Actua Sports

Actua Sports's logo

Actua Sports was a sports video game series published by Gremlin Interactive which competed with Electronic Arts EA Sports label during the second half of the 1990s, until Gremlin was acquired by Infogrames. The term "Actua" is a (seemingly marketing-related) play on Sega's line of "Virtua" titled games, which included Virtua Fighter, Virtua Racing and Virtua Striker.[1]

The first game in the series was the 1995 milestone title, Actua Soccer, which quickly became one of the most important titles for the company. It was later joined by the rebirth of the Premier Manager franchise and the club version of Actua Soccer. In 1996, the first non-football game was released, Actua Golf, followed by the sequels Actua Soccer 2 in 1997, now endorsed by English international Alan Shearer and Premier Manager 98. The third installment in the Actua Soccer series and the Ninety-Nine edition of Premier Manager followed in 1998, the year a new title debuted in the series: Actua Ice Hockey, the official video game of the Nagano Olympic Games ice hockey tournament, followed by Actua Tennis in the same year.

While the series died shortly after Gremlin was acquired by Infogrames, some of the games had further titles developed: UEFA Challenge, developed by the now Sheffield House, was published in 2002 and the rights of the Premier Manager franchise were acquired by Zoo Digital Publishing.

Titles

Title Year Also known as Platform
Actua Soccer 1995 ‹See Tfd›
  • NA: VR Soccer
MS-DOS, PlayStation, Sega Saturn
Actua Golf 1996 ‹See Tfd›
  • NA: VR Golf '97
PlayStation, Sega Saturn
Actua Soccer Club Edition 1996 MS-DOS, PlayStation, Sega Saturn
Actua Golf 2 1997 ‹See Tfd›
  • NA: Fox Sports Golf '99
PlayStation, Microsoft Windows
Actua Soccer 2 1997 PlayStation, Microsoft Windows
Actua Ice Hockey 1998 PlayStation, Microsoft Windows
Actua Tennis 1998 PlayStation, Microsoft Windows
Actua Soccer 3 1998 PlayStation, Microsoft Windows
Actua Pool 1999 ‹See Tfd›
  • NA: Ultimate 8-Ball

‹See Tfd›

  • NA: Underground Pool
PlayStation, Microsoft Windows, Nintendo DS
Actua Ice Hockey 2 1999 PlayStation, Microsoft Windows
Actua Golf 3 1999 PlayStation

Actua Soccer series

Actua Soccer

Actua Soccer 3 UK cover, featuring Alan Shearer.
Genres Sports
Developers Gremlin Interactive
Publishers Gremlin Interactive
Platforms PlayStation, MS-DOS, Windows, Sega Saturn, Macintosh
First release Actua Soccer
1995
Latest release Actua Soccer 3
1998
Actua Soccer and Actua Soccer: Club Edition

The first title's biggest claim to fame was its full 3D graphics engine, used for the first time in a home console football game; although other console games had used a 3D field, players were commonly still 2D sprites but in Actua Soccer players were polygonal. The game was developed with close ties to a local football club Sheffield Wednesday: their players provided hints to the programmers, and three players, Chris Woods, Graham Hyde and Andy Sinton, also served as motion capture models.[2]

Actua Soccer featured only national teams, with squads of 22 players from each of 44 national sides, However a follow up version with English Premier League teams named Actua Soccer: Club Edition was released in 1996 using 20 players from the 20 Premier League teams from 1996/97. The Actua Soccer match engine was also used to display matches in Premier Manager 64.[3]

The first game was a bestseller in the UK,[4][5] where it was backed by what journalists called "the most expensive advertising campaign ever mounted for a console game."[6]

Actua Soccer 2

Actua Soccer 2 or sometimes Actua Soccer 98 due to its capitalization on the 1998 FIFA World Cup was one of the many football titles released to capitalize on the 1998 World Cup, and once again included national teams, but a more polished engine (optimized in the PC version for 3D graphics cards), (in some versions) the full Italian Serie A league, and a new "scenario" mode assured good sales and mostly positive reviews. It also included a team creator mode, which enabled the player to make up to 128 custom teams. Barry Davies was joined by Trevor Brooking on the commentary, and the game featured England football team captain and striker Alan Shearer not only on the cover, but also providing interviews about the game in the press. Michael Owen and Simon Tracey provided motion capture for the players. The game also featured menu music and a cameo appearance from Welsh rockers, Super Furry Animals, which could only be activated after entering a cheat code. Actua Soccer 2 was also bundled with Creative Technology's Voodoo 2 graphic cards, which helped to achieve widespread distribution and popularity.

