Wimbledon (Japan, Europe)
Wimbledon (Japan, Europe): GG Sports
Wimbledon is a tennis game for the Sega Game Gear, released early in the handheld's life. It came out in Japan and Europe, published by Sega themselves. As the catalog summary notes, it's an early but competent tennis sim from the company, aiming to bring the sport to a portable screen without cutting too many corners.
The player takes on AI opponents (or a second player via link cable, if available) in standard tennis matches. You control your athlete from an overhead view, moving them around the court to return serves and set up rallies. The core loop is straightforward: win points by hitting the ball past your opponent, using timing and positioning. The controls let you lob or hit flat shots, and you have to manage your stamina during longer rallies.
This title sits in the Game Gear library as one of the few sports games from Sega's early first-party push. It's not flashy or deep, but it's a solid pick for tennis fans who want a quick match on the go. The graphics are clean and the gameplay is responsive enough that you don't feel cheated by the small screen. If you enjoy retro sports titles that don't overcomplicate things, Wimbledon on Game Gear is worth a few rounds.
How to Play Wimbledon (Japan, Europe) Online
Getting Started
When you boot up the game, you'll see a title screen with the Wimbledon logo. Press Start to move to the menu. You can choose single-player (vs CPU) or two-player versus. If you pick single-player, you'll then select your character and possibly difficulty. The game uses standard tennis rules - best of one set, with games and points following traditional scoring (love, 15, 30, 40).
During a match, you move your player with the D-Pad. Use the A button (X key) to swing your racket. The timing of your swing matters - hit too early or too late and you'll miss or send the ball out. You can also hold the B button (S key) to charge a more powerful shot, but it drains stamina. Lobbing is done with the Y button (Z key) or a quick double-tap of the swing button, depending on your position.
The core loop is simple: serve, rally, and try to outmaneuver the opponent. Pay attention to the ball's shadow on the court - it helps you judge where it will land. The AI can be tricky on higher difficulties, so learn to anticipate and move early. If you're playing the Japanese version, menus will be in Japanese, but the gameplay is intuitive enough that you can navigate by trial and error - the first option after title is usually single-player mode.
Wimbledon (Japan, Europe) Keyboard Controls
Controls
- Arrow Keys: D-Pad / Movement
- X: Button 1
- S: Button 2
- Enter: Start / Pause
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