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| release = 1997
| release = 1997
| modes = [[Single-player video game|Single-player]], [[Multiplayer video game|multiplayer]]
| modes = [[Single-player video game|Single-player]], [[Multiplayer video game|multiplayer]]
| genre = [[Sports Game]]
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'''''League of Pain''', also known as '''League of Pain: Professional Underground,''''' and known as '''''Riot''''' in the UK<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|url=http://archive.org/details/NextGeneration25Jan1997/page/n141|title=Next Generation 25 Jan 1997|date=January 1997}}</ref> is a futuristic, violent [[Sports game|sports video game]] developed by British studio Beyond Reality and published by [[Psygnosis]] for the [[PlayStation (console)|PlayStation]], [[MS-DOS]], and [[Windows]] in 1997.
'''''League of Pain''', also known as '''League of Pain: Professional Underground,''''' and known as '''''Riot''''' in the UK<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|url=http://archive.org/details/NextGeneration25Jan1997/page/n141|title=Next Generation 25 Jan 1997|date=January 1997}}</ref> is a futuristic, violent [[Sports game|sports video game]] developed by British studio Beyond Reality and published by [[Psygnosis]] for the [[PlayStation (console)|PlayStation]], [[MS-DOS]], and [[Windows]] in 1997.

Revision as of 16:21, 30 May 2019

League of Pain
PlayStation cover art
Developer(s)Beyond Reality
Publisher(s)Psygnosis
Designer(s)Lee Doyle, Graham McCormick, Craig Lawson, Dale Thomson
Programmer(s)Andrew Bond, Graeme Love, Tim Swan
Composer(s)David Lowe
Platform(s)PlayStation, MS-DOS, Microsoft Windows
Release1997
Genre(s)Sports Game
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

League of Pain, also known as League of Pain: Professional Underground, and known as Riot in the UK[1] is a futuristic, violent sports video game developed by British studio Beyond Reality and published by Psygnosis for the PlayStation, MS-DOS, and Windows in 1997.

Plot

National sports games are under threat by a new sport, Riot. Sponsors are pulling the plug on funding of traditional sports and moving to this new hybrid sport.[2][3]

Gameplay

League of Pain combines elements of rugby, soccer/football and basketball in a futuristic sport that is violent and without rules.[1] The objective of the game is to charge up the plasma ball, and to then launch it through the ring that floats above the the centre of the play area.[4] The points earned from a goal are determined by the distance from the ring.[5] The ball is charged by reaching the charger in the opponents side of the arena. In the PlayStation version, once charged, the ball will glow purple to indicate the home team charged it, or yellow to indicate the away team charged it.[6] For the Windows/DOS version, the ball will glow blue to indicate a home team charge and green to indicate an away team charge. [3] If the player scores while the ball is charged with the opposing team's color, it will count as an own goal.[3][6] Despite the futuristic set-up, the game plays in much the same way as standard sports games with the ability to tackle, slide and shoot but also allows the player to fight with their opponents.

There are 5 types of power-up available that are randomly thrown into the arena by the crowd. The power-ups are "Speed Up" which makes the player move 3 times faster than usual, "Power Punch" which makes the player's punching power 3 times stronger, "Power Shot" which makes the player throw the ball faster and harder, enabling the ball to be used as a weapon against opponents, "Health" which restores the player's health to maximum and "Hawkeye" which increases the accuracy of passes and shooting.[3]

There are 16 international teams to choose from and an option that allows for customisation and trading of players.[4]

Game Modes

Friendly: A single exhibition game. This mode allows for team selections and team editing.

League: A season of 30 games where you play each of the teams twice.

Exhibition: A knockout competition with 2, 3 or 4 rounds.

Network: Only available on the Windows/DOS version. Allows for network play between 8 players but only allows for a "Friendly" game to be played.[3]

Additional Features

There are also in-game options to perform substitutions to alter the player line-up, and the ability to view a replay of the in-game action.[6]

Reception

Next Generation reviewed the PlayStation version of the game, rating it three stars out of five, and stated that "once players get the hang of the game's fast pace and rhythms, the game does become mildly addictive. With 16 international teams and an option that lets you customize and trade players, League of Pain offers an interesting alternative to the standard 'real' sports games. And you have to love a game with violence and no rules."[4]

GamePro gave the game 13.5/20 stating that "League of Pain is fun at times, especially with 2 players, but the camera angles and sometimes frustrating control doom it to rental status".[5]

PC Zone rated the game 72/100[2]

References

  1. ^ a b Next Generation 25 Jan 1997. January 1997.
  2. ^ a b PC Zone 62 (April 1998).
  3. ^ a b c d e Beyond Reality (1997). Manual: Riot.
  4. ^ a b c NEXT Generation 30.
  5. ^ a b GamePro - Issue 104 Volume 09 Number 05 (1997-05)(IDG Publishing)(US). May 1997.
  6. ^ a b c "League of Pain Sony Playstation Manual". archive.org. Retrieved 2019-05-30.