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Backyard Football

This article describes the video game. For the underlying sport, see Street football (American).

Backyard Football is a series of video games for various systems. The series was developed by Humongous Entertainment and published by Infogrames, Atari and The Evergreen Group. It is one of several sub-series in the Backyard Sports series, and is the first to feature professional players as kids, examples being Steve Young and Barry Sanders. The series currently has eleven titles.

Backyard Football attempts to recreate the experience of playing American football as children.

Titles

Title Year Platforms Cover athlete
Backyard Football September 14, 1999 Macintosh, Microsoft Windows Steve Young
Backyard Football 2002 2001 Macintosh, Windows Drew Bledsoe, Donovan McNabb
Backyard Football 2002 Game Boy Advance Donovan McNabb
Backyard Football 2002 Nintendo GameCube
Backyard Football 2004 2003 Windows Jeff Garcia
Backyard Football 2006 2005 Game Boy Advance, PlayStation 2, Windows Daunte Culpepper
Backyard Sports Football 2007 2006 Game Boy Advance Ben Roethlisberger
Backyard Football '08 2007 Nintendo DS, PlayStation 2, Wii, Windows Tom Brady
Backyard Football '09 2008 Nintendo DS, PlayStation 2, Wii, Windows
Backyard Football '10 2009 PlayStation 2, Wii, Xbox 360 Frank Gore, Eli Manning, Kurt Warner, Peyton Manning, Adrian Peterson, Jason Witten
Backyard Sports: Rookie Rush 2010 Nintendo DS, Wii, Xbox 360 N/A

Backyard Football

Backyard Football, the third "Backyard" game, was developed by Humongous Entertainment and published by GT Interactive in 1999. In it, kids and professional football players as kids play football. There are three types of gameplay available in Backyard Football. The first one is a single game. At the single game screen, the player can select the field on which they wish to play, the weather (between sunny, where the players are able to run very quickly; rainy, in which the players are slowed somewhat and the ball is difficult to throw; and snowy, where players are slowed considerably), and the level of difficulty (between easy, medium, and hard), among various other minor settings. They then pick their team name, which can be any of the then-31 NFL teams and 10 backyard teams. When the team is chosen, a player would take turns choosing players with the CPU. There are a total of seven players on a team, two of which will be on the bench, while five get to see action. The statistics of a player in single game mode have no effect on a player's statistics in season play.

The second type of gameplay is season mode. The player selects their coach name, settings, and team before the season and drafts all seven of their players before the CPU picks any for the rest of the computer controlled teams in the league. The coach guides their team through a 14-game season, at the end of which if they are to win their division or be picked as the wild card, the team will compete in the playoffs. Eight teams, four from each conference, compete in three rounds of games to determine the winner of the "Super Colossal Cereal Bowl" (which is a spoof of the Super Bowl in the NFL).

The third type of gameplay is online play. Backyard Football is the only game, along with Backyard Baseball 2001, that offers online play with players across the globe. Online play is hosted through the Junior Sports Network, and is only available for Windows users, since the network system does not support Macintosh. Like Backyard Baseball 2001, there are three difficulty areas: Easy Streets, Mediumville, and Toughy Town. The harder the difficulty, it becomes less likely that the players out on the field are going to make magnificent plays to "bail the coach out". While playing online, the player may make contact with another coach online. They may then chat with each other with only pre-written dialogue, since the network is not being monitored to make sure no inappropriate language is used. Since www.jrsn.com has been discontinued, no new coach names may be registered to play online. However in 2021, a member named LittleToonCat has recreated the servers from scratch running on Node.js and using an online-enabled ScummVM build as the client to connect to the new servers which was released as Backyard Sports Online. The source codes for the server, session, and the ScummVM client have been made open-source by the creator.

