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Virtua Tennis 2009


Going through the motions, to brilliant effect

Just when you thought you’d seen the back of Tim Henman, here he is again, teaching rookie players how to lob, slice and smash, and sharing tips on how to not win Wimbledon even once in your career. “Cheers, Tim,” we thought, arrogantly skipping Virtua Tennis’ tutorial, “but we’ll muddle through without you.” After 17,000 failed serves in a row, though, we slunk back to Henners with our tails firmly between our legs, and implored the British champion for his help.

It wasn’t the fault of the motion controls – they’re graceful, intuitive and by far the best of their kind on the Wii. It’s just that we just weren’t expecting something quite so subtle, nuanced and… well, fair. After thumping our arms around like an angry gorilla in so many other Wii titles, Virtua Tennis’ measured, often delicate racketing makes a startling, long-overdue change. There’s still a generous amount of arm-thumpage, but it’s mixed in with lighter, more dexterous maneuvers – you know, like real tennis.

Of course, the game won’t turn you into the next Federer, Nadal or even Andy Murray, but you’ll feel like a pro, which is all that matters. Sega have nailed motion tennis so successfully there’s almost no buttons needed, apart from holding A or B during hits to do a more powerful strike. When you’re about to play a shot, an election-style swing-o-meter appears over your character’s head, indicating which part of the court the ball’s going to end up in. Strikes are initiated by raising the remote, before bringing it down when the bar’s in the right place. It’s simple, fun and precise.

The Nunchuk handles character movement, but it’s also possible to play without it, surrendering control of your legs to a largely automated system. The game’s MotionPlus functions are bound to drastically rewrite these controls, but we weren’t able to test them at the time of reviewing.

In a nice change to the pared-down, feature-lacking Wii ports we generally see, Virtua Tennis 2009 has everything the PS3 and Xbox 360 versions have to offer – a detailed World Tour mode and online multiplayer – and with a not-too-noticeable graphical hack-job to boot. All the usual stars are present and correct, with newcomers Andy Murray and Ana Ivanovic joining the fray, but in the revamped World Tour mode you’ll create your own champ from a modestly detailed set of options.

World Tour is the deepest single-player mode Virtua Tennis has ever had, consisting of a week-by-week schedule of championships, sponsorship matches, minigames and challenges, and a shop where you can buy shinier rackets and whiter T-shirts. Every activity, from playing a match to undertaking a challenge, uses up your character’s stamina – deplete it all and you’ll spend the following few weeks in hospital. Championships and other activities do repeat but they only appear at specific times during each season, so keep an eye on your stamina to make sure you don’t miss out on too much. Luckily you can rest, buy energy drinks or even go on holiday to replenish your strength.


 
10 Comments
Order Comments: Newest First | Oldest First
Dengar13  - 5 months 23 days ago 
Wow! This looks awesome! Two great reviews for tennis games.
clownferret  - 5 months 23 days ago 
This review states "Proper online multiplayer" but in the knowledge it shows as being an offline game? Very frustrating, especially as the review is not for the motion plus version. Still don't know what to buy between this and Grand Slam tennis. Grrrr!
zzyzx  - 5 months 23 days ago 
If they're both good, then by this one. Sega deserves the support.

I also chose VT09 because how many times have EA gotten it right on the very first try? The Virtua folks have years of experience. The way I see it, VT is the safer buy because even if it doesn't match the hype surrounding Grand Slam, you know it'll be solid. Grand Slam might live up to the hype (if you believe NGamer) or it might fall on its head (if you believe Eurogamer)
zzyzx  - 5 months 23 days ago 
The game definitely has proper online multiplayer. And the motion controls seem to work well, though I've only had the chance to play a couple practice matches. I'm not good enough to really judge just yet.
Bhup666  - 5 months 20 days ago 
Hey, Tom Sykes! Are you stupid or something??
How can you give this game a 9 without even playing with the Wii Motion Plus..???

The whole point of this game and Grand Slam Tennis is the new reality-feel of the new motion controls!!

Now you have ruined the stats for this game for us who want to see how these will be measured up against each others.

We (the consumer) are only interested in the game that has the best Wii Motion Plus controls of these two tennisgames!! We don't care about anything else than play a realistic game. We donæt care sp much about graphics or if it is Federer og George w. Bush we are playing with. We just want to play a great tennis game with our friends with good realistic control.

Damn! You have ruined everything. Now this game will have false high characther when compared to Grand Slam!

Grrr! What were you thinking, man?? Who cares about this game for anything other that Wii Motion Plus??!!

And @zzyzx: You have lousy arguments for why choosing this over Grand Slam! You must be an employee of SEGA or somehting! Everyone says that EA build a new game from scratch and with the new Motion Plus control in mind while VT09 is only a port and will have more glicht... so in my neutral opinion, GST is way better!
zzyzx  - 5 months 20 days ago 
You're right about one thing, B. It was silly to publish a review that didn't talk about wm+.

You're absolutely wrong that people are only interested in wm+. Some people are interested in, wait for it, a tennis *game*.

From personal experience and everything I've read, I feel safe making these conclusions:

If you want a tech demo for WM+, you're better off getting Tiger Woods or waiting for Wii Sports Resort. But if it must be a tennis game, it should be Grand Slam. Motion Plus doesn't work all that great in either, but it's a bit better in Grand Slam than in Virtua

If you want a fun game of tennis, you'll probably want to unplug WM+.

Virtua Tennis 2009 without WM+ is still a really good game.

Finally, in the past 4 months, Sega has published House of the Dead: Overkill, MadWorld, and Virtua Tennis 2009. They're about to publish The Conduit. I can't think of any third party publisher for the Wii that deserves my dollars more. Including EA.
Bhup666  - 5 months 16 days ago 
@zzyzx:

Well, ok -SEGA has done good lately, I have Madworld myself. But EA is also heavy on sportsgames this year with Tiger woods and all. Now that's a great game with some great controls! FTW!
GRwarrior  - 4 months 16 days ago 
I read both reviews, and I noticed that Grand Slam got a 9 WITH WM+ and Virtua tennis 2009 received a 9 without WM+. I'm not sure if this is an indicator that virtua tennis with WM+ will be better than grand slam with WM+, but I will take it as a sign.
GRwarrior  - 4 months 16 days ago 
reCAPTCHA: Virtua tennis 2009 FTW
angelmanuel68  - 2 months 5 days ago 
I prefer Grand Slam Tennis.Is more intuitive.This one is more arcade.Graphics?:Sega.FUN:both.WM:GST.Realism:GST.Overall:....priceless...arcade and simulation are my fetish in videogames.
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The Knowledge
Virtua Tennis 2009
Virtua Tennis 2009

Genre: Sports
Release date: Jun 9, 2009
Published by: Sega
Developed by: Sumo Digital
Franchise: Virtua Tennis
Multiplayer Modes:
Offline
4 player VS
9 AWESOME
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Going through the motions, to brilliant effect
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