My hat goes off to
All-Star Baseball 2002 for probably being the most realistic baseball game so far this year. Although the ball was smaller than I am accustomed to in the batters box, it provided the extra incentive for me to want play it over and over again. Be aware though, those bats are corked! Being the Twins fan that I am, I was very surprised to see that Denny Hocking, of all people, was capable of multi-homer games. Now I mean no disrespect to the Hocking family, but lets face it, he's not a marquee player. But this does lead me to my next point, that
ASB contains all 30 teams, and has over 700 players to play around with. That's not even including the
Hall of Fame team that includes old greats like Reggie Jackson, Mike Schmidt and Nolan Ryan, complete with
Turn Back the Clock uniforms for each club.
Despite the minor flaws that I mentioned earlier, the rest of the gameplay for All-Star Baseball 2002 was very realistic. When fielding, every play is capable of being a highlight reel with the diving and jumping taking place. Also, take note that errors are unavoidable, even if you yourself do everything right. One example is when you try to throw someone out with a tag, but the throw is high, and the runner slides underneath. The game modes themselves are pretty much standard: Exhibition, Season, World Series (just the playoffs), Home Run Derby and Batting Practice, all of which are self explanatory. And after you complete a Season, awards are handed it out like the MVP, Cy Young, Rookie of the Year, and Gold Glove. There's also a General Manager option that lets you trade, sign free agents, draft and create players.