Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
PC. NA: May 9, 2001 [2] Genre (s) Sports. Mode (s) Single-player, multiplayer. Beach Volleyball, released as Beach 'n Ball on the Game Boy Color, and as Power Spike: Pro Beach Volleyball in North America, is a Volleyball video game developed by French [4] studio Carapace Game Development and Spark Creative SARL, and published by Infogrames for ...
The PC version received "mixed" reviews, while the PlayStation version received "generally unfavorable reviews", according to the review aggregation website Metacritic. Kathryn Renta of NextGen said, "There's only one volleyball game available on the PlayStation – and apparently, it's one too many. That's the sad truth about Power Spike. It ...
Power Spike Pro Beach Volleyball Beach 'n Ball (EU) (2000), Game Boy Color, PlayStation, IBM PC; Infogrames Beach Volleyball: Sea, smash and sun (2001), IBM PC ; Carapace Klonoa Beach Volleyball (2002), PlayStation ; Namco
Kings of the Beach is a beach volleyball computer game released by Electronic Arts in 1988 for the Commodore 64 and MS-DOS. A version for the Nintendo Entertainment System was produced by Konami (under the Ultra Games label) in 1990. Gameplay Screenshot gameplay. The player can play as Sinjin Smith and Randy Stoklos. The game features three ...
Sports ( beach volleyball) Mode (s) Single-player, multiplayer. Arcade system. Sega NAOMI 2. Beach Spikers is a beach volleyball video game released in Japanese arcades in 2001. The game was developed in-house by Sega AM2 and published by Sega. A GameCube port, renamed Beach Spikers: Virtua Beach Volleyball, was released in 2002 for all regions.
Smrek heads to the Final Four fresh off a high-level performance in the regional final. She tied her season high of seven blocks in the four-set win over Oregon on Saturday while recording 10 ...
Olympic. 1964. In volleyball, spiking is the offensive play where a player swings the ball with their palm sharply downwards over the net and into the opposing court, making it difficult for the opposing team to recover the ball. The mechanism of spiking is unique to volleyball, but its counterparts in other sports include slam dunking in ...
Playing volleyball is done primarily through the use of two buttons, one designated for spiking and blocking, and the other for receiving or setting. As many of the actions happen automatically (e.g., jumping up to spike the ball), the game forces the player to focus on timing; a poorly timed press of a button results in a weak hit or a smash ...