Version: 2008
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WTA Tour Tennis (Xbox)

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Price: $19.99
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GameSpot editors' review

Seasoned arcade publishers Sega and Namco have done well for themselves with their respective tennis franchises, producing games that are far more fun than you might expect from such a seemingly stuffy sport. Now, Konami is trying its hand at a tennis game with WTA Tour Tennis. Released earlier this year for the PlayStation 2 (as well as the Game Boy Advance), the new Xbox and GameCube versions of the game are largely identical and again offer mixed results. A few key gameplay and graphical issues serve to keep the game from reaching the same level of quality as other tennis franchises.

WTA Tour Tennisscreenshot
WTA Tour Tennis is ported from a PlayStation 2 game released earlier this year.

For the acronym impaired, WTA stands for Women's Tennis Association, and the game's roster consists of 20 players who have competed in the WTA Tour, including some of the most recognizable names in women's tennis. Jennifer Capriati, Ai Sugiyama, and Serena Williams are present, though oddly, big-name contenders Venus Williams and Anna Kournikova have been omitted from the roster. You'll notice the game's no-frills presentation from the main menu, where WTA Tour Tennis offers three modes of play: tour, exhibition, and tournament. The tour mode emulates the real-life WTA Tour by putting you through a series of ladder-style tournaments. The exhibition mode lets you customize a single match of tennis, and the tournament mode is a mix of the tour and the exhibition modes, letting you customize the length and the seeding of a ladder-style tournament.

The game mechanics are similar to those of Sega's Virtua Tennis games, but the pacing is noticeably slower and more methodical. When serving, you can choose from three different types of serves. The flat serve will shoot the ball straight down the court, and the spin and slice serves will cause the ball to curve sharply to the right or the left, respectively. During play, you can hit a straight flat shot by pressing the A button, or you can hit a topspin shot by pressing the X button, which sacrifices ball control for speed. You can also give your shots more power by double-tapping the button right before you make contact with the ball, but it will take a bit of practice before you'll get the timing down on this technique. As you play through the game, you may notice a few gameplay quirks. As in Virtua Tennis, you have to press your shot button and hold the direction you want to send the ball, but this can be incredibly touchy, and you'll often watch with frustration as your player swats at thin air. You won't see players diving to save shots either, which, when combined with the AI's susceptibility to smash shots, keeps the matches much shorter than they should be and makes rallies all but nonexistent.

WTA Tour Tennisscreenshot
It's a decent but unremarkable tennis game.
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WTA Tour Tennis (Xbox)