zmonster
June 28th, 2008, 11:30 PM
I love the game on the Wii. It is a blast to play. Here are some suggestions I'd like to see implemented in the next version.
1. Start the serve by lifting the nunchuck up in the air, just like you would to throw the tennis ball up with your left hand to start the serve. It is awkward to throw the ball up with the tennis-racket hand as it stands now.
2. The server itself is a bit hard to master. And for some reason the power bar doesn't seem to be timed to the Wii remote's movement (it comes before or after, it's strange). Hopefully you can fine tune the serving motion a bit better, and use the left nunchuck to toss the ball up for the serve as described in #1.
3. The game allows you to hit a backhand by swinging the Wii remote in a forehand fashion (and vice-versa). The game should make the player swing the type of swing the Wii remote is doing (either a forehand or a backhand).
4. The game forces you to time the Wii remote swing with the player on the screen's automatic swing for power. I think the Wii remote should totally control the player's racket such that the player swings when the remote swings. And the power should come from the speed of the remote swing.
5. Playing the net seems too hard to master in the Wii game. Maybe you could come up with ways to make it a tad easier.
1. Start the serve by lifting the nunchuck up in the air, just like you would to throw the tennis ball up with your left hand to start the serve. It is awkward to throw the ball up with the tennis-racket hand as it stands now.
2. The server itself is a bit hard to master. And for some reason the power bar doesn't seem to be timed to the Wii remote's movement (it comes before or after, it's strange). Hopefully you can fine tune the serving motion a bit better, and use the left nunchuck to toss the ball up for the serve as described in #1.
3. The game allows you to hit a backhand by swinging the Wii remote in a forehand fashion (and vice-versa). The game should make the player swing the type of swing the Wii remote is doing (either a forehand or a backhand).
4. The game forces you to time the Wii remote swing with the player on the screen's automatic swing for power. I think the Wii remote should totally control the player's racket such that the player swings when the remote swings. And the power should come from the speed of the remote swing.
5. Playing the net seems too hard to master in the Wii game. Maybe you could come up with ways to make it a tad easier.