay

The player controls a baseball team, against a computer-controlled team, with the player batting at the top of each inning. In a two-player game, each will play independently against the computer, one inning at a time. Standard baseball rules apply, with the player awarded points for various accomplishments such as hitting a pitch, safely reaching any base, pitching a strike, getting a computer player out, or retiring the computer's side to end an inning.

Before play begins, the player can choose which city/state to represent from a list containing Los Angeles, Cincinnati, Atlanta, Pittsburg (probably a typo for Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania), Chicago, Montreal, St. Louis, Boston, Milwaukee, New York City, California and Texas (all of whom had major-league baseball franchises in 1983). The computer then randomly selects from among the remaining cities.

If at any time the computer team has scored more runs than the player, the game immediately ends. The high-scores list ("FAR OUT PLAYERS") can hold the initials of up to six players.

Sequels

Champion Baseball II was released the same year, with identical graphics but allowing two players to compete directly with each other. Another sequel titled Super Champion Baseball was released in 1989.

References

Champion Baseball Wikipedia