Backyard Football 2002

Backyard Football 2002 was developed by Humongous Entertainment and published by Infogrames in 2001 for Windows and Macintosh. A planned release for the Game Boy Color was cancelled.[1] In this game, one can play as their favorite NFL stars as kids. Brett Favre and Drew Bledsoe, who both appear in the first Backyard Football, returns in this game. The goal of the game is to lead a team to Cereal Bowl glory. Updated versions of the game were published yearly on various platforms through Backyard Football 2006. This is also the only SCUMM game to use LAN play instead of online services.

Backyard Sports Football 2007

Backyard Sports Football 2007 was developed by Humongous Entertainment and published by Atari in 2006 for the Game Boy Advance. Like the previous installment in the series, Backyard Sports Football 2007 featured the ability to create own player, build own team, play exhibition games or a season mode, and play as a number of NFL players as their childhood lookalikes. It also added 7-on-7 gameplay for the first time.[2] Backyard Sports Football 2007 received negative reviews, being criticized for its repetitive sound and poor gameplay.[3] The sound is described was described as "annoying, repetitious music" by a reviewer at GameZone.[3] The gameplay was described as poor by the same reviewer due to "irresponsive controls" and a lack of playbook options.[3]

Backyard Football '08

Backyard Football '08 was released in 2007 for the Wii, PlayStation 2, Nintendo DS, and PC. Humongous Entertainment handled development, with assistance by FarSight Studios and Torus Games. It was published by Atari. The game allows the player to play as child versions of professional football players from all current NFL teams, as well as play entire football seasons as any of the 16 teams.

IGN rated the Wii version of the game a 6/10 and criticized it for having controls that may be hard for a younger audience to understand, while praising its commentary for being funny.[6]

Backyard Football '09

Backyard Football '09 was developed and published by the same studios as the previous installment, and released on the same systems in 2008. The game includes all 22 backyard kids and 15 professional players as kids. Professional players include Tom Brady, Peyton Manning, Tony Romo, LaDainian Tomlinson, Brian Urlacher, Reggie Bush, Chris Cooley and Frank Gore and more.[10] Along with the NFL players, most of the classic backyard kids are in the game including Pete Wheeler, Pablo Sanchez, and Ernie Steele. Both of the commentators, Chuck Downfield and Sunny Day, are also from previous games of the series.

Backyard Football '09 was said to be "repetitive with its commentary" and "made too simple and easy" from many reviews. The reviews state that the game targets more of a pre-teen audience.[11][12][13]

Backyard Football '10

Backyard Football '10 was developed by Humongous Entertainment and published by Atari in 2009 for the Xbox 360, Wii, and PlayStation 2. The game features "Single Player", "Season," "Tournament", and "All Pro" modes, along with the multiplayer modes of co-op play and two-on-two contests.[18]

The game received mixed reviews for the Xbox 360 and Wii versions, but negative reviews for the PS2 version.[14][15][16] For the Xbox 360 version, ZTGameDomain said that the game is "simple, easy to pick up and really well designed".[17]

Backyard Sports: Rookie Rush

Backyard Sports: Rookie Rush was developed by Humongous Entertainment and published by Atari in 2010 for the Xbox 360, Wii, Microsoft Windows, and Nintendo DS. This title features the previously created "Pick-up Games", "Season Mode", and "Tournament", and introduces two new styles of gameplay, "Story Mode" and "Mini-Games".[19]

Common Sense Media gave the game 4 out of 5 stars.[20] The game received 2 out of 5 stars from AllGame.[21]