Actua Soccer 3

The last of the series, Actua Soccer 3 arrived in late 1998. For the first time, both club and national teams were present, plus other teams (such as Arsenal LFC) and various joke teams. While its predecessor had been criticized for the absence of club teams, Actua Soccer 3 featured a total of 25 leagues with 450 national and international teams, more than any game of the time except the earlier Sensible World of Soccer as well as over 10000 players. The graphics used a slightly improved version of the Actua Soccer 2 engine with much improved weather effects. Trevor Brooking was replaced by Martin O'Neill as Barry Davies' commentary partner. "Let Me Entertain You" by Robbie Williams was the only ingame soundtrack, while the classical operatic theme Cavalleria Rusticana (Rustic Chivalry) by Pietro Mascagni was played during the game's introduction video.

Actua Golf series

Actua Golf (known as VR Golf '97 in North America) is a sports video game developed by Gremlin Interactive for the PlayStation and Sega Saturn. It was released in October 1996.

It was followed by Actua Golf 2 (known as Fox Sports Golf '99 in North America), also developed by Gremlin Interactive for the PlayStation and Microsoft Windows. It was released in September 1997 for the PlayStation and May 1998 for Windows. Actua Golf 2 received mixed reviews. Aggregating review website GameRankings gave the PC version 70.50%[7] and the PlayStation version 38.75%.[8]

The third and final game, Actua Golf 3, was developed by Gremlin and released on the PlayStation on June 1, 1998.[9] The game received an average score of 70.50% at GameRankings, based on an aggregate of 2 reviews.[10]

Actua Ice Hockey series

Like Actua Golf, the Actua Ice Hockey series was developed by Gremlin Interactive. Two games were released in the series: Actua Ice Hockey for the PlayStation and Windows in 1998, and Actua Ice Hockey 2 on the same systems in 1999. Actua Ice Hockey was the official video game for the Nagano Winter Olympics 1998 ice hockey tournament.

Actua Tennis

Actua Tennis was developed by Gremlin and released on PlayStation in 1998 and Windows PC in 1999. It received mixed reviews. Aggregating review website GameRankings gave the PC version 84.00%[11] and the PlayStation version 53.00%.[12]

Actua Pool

Main article: Actua Pool

Actual Pool was developed by Gremlin for PlayStation and Windows in 1999. The game was also released under the name Pool Shark. A sequel was developed in North America in 2004 for the PlayStation 2 and Windows under the name Pool Shark 2 by Blade Interactive It was not a part of the Actua series as the series had ended years prior, and Gremlin had closed. In 2007, a port of Actua Pool was released for the Nintendo DS, named Underground Pool in North America.

References

  1. The Essential 50 Part 35: Virtua Fighter
  2. Thomas, Aarud (2005-01-01). "Actua Soccer History" Actua Soccer History". Thomas, Aarud. Archived from the original on 2007-08-20. Retrieved 2009-01-28.
  3. Hiranand, Ravi (1999-07-07). "Premier Manager 64 IGN preview". IGN. Retrieved 2008-03-17.
  4. Gallup UK Playstation sales chart, May 1996, published in Official UK PlayStation Magazine issue 6
  5. "Adidas Power Soccer: Extended Play". Maximum: The Video Game Magazine. Emap International Limited (6): 25. May 1996. Both games went on to become massive sellers, with FIFA storming the Christmas charts and Actua going on to become the third fastest-selling CD game in history...
  6. "Actua Soccer: Fantastic Football Action with Next-Gen Graphics!!". Maximum: The Video Game Magazine. Emap International Limited (2): 134. November 1995.
  7. "Actua Golf 2 for PC". GameRankings. Retrieved 8 December 2013.
  8. "Actua Golf 2 for PlayStation". GameRankings. Retrieved 8 December 2013.
  9. "Actua Golf 3 - PlayStation - IGN". IGN. Retrieved April 15, 2016.
  10. "Actua Golf 3 for PlayStation". GameRankings. Retrieved 8 December 2013.
  11. "Actua Tennis for PC". GameRankings. Retrieved 8 December 2013.
  12. "Actua Tennis for PlayStation". GameRankings. Retrieved 8 December 2013.
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