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Tag Team Wrestling
Developer(s) Technos Japan (arcade)
Sas Sakata (Famicom/NES)
Publisher(s) Data East
Distributor(s) Data East
Platform(s) Arcade, Commodore 64,IBM PC, Famicom, Nintendo Entertainment System
Release date(s) INT 1983
Genre(s) Fighting game
Mode(s) single player, multi-player
Media ROM cartridge
Input methods gamepad

Tag Team Wrestling is a 1983 arcade video game developed by Technos Japan and released in the U.S. by Data East. In 1986, the game was ported to the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES). The Famicom/NES version was developed by Sas Sakata, a company which also developed the NES versions of Karnov and Burgertime.

In the NES version, two professional wrestling tag-teams, the Strong Bads and the Ricky Fighters, battle against each other in tag-team action, or a single player competes in a series of tournaments to win ever larger trophies. The Strong Bads provided the basis for the character Strong Bad on the popular Homestar Runner website, which abounds with obscure 1980s popular culture references.[1]

As an 8-bit game, Tag Team Wrestling has a limited number of wrestling moves and characters. Moves and counters are performed through the use of a real-time, menu-based action-reaction fighting module. After engaging in a grapple, players quickly scroll through a menu and choose a technique to perform. Each of the four characters has a unique move that can only be used against one other "rival" wrestler.

The name of the game in Japan is The Big Pro Wrestling! for the original arcade version and Tag Team Pro Wrestling for the Family Computer version. In North America, it is Tag Team Wrestling for both the arcade and NES versions. The game was also ported to the Commodore 64 and IBM PC computers before it even made it to the Famicom, in 1984.

Contents

Critical reception

Seanbaby lists Tag Team Wrestling as the fourth-worst NES game ever. 1up.com, on the other hand, credits it with introducing the tag-team concept to video games and hails it as a major innovation.

Tag Team HD

Australian developer SunDawg acquired rights to the Tag Team Wrestling franchise in 2004. The company is in the process of developing a high definition update to the original Tag Team Wrestling, which is scheduled for release on Xbox Live.

Trivia

References

  1. ^ a b "Strong Bad". Homestar Runner Wiki. http://www.hrwiki.org/index.php/Strong_Bad. Retrieved 16 July 2009.  

External links


Strategy wiki

Up to date as of January 23, 2010
(Redirected to Tag Team Wrestling article)

From StrategyWiki, the free strategy guide and walkthrough wiki

Tag Team Wrestling
Box artwork for Tag Team Wrestling.
Developer(s) Technos
Publisher(s)
NES
Japanese title タッグチームプロレスリング
Release date(s)
Arcade
MS-DOS, Commodore 64/128
NES
Genre(s) Wrestling
System(s) Arcade, NES, Commodore 64, MS-DOS
Players 1-2
Tag Team Wrestling marquee

Tag Team Wrestling is a 1983 arcade video game developed by Technos and released in the U.S. by Data East. The game was ported to the Commodore 64 and MS-DOS in 1984, and the NES in 1986. The NES version was developed by Sas Sakata, a company who also developed the NES version of Karnov, and was published by Namco. The name of the game in Japan is The Big Pro Wrestling! for the original arcade version and Tag Team Pro Wrestling for the Famicom version. In North America, it is Tag Team Wrestling for both the arcade and NES versions.

Home conversion

In the NES version, two professional wrestling tag-teams, the Strong Bads and the Ricky Fighters, battle against each other in tag-team action, or a single player competes in a series of tournaments to win ever larger trophies. The Strong Bads provided the basis for the character Strong Bad on the popular Homestar Runner website.

Computer conversions

As an 8-bit game, Tag Team Wrestling has a limited number of wrestling moves and characters. Moves and counters are performed through the use of a real-time, menu-based action-reaction fighting module. After engaging in a grapple, players quickly scroll through a menu and choose a technique to perform. Each of the four characters has a unique move that can only be used against one other "rival" wrestler.

Table of Contents

Tag Team Wrestling/Table of Contents








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