Can you play singles in wii tennis




















The main gameplay involves using the Wii Remote like a racket and swinging it as the ball comes toward the player. The player s can choose to play a single game Best of 1 , two-out-of-three Best of 3 , or a three-out-of-five match Best of 5. They can also choose whether to play against a real-life opponent or a CPU Mii.

Overall, most of its rules are similar to tennis. The Miis that can appear on your team that are never opponents unless you lose the first match are Hiroshi , Shouta , Chris , Ren , and Abby. The game reappears as one of the current games in Wii Sports Club.

Unlike in Wii Sports, shots like smash hits and topspin have been re-added. When the player beats the champions, they use a frying pan as a racket by holding down the 1 button with the Mii select screen displayed and pressing A. For a game that is supposed to be the most intuitive on a console which is all about ease of play and appealing to new gamers, Wii Tennis can be surprisingly unintuitive.

To help you do that, here are my top tips:. Let me explain. Your Miis choose approximately how they respond to each shot coming at them. You need to pay attention to which way the racket is pointing to work out where you can place a shot.

For example, if the ball is coming from the top right of the screen to the bottom left your Mii will most likely hit it diagonally up to the right when you go to play. However, by timing when you hit your shot you can affect the direction of the shot. If you hit early the ball will go further to the right, whereas a late shot will most likely go straight up the court.

To be clear, you waving your hand a certain way has no effect. What matters is when you hit the shot. This is what I mean by not intuitive! Armed with this knowledge you can begin placing your shots where you want them. When the ball comes to your Mii at the rear of the court, try to hit early so as to send the ball either to the extreme right or left.

This will make it more difficult for the other player to respond. Even if they do you can use your front player to smash the ball down the middle of the court to get a point. Try practicing how you return shots to see how this works. Hit shots early and see what the effect is and then try again only hitting the ball late. You will soon understand how the timing of the shot effects direction and how you can use this to beat your opponent. This is good because it is harder for your opponent to return it.

Even at the highest difficulty level, the computer will sometimes fail to return the ball properly when you power serve. So how do you do it?

Every time you serve there is a little sound on your Wii Mote that kind of sounds like a tennis ball being thrown in the air which is to say that it sounds absolutely nothing like a tennis ball being thrown in the air. There are two different cheers that come from the audience. One is just simply applause.

The second cheer is when the entire crowd says "wow" when you win a game. To get the second cheer instead of the first, make the losing team win a round and make a stunning comeback.

The amount of players watching you on your side of the bench depends on how high you skill level is. The higher it gets, the more people will be watching and cheering you on. After a round, a slow-motion will play, showing you how the ball went out of bounds. If the ball goes near the benches, you will see the Miis jumping up and down very slowly as well! To skip the slow-motion replay, press.

If you hold when the screen is black right before the game, the tennis court will be blue the same court all the tennis training takes place at. Unlike on Baseball and Boxing , the first pair of computer controlled players on one-player mode "Matt" and "Miyu" aren't the lowest leveled.

If you lose against them, you'll face even lower-ranked players. The lowest level player in Tennis is "Hiroshi", who always has a skill level of 0. You can increase your skill level only by playing the game in single-player mode and by not changing the computer controlled team.

You can have two players play a game of Tennis, but you both have to be on the same team in order for this to work. There is no way to increase your skill level in three and four player modes. The amount of skill points you get or take away depend on if you win the match and your performance. If you lose, chances are you will lose points, but if you win, you might gain more. By the time you get to the Pro level via reaching 1, skill points , you will face off against two people with a skill difference.

Reaching Pro ranking in tennis, generates a Wii Message in the main channels view, and causes further games played to be played in front of a larger crowd. If you beat an opponent who has skill level of 2,, you get a congratulatory message sent to your Wii Message Board saying that you have beaten a tennis champion. Points are added to the player's skill level based on an algorithm that depends heavily on the differences between the player's and computer's skill levels.

Holding how well the player does against an opponent constant, the player will receive less points if the opponent is of lower skill level, and more points if the opponent is of high skill level. You will also find that when you play CPU players with a comparable skill level as yourself and win - you might even go down because you have not won convincingly enough - if you play CPUs who are less skilled than yourself, you will go down unless you win without allowing them to get to deuce - or you will only get a few points if you win outright.

Computer characters max out at 2, skill points, so a player with over 2, points will experience diminishing returns for subsequent play. At a skill level of more than 2,, it is possible to win and still lose points.



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