Find more than 15 similar video games like Davis Cup World Tour
Davis Cup World Tour
Details: Video game Initial Release Date: April 1, 1992 Developer: Loriciel Publisher: Tengen Platforms: Sega Genesis, TurboGrafx-CD Genres: Sports Video Game, Simulation Game
Plot: Davis Cup Tennis is a sports game developed by Loriciel in 1991 for the TurboGrafx-16 and then by Hokus Pokus Games and published by Ubisoft for the Game Boy Advance. It was released in the United States in 1991 on the TurboGrafx-16 and again for the Game Boy Advance on October 15, 2002. Wikipedia
Plot: Cool Spot is a 1993 platform game developed and published by Virgin Games for the Mega Drive/Genesis and Super Nintendo Entertainment System. The game was later ported by other teams to Master System, Game Gear, Game Boy, Amiga and MS-DOS in 1994. Wikipedia
Plot: Sampras Tennis 96 is a 1995 tennis video game developed by Codemasters. It is the sequel to Pete Sampras Tennis. Like its predecessor, it was one of the few titles released on the J-Cart format, which provided two additional controller ports for multiplayer games. Wikipedia
Plot: David Robinson Supreme Court is a basketball video game released by Sega exclusively for the Sega Genesis in 1991. The game was endorsed by NBA player David Robinson but does not feature an NBA license and instead features four different fictional American teams. Wikipedia
Plot: Jennifer Capriati Tennis is a Sega Genesis video game developed by System Sacom and released in 1992. In 1994 it was released in the classic range by Sega as Grandslam. The game is named after Jennifer Capriati, one of the world's top-ranked female tennis players at the WTA Tour during the time of...
Plot: David Crane's Amazing Tennis is a tennis simulation video game developed and published by Absolute Entertainment for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System and Sega Genesis consoles in 1992. The game was also made available for the Nintendo Super System. Wikipedia
Plot: Pete Sampras Tennis is a sports video game, developed by Zeppelin Games and published by Codemasters. It was followed by Sampras Tennis 96 for Sega's 16-bit console and later by Pete Sampras Tennis '97, released for the PlayStation and Windows/DOS. Wikipedia