References

  1. ^ "Backyard Football 2001". IGN. Retrieved 15 April 2016.
  2. ^ . Humungous Inc. Archived from the original on 14 July 2006. Retrieved 12 April 2014.
  3. ^ a b c "Backyard Football 2007 - GBA - Review". GameZone. 2 October 2006. Retrieved 12 April 2014.
  4. ^ "Backyard Football for Wii". GameRankings. Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  5. ^ "Backyard Football for DS". GameRankings. Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  6. ^ a b Thomas, Lucas M. (7 January 2008). "Backyard Football 2008 Review". Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  7. ^ Adams, Chris (18 October 2007). "Backyard Football 2008 Review". IGN. Retrieved 14 May 2014.
  8. ^ "Backyard Football '09 for Wii". GameRankings. Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  9. ^ "Backyard Football '09 - WII - Review". GameZone. 14 December 2008. Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  10. ^ "Backyard Football '09 Pro Roster". Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  11. ^ "Backyard Football '09 Review". 25 November 2008. Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  12. ^ "Backyard Football '09 Super Bowl review". 30 January 2009. Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  13. ^ "Hands On: Backyard Football 09". 12 September 2008. Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  14. ^ a b "Backyard Football '10 for Xbox 360 - GameRankings". GameRankings. October 20, 2009. Retrieved June 25, 2011.
  15. ^ a b "Backyard Football '10 for Wii - GameRankings". GameRankings. October 20, 2009. Retrieved June 25, 2011.
  16. ^ a b "Backyard Football '10 for PlayStation 2 - GameRankings". GameRankings. October 20, 2009. Retrieved June 25, 2011.
  17. ^ a b McKown, Ken (October 20, 2009). "Backyard Football 2010 – ZTGD". ZTGameDomain. Retrieved June 25, 2011.
  18. ^ "Backyard Football '10 - Overview - allgame". Allgame. October 20, 2009. Retrieved June 25, 2011.
  19. ^ "Backyard Sports: Rookie Rush Arrives Oct. 26". StreetCorner Media. Retrieved 23 March 2014.
  20. ^ "Backyard Sports: Rookie Rush Game Review". Common Sense Media. Retrieved 23 March 2014.
  21. ^ Alan Scott, Marriott. "Backyard Sports: Rookie Rush Overview". AllGame. Retrieved 7 April 2014.

