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Links 386 Pro

Links 386 Pro is agolfsimulationsports game forMS-DOS released in 1992. It is part of theLinks series, and was developed byAccess Software as the follow-up toLinks: The Challenge of Golf (1990). AMacintosh version,Links Pro, was released in 1994.[1] An enhanced version calledLinks 386 CD was released for PC in 1995 that included audio comments by comedianBobcat Goldthwait acting as the player's caddie, and an aerial flyby of each hole streamed from the game'sCD-ROM. Re-branded versions of the game were also released forMicrosoft Windows under the titlesMicrosoft Golf 2.0 (1994) andMicrosoft Golf 3.0 (1996), part of theMicrosoft Golf series.

Links 386 Pro
Developer(s)Access Software
Publisher(s)Access Software[a]
Designer(s)Vance Cook
Kevin Homer
Roger Carver
Artist(s)Bruce Carver
David F. Brown
SeriesLinks
Platform(s)MS-DOS,Mac OS,FM Towns,PC-98
Release
July 1992
  • DOS
    • NA: July 1992
  • Mac OS
  • FM Towns
    • JP: February 1995
  • PC-98
    • JP: February 10, 1995
Genre(s)Sports
Mode(s)Single-player,multiplayer

Gameplay

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The player on thetee. (MS-DOS)

Players select a male or female character and their clothing.[2] They select the level of play (beginner, amateur, and pro) andtee position.[3] The player can control character direction and foot position,[4] and theshot is controlled by a swing meter, held to the top for power and released and clicked again as it swings back to the bottom for direction - early will hook and late willslice.[5] Players can select from multiple views, split the screen, and record shots.[2][5] Shots can be repeated (amulligan) and short putts taken (agimme).[5]

In 1994, the Computer Sports Network ran the Links Tour, an online tournament of 250 players accessible via modem.[6]

Technical features

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The game ran relatively quickly because it was written inassembly code,[7] though courses could take several seconds to be drawn on less powerful systems.[3] The courses were drawn piece by piece, beginning with the backdrop, then the buildings, then the plants.[5] It was considered to use a large amount of memory for the time, running best on 8 MB.[2] On the Mac, it ran best on aPower Mac[2] and on the PC at least a386 was required.[3] Some features could be turned off to increase the running speed.[5] The game featuredSuper VGA graphics, one of the first games to do so.[3] It features sounds such as birds, frogs, comments from the golfers, and applause.[2][8][4] On the Mac, voice control of the game was available.[2]

Different versions ofLinks 386 Pro,Links 386 CD, and theMicrosoft Golf derivatives included either one or two courses presented through digitized images, and additional courses could be purchased separately.Lower resolution courses for the earlier game,Links: The Challenge of Golf, can be converted for play inLinks 386 Pro.[3][9] A subsequent version, titledLinks 386 CD,[10] includes the voice ofBobcat Goldthwait as the player'scaddie.[11]

Through a deal with Access Software,Microsoft published its ownLinks games forMicrosoft Windows under theMicrosoft Golf name.Microsoft Golf 2.0 (1994;Windows 3.0) is a version ofLinks 386 Pro that includesFirestone South Course andTorrey Pines South Course,[12][13][14] whileMicrosoft Golf 3.0 (1996;Windows 95) features the same courses asLinks 386 Pro.[15][16]Microsoft Golf 3.0 was included with many personal computers as a pre-loaded game.[17] BothMicrosoft Golf 2.0 andGolf 3.0 have16-bitWindows components[18] but also make use ofWin32s.[19]

Courses

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Links 386 Pro had one included course,Harbour Town, and additional courses could be purchased separately under the "Links Championship Courses" branding.[20]Microsoft Golf 2.0 instead includedTorrey Pines andFirestone.Links 386 CD andMicrosoft Golf 3.0 also featured Harbour Town but added a second course that varied regionally, with North American copies includingBanff Springs while Europe receivedThe Belfry.

