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    Super Spike V'Ball

    Game » consists of 3 releases. Released Nov 10, 1989

    Classic NES volleyball game based on the arcade smash hit, U.S. Championship V'Ball. Super Spike V'Ball is one of twenty-two games that were compatible with the NES Four Score (or NES Satellite) for four-player gameplay. The game features three tournament modes: Exercise, American Circuit, and World Cup.

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    Overview

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    Super Spike V'Ball (JP: U.S. Championship V'Ball) is a NES volleyball game released in Japan in 1989 by Technos, in North America in 1990 by Nintendo and in Europe in 1992 by Nintendo. It is adapted from the Arcade hit, U.S. Championship V'Ball, which was released in 1989 to Arcades by (developer) Technos.

    It features three tournament modes (Exercise, American Circuit, and World Cup), and is compatible with up to four players at once using the NES Four Score (or NES Satellite) accessory.

    The game would later be bundled with Nintendo World Cup in a compilation pack.

    Gameplay

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    As with any standard volleyball game, players have one button for jumping (B Button) and one for hitting the ball (A Button). The D-pad is used for aim and distance for spikes and serves. Additionally, players can also hit the jump button repeatedly while airborne and increase the power of their spike before actually hitting the ball. The same technique of powering up can also be used when defending against a spike by simply jumping in the desired place, and then repeatedly hitting the jump button afterward.

    It can be tricky to gauge exactly where the ball is going to land - it is influenced by where the player character is standing and aiming. It's almost always best to power up spikes to maximum and aim where the opponents don't appear to be covering. However, the player can also score points when defending players collide with the most powerful spikes, which cases them to fly into the air and off-screen.

    Choosing A Side

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    When starting the game, the player can select from four different teams consisting of two players each. George and Murphy are the default well-balanced team. Al and John are power hitters with bad defense. Billy and Jimmy (the main characters from the Double Dragon game series) are known for great defense but poor spiking power. And finally there's Ed and Michael, who are fast players with average hitting power.

    Game Modes

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    The Exercise Mode is simply one match against a team in a crowd-less court set to easy difficulty.

    The American Circuit is set to average difficulty and consists of five teams located in the following locations: Daytona, New York, Chicago, Las Vegas, and Los Angeles.

    In World Cup mode, the player competes against seven teams and they are as follows: Japan, Italy, Australia, Mexico, Brazil, The Navy, and Russia. All opponents in World Cup mode are set to hard difficulty. The background for the Russian stage was redrawn in the American release to make it look less hostile by removing "tanks" from the original Famicom version.

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