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Review

Virtua Tennis 2009 Review

Stuck In Deuce
by Matt Helgeson on Sep 22, 2009 at 02:04 PM
Reviewed on Wii
Also on PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
Publisher Sega
Developer Sumo Digital
Release
Rating Everyone

''He not busy being born is busy dying.'' Bob Dylan said that. I'm sure Bob doesn't care about video game tennis, but this quote is neatly applicable to Virtua Tennis 2009. Playing the game, I couldn't help but thinking the biggest change in this game was changing the number in the title from ''3'' to ''2009.'' Is the gameplay solid? Absolutely, but it has been for years. A few new training minigames, some slight improvements to animations and the feel of control, and the addition of the Davis Cup is not going to be enough to make me recommend you upgrade from Virtua Tennis 3 – especially when the career mode is in such dire need of a total renovation.

You could go back as far as the Dreamcast and find essentially the same experience. It's the same rotating globe interface, the same calendar – more of the same in every way. This tedium is not helped by the laborious career progression. It literally takes dozens of matches to move up even 20 spots in the amateur rankings (you start as the 100th rated player). And believe me – these are not challenging. The only time I even lost a point in my early career when I was talking on the phone while playing and forgot that my opponent was serving.

I want the full tennis experience – the ATP tour, all the Grand Slam events, endorsement deals, everything. Sadly, with all the competing interests that run the sport, I'll probably never see it. The players are independent contractors, as are the major tournaments, as are the major sponsors and equipment manufacturers. Negotiating all the contracts necessary to make a real tennis experience might be mission impossible. Still, there's got to be a better way than this. The Top Spin series, despite its gameplay issues, at least made an effort. Virtua Tennis needs to try much harder if it's going to regain its title as the preeminent tennis franchise.

7
Concept
The long-running series returns, looking very similar to its last incarnation
Graphics
The animations are great, but the created players look extraordinarily ugly and the stadiums aren't particularly detailed
Sound
Unremarkable music and no commentary
Playability
As always, Virtua Tennis performs on the court, but sports fans new demand much more than this in terms of depth and career modes
Entertainment
I have a soft spot for Virtua Tennis' fast and fluid play, but this series needs a major overhaul
Replay
Moderately High

Products In This Article

Virtua Tennis 2009cover

Virtua Tennis 2009

Platform:
PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Wii
Release Date: