9 /10 1 Votes
4.5/5 Series Super Volley | 4.5/5 Composer(s) Naoki Itamura Initial release date 25 December 1992 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Genre(s) Traditional volleyball simulation Platform Super Nintendo Entertainment System Developers Video System, Paradigm Entertainment Publishers Video System, Nintendo, Ubisoft, McO'River Modes Single-player video game, Multiplayer video game Similar Video System games, Sports games |
Hyper v ball snes gameplay 1 5 complete
Hyper V-Ball - known in Japan as Super Volley 2 (スーパーバレーⅡ) - is a Super NES/Famicom volleyball video game and the fourth game of Super Volley series.
Contents

Hyper v ball review super nintendo snes
Summary

The player can use either human (men's or women's teams) or robotic volleyball players. While the human players give the game more realism, the robot players can provide special moves that can guarantee points to the player or CPU opponent that can pull them off successfully. The human teams are represented by national selections, with 12 men's teams and eight women's, plus four editable teams on each category. The human teams are as follows:

The Hyper League (made up of the robotic players) comprises eight fictional teams (Lethal Machines, Metal Breakers, Power Spikers, Turbo Force, Neo Crashers, Steel Strikers, Iron Fangs and Grooscaps), as well as four spaces for player-created teams.

This game was featured in the "sports game section" of the October 1993 issue of Nintendo Power magazine where the producer of the game McO'River was humorously confused for a new trout burger at McDonald's.