External links

backyard, football, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, februar. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Backyard Football news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article describes the video game For the underlying sport see Street football American Not to be confused with Backyard Soccer a game about association football released in Europe under this name Backyard Football is a series of video games for various systems The series was developed by Humongous Entertainment and published by Infogrames Atari and The Evergreen Group It is one of several sub series in the Backyard Sports series and is the first to feature professional players as kids examples being Steve Young and Barry Sanders The series currently has eleven titles Backyard FootballThe current Backyard Football logo Genre s SportsDeveloper s Humongous EntertainmentPublisher s Humongous Entertainment Infogrames Atari The Evergreen GroupPlatform s Nintendo DS PlayStation 2 Wii Windows Xbox 360 Game Boy Advance Macintosh Nintendo GameCubeFirst releaseBackyard Football1999Latest releaseBackyard Sports Rookie Rush2010Backyard Football attempts to recreate the experience of playing American football as children Contents 1 Titles 1 1 Backyard Football 1 2 Backyard Football 2002 1 3 Backyard Sports Football 2007 1 4 Backyard Football 08 1 5 Backyard Football 09 1 6 Backyard Football 10 1 7 Backyard Sports Rookie Rush 2 References 3 External linksTitles EditTitle Year Platforms Cover athleteBackyard Football September 14 1999 Macintosh Microsoft Windows Steve YoungBackyard Football 2002 2001 Macintosh Windows Drew Bledsoe Donovan McNabbBackyard Football 2002 Game Boy Advance Donovan McNabbBackyard Football 2002 Nintendo GameCubeBackyard Football 2004 2003 Windows Jeff GarciaBackyard Football 2006 2005 Game Boy Advance PlayStation 2 Windows Daunte CulpepperBackyard Sports Football 2007 2006 Game Boy Advance Ben RoethlisbergerBackyard Football 08 2007 Nintendo DS PlayStation 2 Wii Windows Tom BradyBackyard Football 09 2008 Nintendo DS PlayStation 2 Wii WindowsBackyard Football 10 2009 PlayStation 2 Wii Xbox 360 Frank Gore Eli Manning Kurt Warner Peyton Manning Adrian Peterson Jason WittenBackyard Sports Rookie Rush 2010 Nintendo DS Wii Xbox 360 N ABackyard Football Edit Backyard Football the third Backyard game was developed by Humongous Entertainment and published by GT Interactive in 1999 In it kids and professional football players as kids play football There are three types of gameplay available in Backyard Football The first one is a single game At the single game screen the player can select the field on which they wish to play the weather between sunny where the players are able to run very quickly rainy in which the players are slowed somewhat and the ball is difficult to throw and snowy where players are slowed considerably and the level of difficulty between easy medium and hard among various other minor settings They then pick their team name which can be any of the then 31 NFL teams and 10 backyard teams When the team is chosen a player would take turns choosing players with the CPU There are a total of seven players on a team two of which will be on the bench while five get to see action The statistics of a player in single game mode have no effect on a player s statistics in season play The second type of gameplay is season mode The player selects their coach name settings and team before the season and drafts all seven of their players before the CPU picks any for the rest of the computer controlled teams in the league The coach guides their team through a 14 game season at the end of which if they are to win their division or be picked as the wild card the team will compete in the playoffs Eight teams four from each conference compete in three rounds of games to determine the winner of the Super Colossal Cereal Bowl which is a spoof of the Super Bowl in the NFL The third type of gameplay is online play Backyard Football is the only game along with Backyard Baseball 2001 that offers online play with players across the globe Online play is hosted through the Junior Sports Network and is only available for Windows users since the network system does not support Macintosh Like Backyard Baseball 2001 there are three difficulty areas Easy Streets Mediumville and Toughy Town The harder the difficulty it becomes less likely that the players out on the field are going to make magnificent plays to bail the coach out While playing online the player may make contact with another coach online They may then chat with each other with only pre written dialogue since the network is not being monitored to make sure no inappropriate language is used Since www jrsn com has been discontinued no new coach names may be registered to play online However in 2021 a member named LittleToonCat has recreated the servers from scratch running on Node js and using an online enabled ScummVM build as the client to connect to the new servers which was released as Backyard Sports Online The source codes for the server session and the ScummVM client have been made open source by the creator Backyard Football 2002 Edit Backyard Football 2002 was developed by Humongous Entertainment and published by Infogrames in 2001 for Windows and Macintosh A planned release for the Game Boy Color was cancelled 1 In this game one can play as their favorite NFL stars as kids Brett Favre and Drew Bledsoe who both appear in the first Backyard Football returns in this game The goal of the game is to lead a team to Cereal Bowl glory Updated versions of the game were published yearly on various platforms through Backyard Football 