Top 100 Retro Games: Baseball Stars

Baseball Stars
Nintendo Entertainment System
SNK
1989
#9

During the 8 bit era there were so many baseball games both licensed and unlicensed. I had already fallen in love with baseball via WPIX Yankees games and Micro League Baseball on my Apple II. I loved the depth and strategy of the game and got mixed results from NES games. Major League Baseball had real teams, but wasn’t that great. RBI Baseball was really fun but a bit mindless and random. Bases Loaded, and especially Bases Loaded II, almost got it down right. The pitching and batting interface was excellent and worth investing time in a season, but the fielding, especially when playing now, is very poorly implemented.

I played all of these games a lot trying to make the best out of them. Everything changed when Baseball Stars came out.

The first time I encountered Baseball Stars was at a friend’s house. He had rented it earlier in the day and when I came over to hang out. I sat down and began watching him play the game.

I remember the home run image, with all of its pomp, really drawing me in. A few innings later, my friend climbed a wall to make a catch, which absolutely blew our minds. When he fell over a wall later, we could not even believe what we were seeing in front of us.

I rented the game myself a few days ago and then bought it a few weeks later. One of my favorite aspects of Baseball Stars is all the little things about it that really made the game sit apart from others: you could climb walls, you could stop runners, and trick the AI, and generally the play control was so smooth. There was a woman’s team, and you could buy women to play on your own team. The additional RPG elements that allowed you to level up your players as you played through a league season added depth that allowed me to play the game on and off for at least three summers that I can remember.

Like I said, I kept playing Baseball Stars for a lot of my adolescence. Every summer, I would put together a team of friends and people from school. In private, some of them thought this was cool. Many just thought it made me a dork.

Because you could put women on your team, I could put a few crushes in my lineup. My heavy hitting, after some leveling up, lady catcher was my big middle school crush. All of my pitchers were her friends.

The bottomline is Baseball Stars gave me an outlet to have a space where I had friends that I did not have in real life. Looking back, that is unfortunate, but at the time, it was part of surviving.

I cannot stress enough how much video games saved my life back then. Games like Baseball Stars gave me that outlet to get away from the horrors of my day to day life at school and, once my father was unemployed and then having to commute three hours a day in a horrible economy, at home. I escaped into them and, at times, still do today.

I hate how so many episodes of this podcast have this sad tinge to them. It is one of the realities that made me want to do it though.

I am pretty proud of the fact that when I began playing Baseball Stars this summer, I remembered the code to get a pretty good team from memory. It does not guarantee domination though as some players will have pretty oblong skill sets that need to be leveled up. I did win the quick league I created, but I picked up a few losses along the way. The ability to do RPG style leveling up in a sports game felt revolutionary, just like it did in fighting games like River City Ransom, even though now it would be mundane.

The game still plays well. The play control is so good and very smooth. Fielding was often the aspect of the game that was not as good back in the NES days, but Baseball Stars absolutely nails it. I can pick this game up now and feel like I am 11 years old again. I sat down each afternoon and played a game in my league, and it felt totally natural to play this game despite it being over 25 years old. Much like other games of the era like Tecmo Bowl, there is a timeless quality to Baseball Stars that will make it playable forever.

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Top 100 Retro Games: Alien Storm

Alien Storm
Sega Genesis
Sega
1991
#63

Alien Storm is another in the seemingly endless line of late eighties and early nineties side scrolling platformers that dominated the arcades and both Nintendo and Sega systems. A lot of these games have very similar styles to them involving multiplayer action, area of effect attacks, and generally a good sense of humor. A great asset to Alien Storm is that it never takes itself too seriously. It would be easy to go “dark and gritty” with a game like this, and Sega avoids this masterfully.

I remember Alien Storm being yet another in a very long line of SEGA side scrollers that were fun and highly playable. However, maybe because of this, it did not seem all that memorable and ended up in the pile of games in my closet that got sold off many years later. As I said, it was not until the PS3 collection came out that I really came back to it and then really enjoyed playing the game.

This is a quirky, fun, game that does have some visual and input issues, definitely, but generally holds up regarding both graphics and play control. I dig its sense of humor for sure and the Contra style body horror at the end of the game. More on that in a bit.

So, the plot of Alien Storm goes something like this: Aliens have invaded Earth! You could stay there is a….storm...of them...The Alien Busters...really...must stand up to them save Earth.

The cover for Alien Storm, I think, is showing a scene from an early stage of the game with an alien coming out of a mail box. It looks as silly as it sounds. Notice that the female protagonist is nowhere to be found. The farther away from that era we get, the most asinine the excuses for it sound.

Alien Storm has been reissued on a number of Sega collections for modern consoles plus the Mega Drive Mini.

