Coach K College Basketball

Coach K College Basketball is the first college basketball video game developed by EA Sports spun off from their NBA Live engine. Coach K College Basketball was released in 1995 for Sega Genesis.[2]

Coach K College Basketball
Cover art
Developer(s)Electronic Arts
Publisher(s)EA Sports[1]
Composer(s)Jeff van Dyck
Platform(s)Sega Genesis
Release
Genre(s)Sports
Mode(s)Single-player, Multiplayer

Gameplay

Endorsed by Duke head basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski, the game features 32 officially licensed teams in addition to eight classic teams.

Reception

GamePro commented in their review that "With seven trips to the tournament semifinals under his belt, Krzyzweski knows his stuff, and so does EA Sports - this game takes Dick Vitale's College Hoops to the hole", citing the numerous options, customizable rules, realistic-styled sprites, and strong voice effects.[3] The two sports reviewers of Electronic Gaming Monthly gave it scores of 8 out of 10 and 7 out of 10, praising the wide selection of teams, the multiplayer mode, and the use of plays and animations from the NBA Live engine.[4]

Next Generation reviewed the Genesis version of the game, rating it four stars out of five, and stated that "this game is easily the best attempt yet at capturing this excitement of March Madness."[5]

gollark: It says internal server error.
gollark: Aren't there standardised formats like Swagger and OpenAPI?
gollark: I don't do actual paid work, so yes.
gollark: Mine have no documentation whatsoever.
gollark: I mostly just have a mess of inconsistently styled pages since most of my stuff isn't even in the same programming language.

References

  1. Coach K College Basketball at GameFAQs
  2. Coach K College Basketball at MobyGames
  3. "Coach K and EA Sports Rank Number One". GamePro. IDG (69): 96. April 1995.
  4. "Team EGM: Coach K College Basketball (Genesis) by Electronic Arts". Electronic Gaming Monthly. Ziff Davis (68): 102. March 1995.
  5. "Finals". Next Generation. No. 5. Imagine Media. May 1995. p. 100.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.