NBA Jam

NBA Jam
NBA Jam
NBA Jam arcade promotional flyer
Developer(s) Midway
Publisher(s) Midway
Composer(s) Jon Hey
Platform(s) Arcade,
Super Nintendo Entertainment System,
Sega Genesis,
Sega CD,
Game Boy,
Sega Game Gear,
Wii
Release date(s) 1993
Genre(s) Sports
Mode(s) Up to 4 players simultaneously
Cabinet Upright
Arcade system Midway T Unit
Display Raster, horizontal orientation, 400x254 resolution

NBA Jam is a basketball arcade game developed by Midway in 1993. It is the first entry in the NBA Jam series, and was written entirely in assembly language.[1] The main designer and programmer for this game was Mark Turmell.[2][3] The release of NBA Jam gave rise to a new genre of sports games which were based around fast, action-packed gameplay and exaggerated realism, a formula which Midway would also later apply to the sports of football (NFL Blitz), hockey (2 on 2 Open Ice Challenge), baseball (MLB Slugfest), and professional wrestling (WWF WrestleMania: The Arcade Game).

Contents

History

Midway had previously released such sports games as Arch Rivals in 1989, High Impact in 1990, and Super High Impact in 1991. The gameplay of NBA Jam is based on the aforementioned Arch Rivals, another 2-on-2 basketball video game. However, it was the release of NBA Jam that brought mainstream success to the genre.

The game became exceptionally popular, and generated a significant amount of money for arcades after its release, largely because of the fairly expensive prices for game play. The typical cost to play a full game of NBA Jam in the United States ranged from $1.00 to $2.00. Nonetheless, the game was a smash hit. The original arcade release generated revenue of $1 billion in quarters.[3]

Gameplay

The game employed an exaggerated, over-the-top style, demonstrated by the player dunking from superhuman heights.

NBA Jam, which featured 2-on-2 basketball, is one of the first real playable basketball arcade games, and is also one of the first sports games to feature NBA-licensed teams and players, and their real digitized likenesses.

A key feature of NBA Jam is the exaggerated nature of the play - players jump many times above their own height, making slam dunks that defied both human capabilities and the laws of physics. There are no fouls, free throws, or violations except goaltending and 24 second violations. This meant the player is able to freely shove or elbow his opponent out of the way. Additionally, the game has an "on fire" feature, where if one player makes three baskets in a row, he becomes "on fire" and has unlimited turbo, no goaltending, and increased shooting ability, until the other team scores (or the player has scored four consecutive baskets while "on fire").

The game is filled with easter eggs, special features and players activated by initials or button/joystick combinations. For example, pressing A five times and right five times on any Sega Genesis controller would activate "Super Clean Floors". This feature would cause characters to fall if they ran too fast or changed direction too quickly. And players can enter special codes to unlock hidden players, ranging from US President Bill Clinton to Hugo the Charlotte Hornets mascot. Early versions of the sequel, NBA Jam Tournament Edition, allows players to put in codes that allow people to play as characters from Mortal Kombat, but the NBA, uneasy over the controversies surrounding Mortal Kombat's levels of violence, forced Midway to remove these characters in later updates.

Featured teams and players

The original arcade version of NBA Jam features team rosters from the 1992-93 NBA season and the console versions use rosters from the 1993-94 NBA season. More up-to-date rosters were available in subsequent ports released for the Sega CD, Game Boy, and Game Gear in 1994. Midway did not secure the license to use Michael Jordan's name or likeness (as Jordan himself owns the rights to his name and likeness, and not the NBA), and as such he was not available as a player for the Chicago Bulls or any other team. Other notable absences from the home versions are Gary Payton and Shaquille O'Neal, the latter conspicuous considering his appearance on the arcade version as a member of the Orlando Magic. New Jersey Nets guard Dražen Petrović and Boston Celtics forward Reggie Lewis, both of whom died after the release of the arcade version, were also removed from the home versions.

Note: Some home console versions of NBA Jam were coded later than others, and as a result of real-life roster changes or in the cases of Charles Barkley and Shaquille O'Neal, legal reasons, some rosters differ from version to version.

