Baseball (Intellivision video game)
Baseball is a baseball video game produced by Mattel and released for its Intellivision console in 1980. As the best-selling game in the console's history, with more than a million copies sold, Baseball put players in control of a nine-man baseball team competing in a standard nine-inning game. When first released, Mattel obtained a license from Major League Baseball, though the only trademarked item used is the MLB logo on the box art. No official team names or player names are in the game.
Gameplay
The game consists of nine innings on a simplified baseball diamond. The team that scores the most runs wins.Player 1 is always the visiting team and bats at the top of the innings, with Player 2 as the home team and batting at the bottom of the innings. The pitching player selects a pitch by pushing the controller in one of eight cardinal directions, each representing a different speed and direction. The batting player then attempts to hit the ball into play and reach the base, so that subsequent batters can move to home plate and thus score a run. If the ball is hit into play, the pitching player uses the keypad to select a fielder who attempts to catch the ball, then chooses who will receive the throw, to put the runner "out".
The batting player is able to advance the base-runners off base in an attempt to steal a base, but the pitching player can counter that with a pickoff before the pitch is thrown.
If the score is tied at the end of the 9th inning, extra innings are played until a winner is determined.
Variations from standard baseball
Even though the two teams represented in Baseball are basically the same, the level of simulation is remarkable for its time. A wide array of baseball strategy includes Double plays, triple plays, rundowns, and intentional walks. Changes include all hits being automatically grounders, with no provisions for flyballs. Home runs depend on how and where the ball is hit.Another major change allows the batting player to score a run on a third out, if the base-runner reaches home plate before the third out takes place. For example, if the bases are loaded with two outs and the batter manages to hit the ball into play, the runner on third base could score if a throw to third base forces out the runner from second base. This happens if the runner on third base crosses home plate before the runner from second base reaches third base.