Reviews from

in the past


Resort is honestly a lot better

Screw that one guy who sold me a copy of Wii Sports Resort but instead of having the actual game, had Wii Sports. That or bless him cause this game is still a masterpiece.

ce jeu m'a fait découvrir le baseball et m'a fais croire que j'étais une légende au bowling


Who doesn't love Wii Sports

Fuck online debates let's take it to the bowling alley.

Kids fight in the streets. Men fight in Wii Sports boxing

I am the Tom Brady of Wii Sports Bowling

What an incredible tie-in - bowling, boxing, and tennis are hours of fun (the other two sports are fine). It's probably true that like half of all people who have ever touched a Wiimote have exclusively played this game, which is testament to its importance to the Wii's dominance of its generation.

Matt the best video game antagonist

It was fun for the first few days as it essentially served as an introduction to all the unique features that the Wii had. However, the extremely shallow mini-games coupled with the unreliable motion-centric mechanics resulted in me dropping this with much haste. I get that it's a free pack-in game, but that aside, Wii Sports was so paper thin in every way that I can't say I remember it fondly. I don't get the mild reverence there is for it these days either.

Everyone who had a Wii had this game. This is 1 of my first 3 games I ever played. It's the only game wherein my entire family have played together and my mom hadn't played a videogame since duck hunt when we played lol. Whether it was dinner parties, sleep over's, family gatherings, ect; if this game was present then it was a wonderful bonding experience. it's not even so much about the games as they're just typical sports games with very well implemented motion controls. Nay, it's about the co-op with players. Playing this with people is a core memory of mine. It's very rare now and it's kind of ironic that now playing videogames with people is usually never in person whilst online they feel so hollow. Now we are easily connected yet so far apart. However, growing up with Wii Sports showed me the beauty of playing games with the ones you love. I was literally kindergarden age playing Wii Sports. It's for any age, young or old.

Fallait pas me croiser a la boxe sur ce jeu

Seeing irl friend as mii irwii is funnii

Très bon jeu intergénérationnel.

As a pack-in game, it does its job admirably, showing off the Wii Remote and the amusing self-insert potential of Miis at a time where those things still felt novel. The five sports definitely aren't individually very deep, but the best ones are very fun and the worst ones are still passable. It's a game so intuitive and approachable that my non-game-playing relatives could pick it up and enjoy it. In that sense, it's emblematic of what made the Wii so successful in its day.

A game that managed to carry a good portion of my life.

Wii Sports has five different sports to choose from, baseball, tennis, golf, bowling and boxing. Each sport have very simple controls that even a baby could follow. For tennis, you just swing your Wii-mote like an actual tennis racket. For baseball, you just swing your Wii-mote like an actual baseball bat. Because of how easy and similar to real life the controls were, millions of families have been connected by this game, mine included.

Thank you Nintendo for this masterpiece of a game.

this is one of those games that shifts public consciousness.

Wii Sports is many things.

One of the most important games of all time.

A showcase of a revolutionary new way that games could be controlled.

A game that can be played with anyone regardless of their familiarity with or affinity for videogames.

And a bit of a barebones pack-in game if we're being honest.

But putting that aside, I think you really do have to give it credit for being one of the only video games to ever have entire non-gaming families playing together all across the world. It's the ultimate casual game and it's worth noting over something like Wii Sports Resort because it represents the motion control fad at its peak.

That's right, motion control was a fad. Or was it? It's hard to tell, but we did learn one thing from the Wii era and that's the fact that many hardcore gamers don't like getting up from the couch and moving their arms to play games. It's true that those people would never use motion as their main method of control. However, I think others had the potential to be convinced, but were ultimately unimpressed by motion control as a concept. We might have to blame Nintendo for that.

Nintendo popularized motion control without showing the potential. They didn't include gyroscopes in the initial Wii remotes, making for an extremely limited execution of the motion control concept. Wii Sports was a worse game for not having compatibility with a Wii Motion Plus gyroscope. This is clear once you see the giant increase in quality with the motion control in games like Red Steel 2 and Wii Sports Resort. Maybe motion control would still be a popular method of play if the original Wii Sports had Wii Motion Plus support.

But then again, maybe motion control would have fizzed out eventually anyway. It's impossible to know. But given the fact that Wii Sports was many people's first and/or only experience with the Wii, I think we can both thank Wii Sports for popularizing motion control as well as blame it for relegating that control method to only be used with VR, Nintendo consoles, and gyro aiming for the forseeable future.

We are never getting Red Steel 3.

Simplicity at its finest. While this game is effectively a tech demo for the Nintendo Wii, it is not only a perfect showcase for this console's motion controls but also an enjoyable time with friends or even solo.

Each of the 5 games on display here utilizes motion controls slightly differently, with some games (Tennis and Boxing) being more fast-paced and kinetic, while the others (Baseball, Golf, and Bowling) are more methodical and slower-paced. All of these play well and are fun in their own right.

The biggest complaint is that they are all quite shallow content-wise. There is not much else to do if you don't like the 5 base games, however for what it is worth that was never the point of this title. It was a pack-in title for the Nintendo Wii to show off the console's features, and I believe it did that extremely well.


Haven't made a review in a long time so I'm gonna hate on a game I actually don't hate

As a bundle compilation of how the Wii remote could be used, this does a great job. Everyone knows how these sports work in real life, and translating that into a game like remote really helped introduce people to the gaming like control scape, and really allowed for lots of people to experience games; even if alot of said games where not particularly "main stream." Beyond such however, Wii Sports is just really well put together, climbing the ranks to fight harder opponents, endlessly playing against freinds, and the many practice games make the game feel very complete, especially considering its bundle status. If anything, I would have liked more golf maps, but given how distributed all quality of all the games turned out to be, I can overlook it.

minus one star because hitting myself with the controller is a core memory

Wii boxing alone gives this 2 stars