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High Heat Major League Baseball

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Series of baseball video games
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High Heat Major League Baseball was a series ofbaseballvideo games, released onPlayStation,Xbox,PlayStation 2, andMicrosoft Windows. There were six annual versions of the game released, starting withHigh Heat Baseball 1999, and ending withHigh Heat Major League Baseball 2004.[1]

With the exception of the first game in the series, the officially licensed teams and player names from all 30Major League Baseball teams were included. The series was created by games company3DO (under the Team .366 brand), which filed forbankruptcy in 2003, soon after the release of the final version of the series,High Heat Major League Baseball 2004. In August 2003, Microsoft purchased the rights to theHigh Heat franchise from 3DO;[2] however, Microsoft has yet to develop a new title in the series.

High Heat was traditionally known for possessing moresimulation-style qualities than competitorsWorld Series Baseball,All-Star Baseball, orTriple Play, but frequently lagged behind in graphical quality.

Games

[edit]
GameRelease dateCover athlete (team)Platforms
High Heat Baseball 1999April 1998Microsoft Windows
High Heat Baseball 2000April 1, 1999PlayStation,Microsoft Windows
Sammy Sosa High Heat Baseball 2001February 29, 2000Sammy Sosa (Chicago Cubs)
High Heat Major League Baseball 2002March 5, 2001Vladimir Guerrero (Montreal Expos)PlayStation,PlayStation 2,Game Boy Advance,Microsoft Windows
High Heat Major League Baseball 2003February 12, 2002Curt Schilling (Arizona Diamondbacks)PlayStation 2,Game Boy Advance,Microsoft Windows
High Heat Major League Baseball 2004February 18, 2003Curt Schilling (Arizona Diamondbacks)PlayStation 2,Xbox,Microsoft Windows

Reception

[edit]

At the core ofHigh Heat′s gameplay was itsbatter-pitcher interface, which was often hailed as the most realistic of its era.[3]

According toGameDaily, "Although [the original]High Heat Baseball was not a big seller, the game won numerous awards".[4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"High Heat Baseball series".MobyGames.
  2. ^"Microsoft Buys 3DO 'High Heat' Game - Xbox". Archived fromthe original on 2004-12-17. Retrieved2012-09-21.
  3. ^"The Sports Gaming Network - High Heat Baseball 2002 (PS2) Preview".www.sports-gaming.com.
  4. ^"GameDaily February 25th, 1999". 20 May 2001. Archived fromthe original on 20 May 2001.

External links

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