All-Star Baseball

      All-Star Baseball
      All-Star Baseball 2005 Cover.png
      Boxart of All-Star Baseball 2005, the final game in the series
      Genres Sports
      Developers Iguana Entertainment/Acclaim Studios Austin
      Publishers Acclaim Entertainment
      Platforms PlayStation, Sega Saturn, Nintendo 64, Game Boy Color, PlayStation 2, Xbox, GameCube, Game Boy Advance
      Platform of origin PlayStation, Sega Saturn
      Year of inception 1997
      First release All-Star Baseball '97
      June 30, 1997
      Latest release All-Star Baseball 2005
      April 8, 2004

      All-Star Baseball is a baseball video game series developed and published by Acclaim Entertainment. The series began in 1997 with the release of All-Star Baseball '97, the successor to Frank Thomas Big Hurt Baseball. New York Yankees play-by-play announcers John Sterling and Michael Kay were the announcers for 1998-2000 editions of the game. The final release in the series (due to the bankruptcy of Acclaim) is All-Star Baseball 2005.

      Within the individual games, there are several different modes of play, such as exhibition, managing an existing Major League Baseball team or creating a team. Many North American cities are available for "expansion," in addition to Mexico City and Puerto Rico.

      Most of the games feature Derek Jeter on the cover.

      Series

      Title Year Platforms
      All-Star Baseball '97 1997 PlayStation, Sega Saturn
      All-Star Baseball '99 1998 Nintendo 64, Game Boy
      All-Star Baseball 2000 1999 Nintendo 64, Game Boy Color
      All-Star Baseball 2001 2000 Nintendo 64, Game Boy Color
      All-Star Baseball 2002 2001 GameCube, PlayStation 2
      All-Star Baseball 2003 2002 Xbox, GameCube, PlayStation 2, Game Boy Advance
      All-Star Baseball 2004 2003 Xbox, GameCube, PlayStation 2, Game Boy Advance
      All-Star Baseball 2005 2004 Xbox, PlayStation 2

      1997

      The first game in the series featured Frank Thomas and was released for the PlayStation and Sega Saturn.

      1999

      The game also marked the debut of play-by-play commentary. This is done by two New York Yankees broadcasters: John Sterling and Michael Kay. Larry Walker appeared on the game's box.

      2005

      All-Star Baseball 2005 features a variety of things that most previous versions did not include, such as classic players like Babe Ruth, Yogi Berra and others. Apart from each of the MLB teams, the game also features teams made up with legends of different eras and the 2004 American and National league teams. One particular game characteristic is that it includes the Montreal Expos, who relocated from Montreal to Washington D.C. and changed their name to the Washington Nationals for the 2005 MLB season.

      The game includes all thirty stadiums as of the 2004 season, as well as other fictional and non-fictional ball parks to bring the total to over eighty parks. Some of these parks include: the Polo Grounds used by the then New York Giants (the New York Yankees played their home games there as well from 1913-1922); the Houston Astrodome; Hiram Bithorn Stadium used by the Montreal Expos in their final season; retro, current and future versions of Fenway Park, Yankee Stadium, Shea Stadium and Dodger Stadium.

      Barry Bonds does not appear in All-Star Baseball 2005, because he is not a member of the Major League Baseball Players Association however Bonds is talked about by Brennaman and Lyons in an in-game conversation on why pitchers should not be allowed to win the MVP Award. Steve Lyons says, "You will never see Barry Bonds win the Cy Young Award." Instead, the San Francisco Giants have a make believe player named "Wes Mailman". "Mailman" actually announces himself on one of the billboards at the Philadelphia Phillies home games. The game does feature play by play commentary by Arizona Diamondbacks television broadcaster Thom Brennaman and former major league player Steve Lyons, who sometimes offers long answers to Brennaman's questions during games.

      Derek Jeter is the featured player of this game's incarnation.

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      Receptions

      The initial incarnations on the Nintendo 64 received positive reviews, with an average score in the mid-to-high eighties according to Gamerankings. However, the handheld versions of the game typically received lower scores than their console counterparts. With the sixth generation of consoles the series started to receive lower reviews. The Gamecube version of All-Star Baseball 2002 received the lowest reviews of all the home console games in the series, with an average score of 67%. All-Star Baseball 2000 on the Game Boy Color has the lowest scores of the entire series, at 60%. All-Star Baseball 2000 and 2001 are the highest ranked in the series, with scores of 88% and 87% respectively.

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      Last modified on 10 June 2013, at 08:14