Eastern Conference

Team Arcade SNES/Genesis Sega CD Game Boy Game Gear
Atlanta Hawks Dominique Wilkins and Stacey Augmon Dominique Wilkins and Stacey Augmon Stacey Augmon and Mookie Blaylock Stacey Augmon and Mookie Blaylock Dominique Wilkins and Stacey Augmon
Boston Celtics Reggie Lewis and Kevin McHale Dee Brown and Robert Parish Dee Brown and Dominique Wilkins Dee Brown and Dominique Wilkins Dee Brown and Robert Parish
Charlotte Hornets Larry Johnson and Kendall Gill Larry Johnson and Alonzo Mourning Larry Johnson and Alonzo Mourning Larry Johnson and Alonzo Mourning Larry Johnson and Alonzo Mourning
Chicago Bulls Scottie Pippen and Horace Grant Scottie Pippen and Horace Grant Scottie Pippen and B.J. Armstrong Scottie Pippen and Horace Grant Scottie Pippen and Horace Grant
Cleveland Cavaliers Mark Price and Brad Daugherty Mark Price and Brad Daugherty Mark Price and Brad Daugherty Mark Price and Brad Daugherty Mark Price and Brad Daugherty
Detroit Pistons Isiah Thomas and Bill Laimbeer Isiah Thomas and Bill Laimbeer Terry Mills and Joe Dumars Terry Mills and Joe Dumars Isiah Thomas and Bill Laimbeer
Indiana Pacers Reggie Miller and Detlef Schrempf Reggie Miller and Derrick McKey Reggie Miller and Rik Smits Reggie Miller and Rik Smits Reggie Miller and Derrick McKey
Milwaukee Bucks Brad Lohaus and Blue Edwards Brad Lohaus and Blue Edwards Vin Baker and Eric Murdock Vin Baker and Eric Murdock Brad Lohaus and Blue Edwards
Miami Heat Rony Seikaly and Glen Rice Rony Seikaly and Harold Miner Rony Seikaly and Glen Rice Rony Seikaly and Glen Rice Rony Seikaly and Harold Miner
New Jersey Nets Derrick Coleman and Dražen Petrović1 Derrick Coleman and Kenny Anderson Derrick Coleman and Kenny Anderson Derrick Coleman and Kenny Anderson Derrick Coleman and Kenny Anderson
New York Knicks Patrick Ewing and Charles Oakley Patrick Ewing and John Starks Patrick Ewing and John Starks Patrick Ewing and John Starks Patrick Ewing and John Starks
Orlando Magic Shaquille O'Neal2 and Scott Skiles Nick Anderson and Scott Skiles Nick Anderson and Penny Hardaway Nick Anderson and Penny Hardaway Nick Anderson and Scott Skiles
Philadelphia 76ers Hersey Hawkins and Jeff Hornacek Clarence Weatherspoon and Jeff Hornacek Clarence Weatherspoon and Jeff Malone Clarence Weatherspoon and Jeff Malone Clarence Weatherspoon and Jeff Hornacek
Washington Bullets Tom Gugliotta and Harvey Grant Tom Gugliotta and Harvey Grant Tom Gugliotta and Calbert Cheaney Tom Gugliotta and Calbert Cheaney Tom Gugliotta and Harvey Grant

1Dražen Petrović was killed in a car crash between the release of the arcade version and the home ports. NBA Jam is said to be haunted by Petrović, due to a bug causing his last name to be randomly called out by the announcer.[4]

2Shaquille O'Neal appears only in the arcade version because his likeness was no longer licensed by the NBA by the time the home console versions were developed, and the cost was too high to include him in the game (much like Michael Jordan).

