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Barkley Shut Up and Jam 2

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Barkley Shut Up and Jam 2
Developer(s)Accolade
Publisher(s)Sport Accolade
Platform(s)Genesis
Release
  • NA: June 1995
Genre(s)Sports
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Barkley Shut Up and Jam 2 is a 1995 basketball video game developed and published by Accolade exclusively for the Sega Genesis. The game is a sequel to 1994's Barkley Shut Up and Jam!

Piko Interactive acquired the rights to the game and re-released it in a compilation cartridge for the Evercade handheld under the name Hoops Shut Up and Jam 2 in 2021.[1]

Gameplay

One of the players is about to unleash a "chaotic dunk" on the backboard.

The game is played from a horizontal perspective as the player and its teammate (computer or human) try to outscore the competition using any means necessary.

Players can choose from ten "streetwise" players, not including Charles Barkley himself, as they play in either an exhibition game or tournament. Since this is basketball on the street, players compete in eight different urban environments featuring graffiti, rubble, and even a moving train. More than 2000 player animations have been included to show moves such as behind-the-back passes, double-clutches, alley-oops, and 25 different dunks. Battery backup allows players to save tournament progress, as well as individual records such as triple doubles, total wins, and total losses.

In addition, digitized voice samples of Charles Barkley offer either words of encouragement or ridicule while they play.

Reception

GamePro gave the game a mixed review, saying that the graphics and animations are drastically improved over the original Barkley, the tournament mode is "a worthy challenge for veteran b-ball gamers", and the gameplay is complex, but that "the action stays at relatively the same pace throughout the game" and in single player mode the computer partner AI often fails to cooperate with the player's attempts at teamwork.[2] A reviewer for Next Generation said that while the game is "far superior" to the original Barkley, it is still terrible in absolute terms; the only elaboration he gave is that "it just doesn't capture basketball of streetball particularly well." He gave it one out of five stars.[3]

References

  1. ^ Maciejewski, A.J. (April 17, 2021). "Evercade Piko Interactive Collection 2 Review". Retrieved April 24, 2021.
  2. ^ "Barkley Rebounds with Sharper Graphics". GamePro. No. 81. IDG. June 1995. p. 92.
  3. ^ "Barkley: Shut Up and Jam 2". Next Generation (6). Imagine Media: 111. June 1995.