X-Factor:
Bringing Individuality to the Game
By Alex McLain
Tennis games bring something unique to the traditional
world of sports games. Generally, sports videogames are team
affairs wherein you control entire squads of athletes. Tennis,
however, is a one-on-one match of wits, talent, and pure athletic
ability (even in doubles it’s much more personal). Matches are
filled with grunts of despair, tossed and shattered racquets, cries
of glee, and the occasional hat tipped to your opponent. You’ve got
only yourself to blame in defeat, and victory is oh so much more
juicy sweet when it’s all your doing.
It’s this sense of individual intensity, frustration, and blissful
reverie that can make or break a tennis game, and it’s precisely
this “feel” that Top Spin™
manages to capture so well. The folks at Power and Magic
Development (Top Spin developer) should be showered with
many gifts for paying such close attention to the less tangible
aspects of this Xbox exclusive game. While I’m sure you’d take my
word for it, I’d like to back up this statement with a few examples
of how they pulled off this feat.

It’s all about the
details.
I Can Do What to His Face?
The “Create a Character” option has become standard for sports
games over the years, but the customizing options in Top
Spin are so in-depth, it’s almost ridiculous. I was able to
literally look across the hall and create a facsimile of one of my
colleagues that was so accurate, it was almost scary. Check this
out: After choosing my character’s sex (male) and DNA color code
(yeah, it’s that specific), I was given the option to “sculpt” the
head of my character. Within that option I had the following areas
to choose from:
- Face Global
- Face Top
- Face Middle
- Face Bottom
I chose Face Middle to start with, and I was offered the
following options just to change my guy’s nose:
- Nose Shape
- Nose Hook
- Nose Break
- Nose Tip
- Nostrils

Create your own unique tennis
star.
Within each of those settings was a square with a reticule
inside it. Depending on where I “slid” the reticule, the nose
changed appropriately to the option I selected. For example, under
Nose Shape, if I pushed the reticule to the upper-leftmost corner
of the square the nose became very thin and pushed up just beneath
the eyes (very Grinch-like). If I slid the reticule to the bottom
right corner, his nose became very wide and long. All that just for
one subsection of one facial feature! The options are nearly
limitless. You can also adjust the brow ridge, eyebrows, chin, and
cheeks, just to name a very few. The sheer scope of what’s
available is staggering, and the fact that nearly every area is
changeable via a “slider” instead of static preset options just
makes things that much more interesting.
As if this extravaganza of customization wasn’t enough, you’ll also
unlock various items as you play to further augment your
character’s style. These include things like hairstyles, earrings,
clothes, hats, facial hair, racquets, and more. And, you can assign
your player a specific natural talent (powerful, technician,
defensive) to fit your own playing style. I could go on about how
your character will evolve during the course of his or her career,
but that’s a whole other topic.

Show off your skills
online.
Bringing Your Game Live
Playing your own style against the CPU is all well and good, but
individuality is so much more suited to real human competition.
That’s where Xbox Live comes in, and that’s where Top
Spin reaches feverish intensity. That’s where real grunts of
frustration (via the Xbox Live Communicator) and cries of
glee take place. You can even toss your racquet in frustration or
compliment an opponent in the game. You can, after any point, give
“attitude” by pressing the White or Black buttons. Pressing the
White button shows your character celebrating after you win a
point, or congratulating your opponent on a point well done. The
Black button, on the other hand, lets you display anger and
frustration at a lost point, or “celebrate” by talking a little
smack to your opponent with some mocking body language. Oh, did I
mention that you can bring your freakishly customizable character
onto Xbox Live? It’s just that much more satisfying when
you beat your opponent with a virtual you.
There’s also the small matter of XSN Sports, which will allow you to create your
own leagues and tournaments, but again, that’s a whole other
article. We’ll get to it soon enough—don’t worry.