Western Conference

Team Arcade SNES/Genesis Sega CD Game Boy Game Gear
Dallas Mavericks Derek Harper and Mike Iuzzolino Derek Harper and Jim Jackson Jim Jackson and Jamal Mashburn Jim Jackson and Jamal Mashburn Derek Harper and Jim Jackson
Denver Nuggets Dikembe Mutombo and LaPhonso Ellis Dikembe Mutombo and LaPhonso Ellis Dikembe Mutombo and Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf Dikembe Mutombo and Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf Dikembe Mutombo and LaPhonso Ellis
Golden State Warriors Tim Hardaway and Chris Mullin Tim Hardaway and Chris Mullin Chris Webber and Latrell Sprewell Chris Webber and Latrell Sprewell Tim Hardaway and Chris Mullin
Houston Rockets Hakeem Olajuwon and Kenny Smith Hakeem Olajuwon and Vernon Maxwell Hakeem Olajuwon and Vernon Maxwell Hakeem Olajuwon and Vernon Maxwell Hakeem Olajuwon and Vernon Maxwell
Los Angeles Clippers Danny Manning and Ron Harper Danny Manning and Ron Harper Pooh Richardson and Ron Harper Pooh Richardson and Ron Harper Danny Manning and Ron Harper
Los Angeles Lakers Vlade Divac and James Worthy Vlade Divac and James Worthy Vlade Divac and Nick Van Exel Vlade Divac and Nick Van Exel Vlade Divac and James Worthy
Minnesota Timberwolves Christian Laettner and Chuck Person Christian Laettner and Chuck Person Christian Laettner and Isaiah Rider Christian Laettner and Isaiah Rider Christian Laettner and Chuck Person
Mortal Kombat Kitana and Jax Briggs Baraka and Raiden Scorpion and Sub-Zero Kung Lao and Liu Kang Johnny Cage and Sonya Blade
Phoenix Suns Charles Barkley and Dan Majerle Charles Barkley and Kevin Johnson1 Dan Majerle and Kevin Johnson Dan Majerle and Kevin Johnson Dan Majerle and Kevin Johnson
Portland Trail Blazers Clyde Drexler and Terry Porter Clyde Drexler and Terry Porter Clyde Drexler and Cliff Robinson Clyde Drexler and Cliff Robinson Clyde Drexler and Terry Porter
Sacramento Kings Wayman Tisdale and Spud Webb Wayman Tisdale and Mitch Richmond Wayman Tisdale and Mitch Richmond Wayman Tisdale and Mitch Richmond Wayman Tisdale and Mitch Richmond
San Antonio Spurs David Robinson and Sean Elliott David Robinson and Sean Elliott David Robinson and Chuck Person David Robinson and Dale Ellis David Robinson and Dale Ellis
Seattle SuperSonics Shawn Kemp and Benoit Benjamin Shawn Kemp and Detlef Schrempf Shawn Kemp and Detlef Schrempf Shawn Kemp and Detlef Schrempf Shawn Kemp and Detlef Schrempf
Utah Jazz Karl Malone and John Stockton Karl Malone and John Stockton Karl Malone and John Stockton Karl Malone and John Stockton Karl Malone and John Stockton

1Some earlier cartridges of the SNES, Sega Genesis, and Sega Game Gear versions have Charles Barkley and Kevin Johnson on the Phoenix Suns; however, later versions replaced Barkley with Dan Majerle because Midway lost the rights to include Barkley when Accolade developed Barkley Shut Up and Jam!.

Sequels/spin-offs

NBA Jam Tournament Edition

An update named NBA Jam Tournament Edition (commonly referred to as NBA Jam T.E.) featured updated rosters, new features and easter eggs combined with the same gameplay of the original. Teams now consisted of three players (with the exception of the new "Rookies" team, which consists of five players, all picked in the 1994 NBA Draft) and players could be substituted into the game. The game also featured new hidden teams and hidden playable characters. Early versions of the game included characters from Midway's Mortal Kombat games. Players were also assigned more attributes, including clutch and fatigue levels. In addition, the game also introduced features such as a "Tournament" mode that turned off computer assistance and on-court hot spots that allowed for additional points or special slam dunks.

This version was also ported to the SNES, Genesis, 32X, Game Boy, Game Gear, Sega Saturn, PlayStation and Atari Jaguar.

Ports and sequels

The NBA Jam games were also ported to many video game consoles as well as PC, beginning with the original's debut on the highly-publicized Jam Day (March 4, 1994). Console versions were well known for featuring many easter eggs; the home versions of Jam T.E. even allowed the player to use then President Bill Clinton, First Lady Hillary Clinton, Vice President Al Gore and Atari's Vice President of Software Development Leonard Tramiel on the Atari Jaguar version. Acclaim published the console versions, who later ended up winning the exclusive rights to use the NBA Jam name.

Acclaim used the name on NBA Jam Extreme in 1996, a 3D version of Jam which featured Marv Albert doing commentary. The game was a flop in comparison to Midway's version released that same year, rechristened NBA Hangtime, a game which featured a create-a-player and a usual batch of new features combined with a classic, but improved, NBA Jam feeling. An update called NBA Maximum Hangtime was subsequently released.

In 1995, Acclaim released a collegiate version of NBA Jam for home consoles entitled College Slam. Although the game was created to capitalize on the popularity of March Madness and the subsequent Final Four, it did not enjoy the popularity of the earlier NBA Jam games.

However, the idea was not quite dead as Midway passed it to their other sports games. The 1995 hockey release 2 on 2 Open Ice Challenge was only mildly successful at best, but Midway found success with Wayne Gretzky's 3D Hockey in 1996 and NFL Blitz in 1997. The NFL Blitz series would later become Blitz: The League due to EA Sports exclusivity deal with the NFL. The success of the game brought forth another high-flying basketball game, and genuine 3D rendered (but 2D playing) sequel to NBA Jam and NBA Hangtime, NBA Showtime: NBA on NBC (which used the familiar NBA on NBC theme, "Roundball Rock") in 1999, a game which was received well and had acceptable success. After it was ported, Midway decided to focus itself on other games, and after the following year's NBA Hoopz (a slower-paced, 3-on-3 copy of NBA Showtime), Midway's series ended. Acclaim continued to keep the NBA Jam name alive with its console games, although the games were only mildly popular.

