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AMA Superbike Championship

 
Games: AMA Superbike

Game Description

The boxed version of AMA Superbike is actually an adjunct to the downloadable online version of the game, and purports to include AI riders to practice against as well as a full championship season (misleading). Updates and enhancements are offered via the Marimba Castanet system of software updates via the Internet, and all upgrades at the time of release are included. Unfortunately, many of the advertised features are missing and the game suffers from an atrocious control system.

Based on the planned 12-race 1999 AMA Superbike racing season, the game requires winning only a nine-race series (not 12) to be champion since one of the races was dropped by the AMA, and the developers were unable to secure licenses on two others prior to release. Some superbike models listed in the manual are not in the game (e.g., the Harley-Davidson VR1000), and, according to the manual, the game is a "living product," meaning you're meant to update over time with new features, tracks, vehicles and "the occasional bug fix."

Playing with up to 30 other competitors online is problematical since no means to set the number of players exists in the setup. Although three modes of difficulty (beginner, expert, pro) are offered, the gameplay mode for online and championship races is predetermined, thus allowing the function to be used only in practice. Although the box states a joystick is required, the keyboard can be configured, but either way control response is sluggish, as is the mouse interface for administrative chores.

The graphics are low key, especially considering the time of release, with little texture and horrible effects during crash sequences. Riders in AMA Superbike aren't skilled at the art of tucking arms as they careen across the track like stiff scarecrows. The game is a perfect example of the old adage that you "can't judge a book (game) by its (box) cover." Heavy on promises, but light on delivery, AMA Superbike fails to deliver realistic racing at nearly all levels.
~ Michael L. House, All Game Guide

Roots & Influences

Simulation is based on actual riders, bikes and circuits of the American Motorcyclist Association.
~ Michael L. House, All Game Guide

Production Credits

VP of Development: Stephen Wilkinson; Senior Programmer Realtime Database Design: Miguel Parra; Senior Programmer Network, Billing: Jeff Dripps; Senior Programmer Sound, Animation: Doug Service; Vehicle Dynamics: Matthew V. Jessick, H. Sam Perera; Lead 3D Programmer: David Barrett; Java, Web Development Programming: Corey Frye; Control Center, Tools Programming: Scott Inglis; Art Director: Mark Kaiser; Senior 3D Database Artist: Donny Bahlman; Sr. 3D Cinematic Artist: David Womack; Senior 2D Artist Game Graphics: Jerry Comandante; Senior 2D Artist Graphic Design: Randy Avila; Lead 3D Artist: Greg Morrissey, David Leriche; 3D Artist: Sangwook Chun, Mike Arditi, Jeremy Hidalgo; 2D Artist: Jaewook Kim, Erin Moore; President: John R. McCarthy; Executive Producer: Charles Joyner; Director of Design & Planning: Mark S. Miller; VP of Marketing and Sales: Allan Castillo; Director of Marketing: Mark Portugal; Director of Sales: John Biery; Chief Financial Officer: Rob Bodnar; Web Master: Allen Crosby; Online Game Coordinator: Kory Yingling; Office Manager: David McCarthy; Billing: Michelle Cook; Technical Support: Eric Prollochs, Pat Jones; Expert Analyst: David Sadowski; Beta Tester: Alison Hine, Chris Cavin, Dave Schwabe, Graeme Nash, Josh Sirota, Michael Carver, Patrick Dotson, Remco Moedt, Scott Husted; Document Design & Layout: IMGS, Inc.
~ Michael L. House, All Game Guide
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Wikipedia: AMA Superbike Championship
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AMA Superbike Championship
AMA Superbike logo.png
The official AMA Superbike logo
Sport Motorcycle sport
Founded 1976
No. of teams 5 manufacturers
Country(ies) United States
Most recent champion(s) United States Ben Spies (Rider)
Japan Suzuki (Manufacturer)

The AMA Superbike is the premiere superbike racing series in the United States. It is part of the AMA Pro Racing series, and it is managed by the Daytona Motorsports Group. AMA Superbike Championship was created in 1976 to provide playing field for professional racing teams and a means for motorcycle manufacturers to showcase their sport-performance, production based models. The series allows more engine modifications than most Superbike championships. The roots of AMA Superbike are said to have started when the AMA first organized road racing in the United States in 1934.

The most successful riders have included Doug Chandler, Scott Russell, Miguel Duhamel and Mat Mladin, who holds several series records including six championships. The 2006 and 2007 crowns went to Ben Spies. Four non-Americans have won the title - Englishman Reg Pridmore, Australians Mat Mladin and Troy Corser, and Canadian Miguel Duhamel.

The 5 manufacturers participating in AMA Superbike are: Suzuki, Honda, Ducati, Buell and Yamaha.[1]


References

See also

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