Additional courses could be purchased individually on floppy disc or CD, with some releases including a flyby video for use only withLinks 386 CD,Microsoft Golf 2.0, andMicrosoft Golf 3.0. Most of the add-on courses would later be offered in four 5-course bundles that were also compatible with later releases in the series.

In addition to buying courses, a tool was included with the game that could convert the eight courses that had been made available for the originalLinks: The Challenge of Golf: Torrey Pines, Firestone,Bountiful Municipal Golf Course,Bay Hill Club,Pinehurst Country Club,Dorado Beach East Course,Barton Creek-Fazio, and Troon North. The converted courses were at a lower resolution than the courses natively created for Links 386, and newer versions of these courses were later sold with better graphics.[20]

Development

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Links 386 Pro was developed with a budget of $500,000, which was mostly allocated towards employee salaries, and took nearly three years to make, according toChris Jones. The game was released in the second week of July 1992.[21]

Reception

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Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
Computer Gaming World3/5 (Microsoft Golf 2.0)[13]
      (Microsoft Golf 3.0)[15]
GameSpot7.5/10 (Links 386 CD)[10]
Gamecenter7/10 (Microsoft Golf 3.0)[22]
MacUser4.5/5 (Links Pro)[23]
PC Magazine      (Microsoft Golf 3.0)[24]
Awards
PublicationAward
Compute!Best Sports Game[25]
Computer Gaming WorldOverall Game of the Year[26]
Software Publishers AssociationBest Sports Program[27][28]

Links 386 Pro was a commercial success, with sales of roughly 400,000 units by July 1994. At the time,Bruce Carver of Access Software estimated that its actual ownership number was "at least 1.6 million" thanks to software piracy.[29]

The graphics were much praised, described as "almost photo-realistic".[2] Some players complained that achieving a low scoring round was too easy.[4]Computer Gaming World in 1992 stated "the final word in golf—for now, at least—isLinks 386 Pro, praising the game's "stunning" Super VGA graphics and "dream come true" gameplay. The magazine predicted that "it is quite likely that the only thing to ever beat this game will be yet another version ofLinks.[4]

In 1993Links received aCodie award from theSoftware Publishers Association for Best Sports Program,[27][28] andComputer Gaming World awarded it Overall Game of the Year, stating that doing so was "pretty obvious" given how longLinks 386 Pro had been at the top of the magazine's Top 100 Games list.[26] In 1994, it was reported that "Links 386 Pro easily leads the market for golf games".[6] That year,PC Gamer US namedLinks 386 Pro the 6th best computer game ever. The editors called it "one of the most polished and professional games ever produced".[30] In 1996,Computer Gaming World declaredLinks 386 the 26th-best computer game ever released.[31]

In 2014,PC PowerPlay listedLinks 386 Pro among the 100 most influential PC games, saying it was "the perfect way to demonstrate all 40MHz worth of computing power in one’s brand new PC."[32]

The Age reviewed the Macintosh version,Links Pro, and wrote that "great depth and realism makes it the golf game for serious indoor swingers."[1]Links Pro received a score of 4.5 out of 5 fromMacUser.[23]Links Pro sold 19,699 during 1997 in the United States, and was among that year's best-selling Mac games in the country.[33]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^Released in Japan by Japanese publisher Cybelle.