2006 This is also the only SCUMM game to use LAN play instead of online services Backyard Sports Football 2007 Edit Backyard Sports Football 2007 was developed by Humongous Entertainment and published by Atari in 2006 for the Game Boy Advance Like the previous installment in the series Backyard Sports Football 2007 featured the ability to create own player build own team play exhibition games or a season mode and play as a number of NFL players as their childhood lookalikes It also added 7 on 7 gameplay for the first time 2 Backyard Sports Football 2007 received negative reviews being criticized for its repetitive sound and poor gameplay 3 The sound is described was described as annoying repetitious music by a reviewer at GameZone 3 The gameplay was described as poor by the same reviewer due to irresponsive controls and a lack of playbook options 3 Backyard Football 08 Edit ReceptionAggregate scoreAggregatorScoreGameRankings60 Wii 4 15 DS 5 Review scorePublicationScoreIGN6 10 Wii 6 1 5 10 DS 7 Backyard Football 08 was released in 2007 for the Wii PlayStation 2 Nintendo DS and PC Humongous Entertainment handled development with assistance by FarSight Studios and Torus Games It was published by Atari The game allows the player to play as child versions of professional football players from all current NFL teams as well as play entire football seasons as any of the 16 teams IGN rated the Wii version of the game a 6 10 and criticized it for having controls that may be hard for a younger audience to understand while praising its commentary for being funny 6 Backyard Football 09 Edit ReceptionAggregate scoreAggregatorScoreGameRankings68 Wii 8 Review scorePublicationScoreGameZone6 8 10 Wii 9 Backyard Football 09 was developed and published by the same studios as the previous installment and released on the same systems in 2008 The game includes all 22 backyard kids and 15 professional players as kids Professional players include Tom Brady Peyton Manning Tony Romo LaDainian Tomlinson Brian Urlacher Reggie Bush Chris Cooley and Frank Gore and more 10 Along with the NFL players most of the classic backyard kids are in the game including Pete Wheeler Pablo Sanchez and Ernie Steele Both of the commentators Chuck Downfield and Sunny Day are also from previous games of the series Backyard Football 09 was said to be repetitive with its commentary and made too simple and easy from many reviews The reviews state that the game targets more of a pre teen audience 11 12 13 Backyard Football 10 Edit ReceptionAggregate scoreAggregatorScoreGameRankings57 50 X360 14 65 Wii 15 35 PS2 16 Review scoresPublicationScoreOfficial Xbox Magazine US 6 10ZTGameDomain6 5 10 X360 17 Backyard Football 10 was developed by Humongous Entertainment and published by Atari in 2009 for the Xbox 360 Wii and PlayStation 2 The game features Single Player Season Tournament and All Pro modes along with the multiplayer modes of co op play and two on two contests 18 The game received mixed reviews for the Xbox 360 and Wii versions but negative reviews for the PS2 version 14 15 16 For the Xbox 360 version ZTGameDomain said that the game is simple easy to pick up and really well designed 17 Backyard Sports Rookie Rush Edit Backyard Sports Rookie Rush was developed by Humongous Entertainment and published by Atari in 2010 for the Xbox 360 Wii Microsoft Windows and Nintendo DS This title features the previously created Pick up Games Season Mode and Tournament and introduces two new styles of gameplay Story Mode and Mini Games 19 Common Sense Media gave the game 4 out of 5 stars 20 The game received 2 out of 5 stars from AllGame 21 References Edit Backyard Football 2001 IGN Retrieved 15 April 2016 Backyard Sports Football video game NFL video games for kids from Humungous Inc Humungous Inc Archived from the original on 14 July 2006 Retrieved 12 April 2014 a b c Backyard Football 2007 GBA Review GameZone 2 October 2006 Retrieved 12 April 2014 Backyard Football for Wii GameRankings Retrieved 13 May 2014 Backyard Football for DS GameRankings Retrieved 13 May 2014 a b Thomas Lucas M 7 January 2008 Backyard Football 2008 Review Retrieved 13 May 2014 Adams Chris 18 October 2007 Backyard Football 2008 Review IGN Retrieved 14 May 2014 Backyard Football 09 for Wii GameRankings Retrieved 13 May 2014 Backyard Football 09 WII Review GameZone 14 December 2008 Retrieved 13 May 2014 Backyard Football 09 Pro Roster Retrieved 14 February 2014 Backyard Football 09 Review 25 November 2008 Retrieved 14 February 2014 Backyard Football 09 Super Bowl review 30 January 2009 Retrieved 14 February 2014 Hands On Backyard Football 09 12 September 2008 Retrieved 14 February 2014 a b Backyard Football 10 for Xbox 360 GameRankings GameRankings October 20 2009 Retrieved June 25 2011 a b Backyard Football 10 for Wii GameRankings GameRankings October 20 2009 Retrieved June 25 2011 a b Backyard Football 10 for PlayStation 2 GameRankings GameRankings October 20 2009 Retrieved June 25 2011 a b McKown Ken October 20 2009 Backyard Football 2010 ZTGD ZTGameDomain Retrieved June 25 2011 Backyard Football 10 Overview allgame Allgame October 20 2009 Retrieved June 25 2011 Backyard Sports Rookie Rush Arrives Oct 26 StreetCorner Media Retrieved 23 March 2014 Backyard Sports Rookie Rush Game Review Common Sense Media Retrieved 23 March 2014 Alan Scott Marriott Backyard Sports Rookie Rush Overview AllGame Retrieved 7 April 2014 External links EditBackyard Football official website archived Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Backyard Football amp oldid 1143924376 Backyard Football 2002, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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