Power Serve 3D Tennis

PSX PlayStation Power Serve 3D Tennis Clear Case Saturn Style Long Box Release

Clear Case Long Box Release

Genre:
Tennis
CDs:
1
Publisher:
Ocean
Released:
August 31, 1995
Developer:
SPS
UPC:
0 20295 14005 2
Sony ID:
SLUS-00105
PSRM:
000810
Players:
1 to 2 Players
Memory:
1 Block
Accessories:
None
ESRB:
Kids to Adults No Descriptors
Box Copy:

See how your PlayStation performs on the court.

Grab a racket and experience virtual tennis how it was meant to be played. Boasting the most advanced 3D game design ever seen on a sport title, Power Serve 3D Tennis utilizes the full potential of the PlayStation console’s powerful new generation technology – to deliver a benchmark event in interactive sporting.

Large, life-like players put you right on the court. Smooth, full motion character movement allows you free 360 degree mobility. A.I. motivated competitors keep you at the top of your game.

 

 

 

 

 

Variants

  • There are no known variants.

 

 

Misprints

  • There are no known misprints.

 

 

 

 

Review

Video game tennis has always been an enigma to me – I mean, for all intents and purposes, Pong’s first day on the job nailed it, right? The rest is essentially just graphical upgrades.

Which brings us to Power Serve 3D Tennis.  An early released Japanese game originally called “Ground Stroke: Advanced Tennis Game”, Ocean brings it over to the United States as a Day 1 release with…laughable results.

Before we get into anything else, let’s get the one true shining moment out of the way; Power Serve 3D Tennis has one of the highest resolution settings I have ever encountered on a PlayStation 1 game. Our screen captures, done through an HDMI upscaler, really do not do it justice. The game is bright, vivid, and wickedly sharp. Regretfully this is all on a game where there is a maximum of 4 characters and a net on-screen, so it’s obvious they had some processing power to play with. This leads into some nice minor details like the lettering on the tennis racket netting or the decorative pattern holes on the one female’s skirt. The downside is that there are so few polygons the player gets to clearly see rackets behind hands and shoulders going through chins, but it’s a small price to pay to see everything so vividly.

Power Serve is fairly sparse on the options and almost everything else the player could think of. To put this in perspective, we’ll compare it to another launch era tennis game – Super Tennis on the Super Nintendo.

Both games feature Singles or Doubles Play, the option to play on Hard, Grass, or Clay, and offer a top-down view of the action. Here’s where Power Serve completely falls apart to its predecessor as Super Tennis also throws in a Circuit (Campaign) mode, more than double the characters, an animated crowd, and even has net-side ball retrievers that really go and grab the ball.  Back in Power Serve, there’s just your players that animate and not much else.

To their credit, Ocean did try to make the game special with the camera angles, but aside from the top-down view, the rest make the game more unplayable than it already is, which I’ll cover in a second. The default view is a not-quite first person romp that gives the player no reaction time to the volleys. From here, the player gets various split screen choices that only add to the confusion and reduce your viewing angle. Just pause the game, set it to the final camera angle, and never look back.

Once that’s out of the way, the final nail in the racket is the actual control. All they would have needed would be to assign the 4 (Forehand, Backhand, Volley, and Overhead) types of swings to each of the 4 thumb buttons and call it a day. Instead, there are overlapped button assignments, directional holds, and even two step combinations. Granted, I’d have more to talk about here, but after 2 hours of not being able to actually hit the ball, I gave up on the game.

Sadly, there is just no consistent way to approach or even hit the ball. After 2 hours, I had all of 3 total points (as in points, not actually winning a round or match) and nothing but whiffs to show for it. I used all 8 players, tried all the various button presses, and all three courts, and no matter what happened the ball sailed passed me, through me, under the racket or just past the racket. I lost the first 3 sets with straight zeroes across the board. I even tried doubles to help alleviate half the space to cover, and still never got to the ball in time.

To put this all in perspective, one only needs to understand the reasoning behind the ‘Laughable’ descriptor for the review. By default it was meant to illustrate a game so bad the player couldn’t help but laugh at it. When it comes to Power Serve 3D Tennis, it’s more laughing at yourself for not realizing how much you could suck at a game no matter how hard you try, and then laughing at having tried for hours.

Leave this one to the long box and full set collectors. 

 

The Good

  • Early graphics are surprisingly sharp and vibrant

The Bad

  • Poor controls
  • No real options
  • Doubles is with CPU players only, no multi-tap support.
Final Score: 3 – Laughable

For such a strong visual presentation, Power Serve ends up serving one of the earliest bargain bin games on the PlayStation. For complete set / subset hunters and tennis collectors only.

 

 

 

Screenshots

 

Videos

 

 

 

Trivia

  • Released a week prior to the system launch.
  • The first ever tennis game for the system.
  • All characters seem to be based / referenced from real life players. For example, Andy Legacy’s name and bio could be referenced to Andre Agassi.
  • Ocean only released two games for the US PlayStation: Power Serve Tennis and Tunnel B1.
  • One of the very few titles to have artwork underneath the PlayStation font.
  • One of the few long boxes to have no known variants.
  • Copy writers take note: If you launch a game prior to a system coming out, NEVER EVER have the phrase “utilizes the full potential of [system]”. It’s cheesy, not true, and if this was the farthest a $300 system could go, I wouldn’t have bought it.

 

 

Comments are closed.