Now making console games exclusively, Midway has used Jam's idea on several other sports, with NFL Blitz, NHL Hitz, MLB Slugfest, and RedCard 20-03 (a hard-hitting football (soccer) game). Many of Jam's influences remain in their games. The latest efforts of Midway arcade basketball included the NBA Ballers series.

On October 5th, 2010, EA Sports released a new version of NBA Jam for the Wii. The game was later ported to the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 in November 2010. Original NBA Jam creator Mark Turmell was hired to work on this new version in conjunction with EA Vancouver.[5] Following the game's critical and commercial success, a follow-up NBA Jam: On Fire Edition was released on October 4th, 2011 on PSN and XBLA on October 5th, 2011.

Popular culture

In certain subcultures, the phrases "He's heating up", "He's on fire" and "Boomshakalaka!" have entered into common usage. The phrases, as in the game, are used to (self) describe someone doing something successfully twice or thrice respectively, as the original expression was used for any player who scored three baskets in a row. He would be "on fire", as he then started tossing/dunking a flaming ball to the basket, burning its net in the process. The effect only wore off if the opposite team scored. The NBA Jam script was written solely by Jon Hey.

NBA Jam also incorporated a slogan from Spike Lee's alter-ego in his 1986 film She's Gotta Have It, Mars Blackmon, who was also featured in a Nike basketball shoe television commercial at the time. The NBA Jam commentator asked, "Is it the shoes?" after a player performed spectacularly.

The announcer was modeled on Marv Albert and other announcers although there is no mention of Albert in the game and was voiced by Tim Kitzrow.[6]

The upbeat, funky music written by Jon Hey was inspired by sports music themes and has been compared to George Clinton's P-Funk All Stars. Funkadelic's 1979 "(Not Just) Knee Deep" shares the most similarity with the music of NBA Jam but was recorded more than a decade before NBA Jam's music was written. The likeness of George Clinton was used as the character "P. Funk" in the console versions of NBA Jam: Tournament Edition.

In July 2009, Mortal Kombat creator Ed Boon revealed (on Twitter) that a Mortal Kombat court was to be hidden in a console port of NBA Jam or NBA Hangtime.[7]

Mark Turmell, creator of NBA Jam, confirmed a long held suspicion that the game had a bias against the Chicago Bulls. According to Turmell, a Detroit Pistons fan, the game had a special code that caused the Bulls to miss last-second shots in close games against the Pistons.[8]

External links

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • NBA Jam — Entwickler Midway Publisher …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • NBA Jam '99 — Developer(s) Iguana UK Publisher(s) Acclaim …   Wikipedia

  • NBA Jam — est une série de jeu vidéo de basket de type arcade, dont le premier épisode est sorti en 1993 sur borne d arcade (JAMMA+). Edité par Midway, une de ses originalités est de ne proposer que du 2 contre 2. On notera également les coups spéciaux… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • NBA Jam '99 — NBA Jam NBA Jam est une série de jeu vidéo de basket de type arcade, dont le premier épisode est sorti en 1993 sur borne d arcade (JAMMA+). Edité par Midway, une des ses originalités est de ne proposer que du 2 contre 2. On notera également les… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • NBA Jam 99 — NBA Jam NBA Jam est une série de jeu vidéo de basket de type arcade, dont le premier épisode est sorti en 1993 sur borne d arcade (JAMMA+). Edité par Midway, une des ses originalités est de ne proposer que du 2 contre 2. On notera également les… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • NBA Jam — es un videojuego de baloncesto desarrollado por Midway y distribuido para máquinas recreativas por Acclaim Entertainment en 1993. Esta primera versión estaba basada en la temporada 92/93, teniendo las licencias de algunas de las estrellas de la… …   Wikipedia Español

  • NBA Jam TE — NBA Jam: Tournament Edition NBA Jam: Tournament Edition Éditeur Acclaim Entertainment Développeur …   Wikipédia en Français

  • NBA Jam (series) — NBA Jam (sometimes Jam for short) is a basketball arcade/video game series focusing primarily on an exaggerated style of basketball play. In the series, players jump many times above their own height, can make slam dunks that defy human… …   Wikipedia

  • NBA Jam Extreme — Sega Saturn cover art Developer(s) Sculptured Software Publisher(s) Acclaim …   Wikipedia

  • NBA Jam 2000 — Developer(s) Acclaim Studios Salt Lake City Publisher(s) Acclaim …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”