References

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  1. ^ab"There's no handicap with golf on the Mac".The Age. August 30, 1994. RetrievedApril 18, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  2. ^abcdefgKinne, Richard (August 22, 1994)."Links Pro Hits a Hole in One".TidBITS.
  3. ^abcdeTrivette, Donald (September 28, 1993)."The Desktop Athlete".PC Mag.
  4. ^abcdMcDonald, T. Liam (November 1992)."Links 386 Pro from Access".Computer Gaming World. No. 100. pp. 72–74. Retrieved18 September 2016.
  5. ^abcdeMann, Richard (January 1993)."Links 386 Pro".Compute!.
  6. ^abSchwabach, Bob (November 1, 1994)."Golfers don't need to depend on the weather to hit the links".The Milwaukee Journal.
  7. ^Cawkell, Tony (2 September 2003)."Home and Consumer Applications".The Multimedia Handbook. p. 323.ISBN 9781134777112.
  8. ^Cohen, Julie (December 22, 1992)."Holiday software".PC Mag.
  9. ^"Links: Master List of Available Courses".Microsoft.com.
  10. ^abScisco, Peter (May 3, 1996)."Links 386 CD".GameSpot. Archived fromthe original on February 9, 2005.
  11. ^Duncan, Corey (January 11, 2017)."Behind the Game: From Leader Board Golf to Links 2004".IndieBuilt.com. RetrievedJune 20, 2019.
  12. ^"Golfers can now slice ball on computer screen".Gannett News Service. November 10, 1994. RetrievedApril 18, 2020 – via Newspapers.com.
  13. ^abScisco, Peter (January 1995). "A Spot of Tee: A Desktop Putter Takes A Threesome To The Greens".Computer Gaming World. pp. 182–183.
  14. ^Access Software (1994).Microsoft Golf 2.0. Microsoft.
  15. ^abMay, Scott A. (April 1997). "Links Lite: Microsoft Golf 3.0 Levels the Field for Win 95 Golfers".Computer Gaming World. p. 112.
  16. ^"War games, sport and monster madness".The Age. September 5, 1996. RetrievedJune 20, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
  17. ^"Tee time? PC time".Kokomo Tribune. November 14, 1998. RetrievedJune 20, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.If your PC came loaded with Microsoft Golf 3.0, as many do [...]
  18. ^Microsoft Golf 3.0
  19. ^Q138557: PRB: Golf 2.0 Overwrites WIN32s Files
  20. ^abLinks 386 Pro Players Manual. Access Software Incorporated. 1992. pp. 6–7.
  21. ^"It's Not All Fun for Computer-Games Makers".The Salt Lake Tribune. July 12, 1992. p. 74. RetrievedApril 25, 2024."Links 386 Pro," an upgraded version of the original golf game due out this week, took nearly three years to create and cost more than $500,000. Most of the money goes to personnel salaries, [Jones] said.
  22. ^Mooney, Shane (March 25, 1997)."Microsoft Golf 3.0".Gamecenter. Archived fromthe original on November 19, 2000.
  23. ^abLeVitus, Bob (December 1995)."The Game Room".MacUser. Archived fromthe original on January 22, 2000. RetrievedFebruary 28, 2020.
  24. ^"Click and Putt".PC Magazine. September 23, 1997. pp. 321–322. RetrievedJune 20, 2019.
  25. ^"The Best of the Year: The Compute Choice Awards".Compute!. January 1993. pp. 65, 80.
  26. ^ab"Computer Gaming World's Game of the Year Awards".Computer Gaming World. October 1993. pp. 70–74. Retrieved25 March 2016.
  27. ^ab"Awards - Thy Name Is Controversy".Computer Gaming World. May 1993. p. 146. Retrieved7 July 2014.
  28. ^ab"1993 Winners".Software and Information Industry Association. RetrievedJune 20, 2019.
  29. ^Staff (July 1994). "Insider Interview: Bruce Carver, Access Software".Electronic Entertainment.1 (7): 80, 81.
  30. ^Staff (August 1994). "PC Gamer Top 40: The Best Games of All Time".PC Gamer US (3):32–42.
  31. ^Staff (November 1996). "150 Best (and 50 Worst) Games of All Time".Computer Gaming World. No. 148. pp. 63–65, 68, 72, 74, 76, 78, 80, 84, 88, 90, 94, 98.
  32. ^Gillooly, John (October 20, 2014)."The 100 most influential PC games OF ALL TIME".PC PowerPlay.
  33. ^"GAMECENTER.COM - Game News - Best-Selling Games of 1997".Archived from the original on 2000-08-16. Retrieved2020-02-28.

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