If you're into action-oriented baseball games, chances
are you're already a fan of the Triple Play series. Even the original 2D
Triple Play 97 was one of the most enjoyable arcade-style baseball games
around. Last year, Triple Play 98 got even better, with 3D polygonal players,
stunning visuals, and improved gameplay. TP 98 was plagued by annoying
bugs, however, and many fans have been looking forward to this year's version
in the hopes that an even better, bug-free Triple Play would step up to
the plate. Well, the good news is that Triple Play 99 does deliver many
notable improvements, including 3D hardware support, career mode, and a
full-league draft. The bad news is that this year's version comes complete
with its own set of annoying bugs.
As the game loads and you hear the looping John
Fogerty-style theme music begin, you'll see that Triple Play 99 supports
the usual lineup of gameplay options: Single-game exhibition, home run
derby, play-off, tournament, and season (15, 30, 60, or 162 games) are
all available. Additionally, you can play TP 99 in career mode, which allows
you to string together multiple seasons. Tournament mode is kind of neat:
It lets you put together a custom single-elimination or mini-season competition
between two to eight teams.
Possibly the game's best new feature, TP 99's
full-league draft allows you to dump all Major League players into a pool
then build up a team from scratch. Unlike NBA Live 98, which also has a
draft feature, TP 99 imposes a "trade point" cap on each team during the
draft. Each team gets 1875 points to spend on the draft, and each player
is worth a certain amount of points (Roger Clemens is worth 93 points,
Mark Langston is worth 63). So you can't simply take all the best layers
- you have to balance your team's skill level and point allocation wisely.
During the season, you also have to monitor your points when you want to
trade for better players. Trading Devon White for Ken Griffey Jr., for
example, sucked up 150 of my 300 total trade points.
The game also offers a decent array of multiplayer
options. You can play head-to-head over modem, LAN, and Internet. Yes,
that's right, you can play TP 99 over the Internet, but only in manager
mode, which is practically a story in itself. The manager mode lets you
sit back and control the game with your brain instead of your thumbs. You
have complete control over your team and can track a wealth of statistics
through a series of collapsible windows. Hard-core baseball purists will
welcome the new option, though I'm not convinced that this feature alone
will convert too many anti-arcade baseball fans.
TP 99 offers four basic difficulty levels, with
a great selection of adjustable settings for each (such as "computer-assisted
fielding"). Triple Play veterans should welcome the new difficulty levels,
as the game's highest difficulty setting is not nearly as easy as it has
been in the past. Basic gameplay is largely unchanged from last year, though
EA Sports revamped the baserunning commands. The new controls are a bit
simpler, but I really didn't find them very reliable in some instances.
I
often had a hell of a time trying to convince
my lead runner to advance. Apart from that, most of the controls are the
same, which is basically a good thing.
The Triple Play franchise has always been known
for its graphics, and this year's version looks awfully good. To be honest,
however, the player graphics are basically the same as last year's version
- they just look a little smoother now with 3D acceleration. The game seems
to have a number of new player animations, including several off-balance
throws and some really nice collisions. Also, you'll notice several new
camera angles, some of which automatically come into play when you make
a routine throw to first or try to pick off a runner. My favorite new angle
is the "home run strut" view, which gives you a ground-level view of any
monster shot that carries over 420 feet. Another new feature is the option
to bat from a first-person perspective. This is sure to get more hype than
it deserves, but it is kind of fun to play with in the Home Run Derby mode.
You'll find it damn hard to hit anything using this perspective, but it's
good for a laugh.
The game's play-by-play commentary - once again
supplied by Jim Hughson and Buck Martinez - is as enjoyable and humorous
as ever. The play-by-play seems a bit more accurate than it was in last
year's version, though some plays are still called twice. Also, Martinez
offers more context-sensitive information this time around and the sponsor
messages are even funnier than they were last year.
The game tracks a healthy array of statistics,
which should make any serious baseball fan happy. However, the interface
for viewing these stats is just plain awful and involves far too much repetitive
scrolling to see simple items, such as a pitcher's energy rating.
As with most EA Sports titles, Triple Play 99
suffers from a number of bugs. For starters, the game refused to work properly
with my Creative 3D Blaster Voodoo2 card. The game loaded and I could actually
play, but there was no sound at all. When I disabled 3D acceleration, the
game ran fine (EA Sports is aware of this problem and a patch should be
available soon). Other annoying bugs included a consistent baserunning
glitch that had me fuming. For some reason, base runners - after reaching
second and stopping safely - will suddenly lunge for third even when the
second baseman is standing on the bag with the ball in his glove. Needless
to say, it led to a number of needless outs. My only consolation was that
the computer teams did it too.
TP 99 also seems a bit overzealous when it comes
to scoring errors. Some very obvious base hits were scored as errors on
the pitcher, while others went to the nearest outfielder. I once saw the
computer team's second baseman field the ball in the infield and throw
it directly to the left fielder - despite the fact that the only play was
at first base.
Finally, there is one bizarre graphics glitch
that just seems too sloppy for EA: Most Major League pitchers have their
names cut off on their jerseys. Mark Portugal, for example, is simply "Portug."
True, this has no impact whatsoever on gameplay, but for a game that built
its reputation on graphics first and gameplay second, it is quite odd.
Despite the bucket of bugs, Triple Play 99 is
a better game than it was last year, when it was arguably the best baseball
game on the market.TP 99 will face some serious competition this year from
Hardball 6 and Microsoft's debut diamond title, but it seems to be solid
enough to hold its own. With a few bug fixes, TP 99 could be a repeat champion.
FEATURES
Real Baseball, All Highlights. EA SPORTS' Triple
Play 99 delivers all the action of a Major League Baseball highlight reel
that you control. Blast a game-winning home run. Dive for a sinking line
drive. Strike out the world's best.
*FIRST PERSON Point Of View batting. Immerse yourself in the Major Leagues™
like never
before.
* Real Offensive, Defensive, & Manager AI
*Real Stats tracking, over 1300 stats for each player
* Life-Like Player Graphics and motion: All new moves that you control
*Career mode: take your team through multiple seasons
*Fantasy Draft
*Unprecedented Stadium Graphics & Detail: real stadium architecture
and textures taken
from all the actual stadiums.
*Major League Baseball™ license - All the TEAMS
*MLBPA license - All the Players
*Complete 3-D Baseball Environment
*6 Game modes: Exhibition, Home Run Derby, Tournament, All Star™, Playoff,
& Full Season
(Choose between 15, 30, 60, or 162 game schedule)
*All 30 MLB™ stadiums - unprecedented realism
*3Dfx accelerator card compatible
*1998 Team Schedule and rosters
*2 Home Run Derby™ modes: NEW "Tournament" mode
*Expansion Teams & Drafts - Devil Rays, and DiamondBacks
*"Living Stadium Sound" makes you feel like your at the game
*Two Man Booth, plus Stadium Announcers - Color Commentary by Buck Martinez
and Play
by Play by Jim Hughson
*Create and Edit Players
*Atmospheric conditions affect ball physics and game play
*Compete against up to 30 people in Internet season play
*Up-loadable PC user "records" - www.easports.com top 10 players for season
stats (See
product reference card for details)
*Up-loadable PC "Highlights of the week": The top 5 user highlights will
be shown on
www.easports.com each week
*PC Network Play - LAN, Modem, Internet!!
*8 Player Multi-Play
SCREEN-SHOTS
