Tecmo Super Bowl III: Final Edition

Tecmo Super Bowl III: Final Edition

Genesis box art
Developer(s) Tecmo
Publisher(s) Tecmo
Series Tecmo Super Bowl
Platform(s) Super NES, Sega Genesis
Release date(s)

Sega Genesis:

  • NA: August 4, 1995

Super NES:

  • JP: December 22, 1995
  • NA: October 1995
Genre(s) Traditional football simulation
Mode(s) Single-player
Multiplayer

Tecmo Super Bowl III: Final Edition is the final Tecmo football game released on the Super Nintendo Entertainment System and the Sega Genesis.

The full NFL license is used.

Gameplay

The game is closer to the real-life sport in comparison to its NES predecessors in several ways. Each team has a playbook of eight passing plays and eight running plays, any one of which can be switched out and another put in its place in the middle of a game. It also includes some of the more nuanced strategies of football, such as attempting two-point conversions. Also setting itself apart from the NES-era games was the in-game presentation, which is more akin to the realistic "TV style" presentation of modern football games like the Madden series. After a big offensive play, or a turnover or sack on defense, a box would appear on screen with a small grayscale picture of the player involved alongside his current statistics for the game.

The series' shift towards greater realism is also reflected in the game's season mode. First, it records fairly detailed statistics of each game and cumulative statistics for each team in the league throughout the season. Also throughout the season the game would maintain a list of leaders across the league in each major statistical category, and would record when a player or team broke an NFL record. The rosters for each team can also be customized by the user, and the starting lineup of a user-controlled team can be changed at any point in Season mode. Tecmo Super Bowl III's season mode also features occasional injuries, which would last for varied amounts of time just as in real life.

Features

Although Tecmo Super Bowl II: Special Edition added many new features during its limited release, Tecmo Super Bowl III added even more to make the "Final Edition" the last installment of the series. The new Super Star Editor allows for creating players while using a limited point system. These created players can be improved upon, but only if they do well in Season Mode. As in the last edition, player trades can be made during a three-week period right before Season Mode begins. Free agency is another addition to the game, which allows signing players not currently on teams, but not before space on rosters is made available. The free agent pool is only available when Trade Mode Season is selected. Depending on the home team, different stadium types are sometimes used, such as real grass fields, indoor/outdoor astro turf, or even a converted baseball infield style of stadium.

Alternate schedules are generated by the computer after the official (1995) schedule is played through. The fake extra point option, which was excluded from the previous version, was added to the game. Also new to the game is that player stats and real life player portraits are occasionally posted during games, so whenever a player makes a big catch, or a running back runs for so many yards, a window comes up indicating how that player is doing. First of all, Tecmo Super Bowl games include expansion teams consisting of Jacksonville Jaguars and Carolina Panthers. Their respective rosters are based on the 1995 season.

Glitches

The game has a few glitches, most of which came from the previous titles.

When a player kicks a field goal, the ball may go through the goal post. If it does, then it's good. If it bounces back, then it's no good.

When running on the sideline, if the player leaps, then the player is out of bounds.

If a player picks up a fumble too quickly, he becomes that team's player. Example: If a Broncos player picks a fumble too quickly from the Falcons, then he is on the Falcons, and vice versa.

If the player selects "CHANGE" while the other team does a two-point conversion, the game freezes.

If the player switches players around, the stats change.

If the player wins 3 Super Bowls in a row against the CPU, with the same team, Hall of Fame players appear in the Free Agent section. When the player tries to sign the free agent players, the game eventually "freezes up" and all the players in "trade mode" become Jim Kelly. The only way to fix this problem is to reset all the rosters.

Reception

Reviewing the Super NES version, Slo Mo of GamePro remarked positively on the two-player mode, the graphics, the Superstar Editor, and the inclusion of real pro teams, colors, logos, and players. He criticized the limited field view which leads to deep receivers running off screen, but concluded the game to be "easy to play and a gas for two antagonists."[1] A reviewer for Next Generation panned the game, citing outdated graphics and perspective, a mediocre soundtrack, and a small and "ill-conceived" playbook. He gave it one out of five stars.[2]

References

  1. "Tecmo Back in the Super Bowl". GamePro. IDG (86): 112. November 1995.
  2. "Tecmo Super Bowl III: Final Edition". Next Generation. Imagine Media (12): 201. December 1995.
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