It might tee you off.
Think back to the first time you tried to hit a golf ball. I bet it didn’t work
out so well. How about first time you got behind the wheel of a car? No Mario
Andretti, eh? What about the first time you cooked scrambled eggs, or went bowling,
or surfed the Internet? Unqualified disasters, all of them, because first doesn’t
mean best.
Such is the case with Tee
Off, the first golf game for the fledgling Dreamcast. While there isn’t
anything inherently wrong with the game, there’s nothing particularly right
about it either. Tee Off offers nothing new to the arcade golf genre,
despite the power of the new system.
Tee Off follows the mold of other arcade golf games like the excellent
Hot
Shots Golf for the Playstation. This is in no way a simulation – no real
pros or courses. But where Hot Shots brought quick loading times, great
graphics, and an almost RPG quality to the table, Tee Off sometimes feels
like a Rip Off.
The gameplay is pretty much identical to other arcade golf games. You get
the cute little swing meter, the manually adjustable camera, and the golfers
with the enormous anime heads. You have to account for varying wind conditions
and lies. You get a choice of clubs and characters, all of which have different
skill rankings. Nothing shocking here.
Tee Off features a somewhat paltry 5 courses, though the 15 different
characters certainly add some depth. The course design is a bit boring. Most
holes have a few scattered sand traps, a few trees and the occasional tricky
spot, but for the most part there’s plenty of open space. This is fantasy golf
after all – how about some lava pits? Geysers? Maybe a giant clam? A little
innovation never hurt anyone.
The basics are all accounted for. You can play in one of several modes. World Tour lets you compete for points across all five courses, unlocking new characters and equipment along the way. Then there’s the standard Match and Stroke Play, as well as a Point Tourney. Oddest of all is Gate Ball.
Gate Ball is essentially croquet
played in a Tron arena. You have to smash your ball through various gates before
your opponents do. Not surprisingly, this is exactly as fun as it sounds. Perhaps
things would be better if the AI wasn’t quite so brain-dead. I set the difficulty
one tick higher than normal and the CPU players missed the first gate
over and over again – for 5 straight minutes. Redefines the word “doh!”
As a multiplayer game, Tee Off is capable. You can play with up to
3 friends, though if you actually have 3 friends willing to play video golf
you should probably just go play for real.
Graphically, Tee Off is par for the course. (Note the fine texture
of that pun. It goes well with red wine.) The courses are crisp, the colors
are vibrant, and the framerate is smooth. The huge-headed characters look fine.
Strangely , the loading times can get a bit excessive, a fact made all the more
bizarre when you consider the burliness of the Dreamcast system. Why Tee
Off has longer loading times than Soul
Calibur is beyond me.
The sound in Tee Off is a delightful mix of terrible and crap. In addition
to the lame voices, you’ll find some truly annoying music. At times you’ll think
you’re playing Sonic
Adventure, what with the cheesy metal riffs and all. It doesn’t take much
to improve on this. I’m surprised they actually paid for the Casio-drumbeat-meets-Frampton-guitar-tone
rock disaster they put in the game. I could personally write better songs by
gargling musically after brushing my teeth.
Eardrum violations aside, Tee Off doesn’t really do anything wrong.
Fans of this kind of thing will be satisfied. But satisfaction is far from greatness,
and Tee Off just seems content settling for the established mechanics.
As the first golf title for the DC, it really could have added some oomph, particularly
in terms of depth and innovation. Instead, this is merely an adequate diversion
and an uninspired beginning to Dreamcast golf.