Mario and his pals from the Mushroom Kingdom have certainly been in their fair share of sports titles over the past thirty years, from karting to golf, football to baseball, they've seen and done it all.
Mario and his pals from the Mushroom Kingdom have certainly been in their fair share of sports titles over the past thirty years, from karting to golf, football to baseball, they've seen and done it all.
Andy Murray and Steffi Graf are just finishing off their opponents. They're against Tim Henman and Sue Barker off Question of Sport in the mixed doubles finals at Wimbledon, and suddenly The King of England Cliff Richard stands up and starts singing.
Nintendo looks to raise a racquet on Switch, with a new sports game that features online multiplayer and a story campaign.
The core tennis action is excellent and the extra abilities are better balanced than most recent games; Full suite of online options and an enjoyable simplified mode
The special moves can still be intrusive and frustrating; Story campaign is repetitive and has a very uneven difficulty curve
It was early in my time with Mario Tennis Aces that I realized a major flaw. I was just a couple missions deep in the story based Adventure mode when I knew: The game is boring. It lacks the charm of Super Mario Odyssey or Mario Kart 8 Deluxe and got very repetitive very quickly.
Tennis mechanics are fun; Large character roster
Little variety; Broken online
This review originally published on June 20, before its online was live. We've since updated this review with multiplayer impressions and a score. I admittedly don't know much about traditional tennis. I know there are tennis balls. I know there are courts.
I admit, the game is fun if you play with more people, and I do like they keep on bringing DLC character to the game. But it feels like the game is meant for one player only. Story mode is only for 1player and it would have been better if it was a split screen.
Summer is in full swing and Nintendo and Camelot Software are serving up their next instalment in the Mario Tennis series for all to enjoy, even enlisting some famous faces to help with the advertising campaign.
Camelot have been the kings of the Mario Tennis (and Golf) kingdom for some time, after the pure disappointment that Mario Tennis: Ultra Smash on the Wii U was, everyone has been waiting for them to give Tennis another real shot.
Right off the bat, Mario Tennis Aces , the eighth installment in the Mario Tennis series, feels inadequate. Mario's Tennis , which kicked off the series way back in 1995 on the Virtual Boy, featured at least six games per set, just like actual tennis.
Racketeering
Best representation of tennis for a long time; Typical colourful Nintendo presentation; Great with mates
Frustrating story mode; Lack of things to do; Gimmick courts are awful
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