Neha Patil (Editor)

Tennis (1981 video game)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Initial release date
  
1981

Designer
  
Alan Miller

Genre
  
Sports game

Developer
  
Activision

Publisher
  
Activision

Platform
  
Atari 2600

Tennis (1981 video game) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenaa3Act

Mode(s)
  
One player, two players

Similar
  
Alan Miller games, Sports games

Tennis is a tennis–simulation video game developed for the Atari 2600 by Activision, and published in 1981. The game was designed by Activision co-founder Alan Miller.

Contents

Activision has republished Tennis in a number of game compilations, as well as via Microsoft's Game Room service.

Gameplay

Tennis offers singles matches for one or two players; one player is colored pink, the other blue. The game has two user-selectable speed levels. When serving and returning shots, the tennis players automatically swing forehand or backhand as the situation demands, and all shots automatically clear the net and land in bounds.

The first player to win one six-game set is declared the winner of the match (if the set ends in a 6-6 tie, the set restarts from 0-0). This differs from professional tennis, in which player must win at least two out of three six-game sets.

Reception

Tennis was well received by critics, picking up an award for "Best Competitive Game" and an honorable mention for "Best Sports Game" at the 3rd annual Arkie Awards. Arkie Award judges commented that "'Tennis' is as far removed from the primitive 'Pong'-style games from which it derives as gasoline is from the dinosaurs", and specific praise was given to the game's "realistic illusion of depth" and its competitive aspects which allow for "hard fought contest[s]" and "glorious comebacks from the brink of defeat" and which give "more methodical players a chance to taste victory against the kings and queens of hand-eye coordination". Covered in Video magazine's 1982 Guide to Electronic Games, Tennis was characterized by critics as "not terribly complicated" but also as "one of the few very good sports games for the Atari VCS".

References

Tennis (1981 video game) Wikipedia