"World Tour Mode is for more serious players, and its previous linearity has been broken up a little bit on Vita. Going to incredible depth, players stick their own face on a character, then take him/her all over the world improving skills, training, and all around moving up the ladder of world domination. Of tennis. It’s rewarding to take someone from the lowly scraps of tennis hell, rise up and be like 'I am going to tennis the shit out of someone today,' and then do it." -PSLS
VGChartz's Adam Cartwright: "Thanks to the timing of the Vita’s release and its relative power compared to the home consoles at the time (PS3 & Xbox 360), it saw the benefit of a number of these late ports which have remained the ‘definitive’ versions to this day. It’s these games that I’m aiming to look at in this article – titles that are best on Vita by virtue of extra bells and whistles, tweaked controls, and content, or in some cases just a general feeling that Sony’s portable hardware is the most enjoyable way to play."
PSBlog:
This year’s exciting summer of sport is well underway and has this week arrived in London for the Wimbledon Tennis Championships!
To celebrate this, some of our friends at SEGA met up with World Number 4, Andy Murray to see if he was ready by getting hands on with Virtua Tennis 4: World Tour Edition on PlayStation Vita, but how did he fare?
Virtua Tennis is a sports game, which was released on several platforms. Been with us since time immemorial, that is, for over 13 years. A special version of Virtua Tennis 4 World Tour Edition was released on the latest handheld produced by Sony Corporation - PlayStation Vita. For creating this production is responsible SEGA internal studio - Hitmaker (formerly known as AM3). Premiere in Poland and abroad took place on 22 February 2012
I've wondered what all in the early line-up I'd be interested in picking up, so a portable tennis game might make the list.