Pat Riley Basketball: Difference between revisions

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|designer=

|designer=

|composer = Hikoshi Hashimoto

|composer = Hikoshi Hashimoto

|released={{vgrelease|JP|March 2, 1990<ref name=”Sega titles – Sega JP”>{{cite web |title=Software List (Sega Release) |url=https://www.sega.jp/history/hard/megadrive/software.html |website=Sega Hard Encyclopedia |publisher=[[Sega|Sega Corporation]] |access-date=May 15, 2023 |language=ja}}</ref>|NA/EU|1990}}

|released={{vgrelease|JP|March 2, 1990<ref name=”Sega titles – Sega JP”>{{cite web |title=Software List (Sega Release) |url=https://www.sega.jp/history/hard/megadrive/software.html |website=Sega Hard Encyclopedia |publisher=[[Sega|Sega Corporation]] |access-date=May 15, 2023 |language=ja}}</ref>|NA/EU|1990}}

|genre= [[Sports game|Traditional basketball]] [[simulation game|simulator]]

|genre= [[Sports game|Traditional basketball]] [[simulation game|simulator]]

|modes= [[Single-player video game|Single-player]], [[multiplayer video game|multiplayer]] <small>(for both Exhibition and Tournament modes)</small>

|modes= [[Single-player video game|Single-player]], [[multiplayer video game|multiplayer]] <small>(for both Exhibition and Tournament modes)</small>


Revision as of 09:55, 21 September 2025

1990 video game

1990 video game

Pat Riley Basketball is a basketball video game which was released for the Sega Genesis,[3] for the Mega Drive in Japan on March 2, 1990[2] under the title Super Real Basketball (スーパーリアルバスケットボール, Sūpā Riaru Basukettobōru) and Europe under the same title as Japan. It was released in 1990 in the United States.[3] It was also developed for the Master System, but was never released. Pat Riley was the coach of the Los Angeles Lakers at the time of the game’s release. There are two modes and eight different teams to choose from.[4]

Gameplay

There are eight teams to choose from:

Like regulation basketball, there are four quarters, but the player can set the length of the quarters (five, twelve, or twenty minutes per quarter). The game supports two players. Its modes are exhibition and tournament.

References

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