For my most recent play through of Alien Storm, I played it via the Genesis collection on the PS4. I also streamed it to completion. I think Alien Storm has really held up over the years and is still very playable. There are a few flaws we will get to, but overall this is still a great game.

The game reminds me of so many other games of the era like Streets of Rage and Contra. It is yet another side scroller with area of effect attacks that can be replenished. I have played a lot of these games in the past few years and gotten really comfortable with them.

I also love how the game does not take itself so seriously. I mean, for crying out loud the aliens become mailboxes! Some of the aliens look like Slurms, but not the Original Party Worm, Slurms Mackenzie.

I love the last level in this game and its Contra style body horror. It also opens up into various paths, which eventually I figured out. I did have to use an extra life code to get through this one. I think, like Streets of Rage, this is yet another game that is much better in multiplayer mode.

I would highly recommend Alien Storm. It is a very underrated game on the Genesis and worth replaying now. Given that the new collection is available on pretty much every system out there, you might as well check it out.

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International Student Scholarship 2023

A few weeks ago I was proud to award my annual scholarship for a student from our international student community. Faculty were asked to not offer remarks, so I have included mine below…

This year’s International Student Scholarship is being awarded to Lara Melo. The nominating faculty member, Professor Renita Brady, noted that Ms. Melo is “an extremely enthusiastic student with a love of learning and a love of experiencing.” Professor Brady noted that Lara’s most impressive trait was her willingness to share aspects of her Brazilian culture to faculty and members of her student cohort. She is a member of the International Student Association as well.

Books Read 2022

  1. All The Stars Aflame by Malik Abduh

  2. The Sentences That Create Us: Crafting A Writer’s Life in Prison by Pen America

  3. The Devil Finds Work by James Baldwin

  4. Bright Boulevards, Bold Dreams: The Story of Black Hollywood by Donald Bogle

  5. Labyrinths by Jorge Luis Borges

  6. The Total Library: Non Fiction 1922-1986 by Jorge Luis Borges

  7. The Book of Sand by Jorge Luis Borges

  8. On Mysticism by Jorge Luis Borges

  9. The Aleph and Other Stories by Jorge Luis Borges

  10. Class Struggle Unionism by Joe Burns

  11. Violent Order: Essays On The Nature of Police by David Correia

  12. If It’s Tuesday This Must Be Walla Walla: The Wacky History of Adrenalin OD by Dave Scott Schwartzman

  13. Art in the After-Culture: Capitalist Crisis and Cultural Strategy by Ben Davis

  14. Watch My Smoke: The Eric Dickerson Story by Eric Dickerson

  15. The Black Agenda by Glen Ford

  16. All Hail Megatron Volume Four by Simon Furman

  17. Transformers 84’ Secrets and Lies by Simon Furman

  18. Transformers: Devastation by Simon Furman

  19. Ask Iwata: Words of Wisdom from Satoru Iwata by Satoru Iwata

  20. See You Soon by Mariame Kaba

  21. Notes From Childhood by Norah Lange

  22. People In The Room by Norah Lange

  23. Marvel Masterworks: The X-Men Volume Two by Stan Lee

  24. Virtue Hoarders: The Case against the Professional Managerial Class by Catherine Liu

  25. Butts In Seats: The Tony Schiavone Story by Dirk Manning

  26. Transformers 84’ Legends and Rumors by Bill Mantio

  27. All Hail Megatron Volume Three by Shane McCarthy

  28. There Are Trans People Here by H. Melt

  29. We Will Win the Day: The Civil Rights Movement, the Black Athlete, and the Quest for Equality by Louis Moore

  30. Sula by Toni Morrison

  31. The Labyrinth of Solitude and Other Writings by Octavio Paz

  32. Transformers: The Wreckers Saga by Nick Roche

  33. Seven Conversations With Jorge Luis Borges by Fernando Sorrentino

  34. Race for Profit: How Banks and the Real Estate Industry Undermined Black Homeownership by Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor

  35. How We Get Free: Black Feminism and the Combahee River Collective by Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor

  36. Unveiling Kate Chopin by Emily Toth

  37. Godzilla On My Mind: Fifty Years of the King of Monsters by William Tsutsui

  38. Soundtrack to a Movement: African American Islam, Jazz, and Black Internationalism by Richard Brent Turner

  39. The Joker: A Celebration of 75 Years

  40. Batman: A Celebration of 75 Years

  41. The Aesthetic of Our Anger by Mike Dines

  42. The Kaepernick Effect: Taking a Knee, Changing the World by Dave Zirin

  43. The Poems of Hesiod

  44. The Cambridge Guide To Women’s Writing In English by Lorna Sage

Wrasslin' 2022

My final sheet for 2022 is now online.