![]() Gameplay In Japan, this game is called "Minna no Golf" - Everybody's Golf. In truth, it does everything a golf game needs to do to be worth your money. Hot Shots delivers the gameplay that made its predecessors a success with more than enough options to come back to and a great new 3D engine to power it all. Of course, this probably all sounds like quibbling to most. ![]() Otherwise, prepare to be rubbed the wrong way a bit. If that floats your boat, well, set sail. Whether this is good or bad is entirely up to your personal tastes, but be advised that the big-eyed cuties of the Japanese version have been replaced (to pull out a few examples) by hairy, pot-bellied veterans, at least one hulking Afro-packing housewife, and a surprising likeness of former MTV veejay Kennedy. It's also worth noting that SCEA has done a job on the Hot Shots character designs for a second game running. It works, but there are far more possibilities to the PS2 control interface that could be make golf gameplay fresher, more intuitive, and more fun. In comparison, the tap-tap-tap system employed in Hot Shots can't help but feel a little bit tired. Hot Shots 3 happens to be following the excellent Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2002 this year, though, which continues to establish its analog swing system as a superior innovation in golf gameplay. Most years, this question would not come up at all, given that video golf gameplay has remained roughly constant for around two decades. ![]() The question with Hot Shots at this point is whether it's going all that far.
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