League Bowling (リーグ・ボウリング) is a bowling simulation game released by SNK in 1991 for the Neo Geo.
Overview[]
The rules are the same as ten-pin bowling and players only need the joystick and A button to play. On each frame, players can pick a position from where they want to launch the ball. Pressing the A button once determines how much spin the player will use in their throw and the second time determines how much power they will use. The graphics are brightly colored and cartoony with lively character animations along with flashy special effects. Since the gameplay is straight forward and simplistic, it can be enjoyed by people of all ages.
Modes[]
League Bowling has three types of modes, played up to 4 players.
Regulation[]
Played just like a normal game of bowling, with 300 being a perfect score.
Flash[]
Values of 100 to 300 will flash on a randomizer during the time the bowler throws his shot. A strike adds the bonus flash value to the score accumulated at the end of the game. Below each strike value is a smaller point value, which is added to the score for a spare.
Unlike regular bowling, bonus shots in the tenth frame are not awarded; once a strike or spare is thrown, the game ends.
The maximum possible score is 3,000.
Strike 90[]
Played just like regulation except that a strike scores 90 points for the frame, and a spare scores 60 for the frame, with no carry-over bonus. 30 points are awarded in the case of a field goal (throwing the ball in between the 7 and 10 pins). Like the Flash mode, there are no bonus shots in the tenth frame.
The maximum possible score is 900.
Multi Link Play[]
In addition, it also has the option to link up to 4 Neo-Geo MVS machines to become the 8-player game. This is the only Neo-Geo game that features the 8-player support. The 8-player gameplay video are shown on YouTube with the link below.
Critical Reception[]
In Japan, Game Machine listed League Bowling on their February 1, 1991 issue as being the eighth most-popular arcade game at the time. Likewise, RePlay reported the game to be the twentieth most-popular arcade game at the time. The title was met with mixed to positive reviews from critics, many of which criticized its awkward controls for being passable but praised its humorous artstyle as well as the characters and their reactions.
AllGame's Kyle Knight praised the catoon-style presentation, simple gameplay and multiplayer but criticized the audio and lack of replay value. Consoles Plus's J.B. Aerstut also commended the visual presentation, comparing it with the works of Tex Avery, audio and playability but felt mixed in regards to its longevity. Hobby Consolas' Manuel del Campo gave positive remarks to the multiplayer, character animations, appropriate music, sound and playability but criticized one gameplay aspect. Joystick's Jean-Marc Demoly and Player One's Cyril Drevet commented positively in regards to the animated audiovisual presentation, realism and longevity. Joystick also regarded it as one of the best bowling simulators in the genre but was criticized for being repetitive and limited.
Ports[]
Tom Fulp, the founder and CEO of Newgrounds, ported the game to Flash in 2002. The port features no ball selection, a regulation mode only, fewer animations, and the different player's sprites are the same.
Later on 2010, SNK Playmore releases the NEOGEO Station, which includes the emulation of the game and other Neo-Geo games for the PlayStation 3 and the PSP. On July 12, 2011, Virtual Console version for the Wii was released in Japan.
Cameos[]
Nadia, from the anime Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water, can be seen cheering in the background.
Videos[]
Trivia[]
- This game has gained some fans over the internet due to a mostly faithful flash adaption of the game.