I noticed since childhood, probably by three years after, that there were so many baseball video games made in 1994, along with the American League-licensed movies Little Big League, Angels in the Outfield, and -- as I didn't learn until much later -- Major League II.
As for the video games, here are the ones for the consoles and a quick write-up for my memories of each.
MLB & MLBPA LICENSE
World Series Baseball (Sega, Genesis) - Can't relate anything about this game at all because I didn't have a Genesis in my elementary school years.
MLB LICENSE, BUT NO MLBPA LICENSE
Ken Griffey Jr. Presents Major League Baseball (Nintendo, Super NES) - For a while, the only baseball game we owned. My perception of the leagues and my first exposure to the new logos came from here. Editing player names was definitely a plus.
ESPN Baseball Tonight (Sony Imagesoft, Super NES) - Only rented this one a time or two, learning the name "I'll Never Be Your Beast of" Berman.
MLBPA LICENSE, BUT NO MLB LICENSE
MLBPA Baseball (EA Sports, Super NES & Genesis) - I liked the music, the scoreboard, and that team select menu. Hearing the Chop for the Cleveland team was a memorable moment. This was a rental for us.
Tecmo Super Baseball (Tecmo, Super NES & Genesis) - Finally, a game that had the National stars in red and the American stars in blue (I liked red and the NL better). The music was cool to me, and I liked how they handled shorter seasons by staggering games. A rental.
Super Bases Loaded 3 (Jaleco, Super NES) - It had its own thing, but I guess I preferred SBL2 because of its presentation. A rental.
HardBall III (Accolade, Super NES) - By the time I rented this one, it was late enough for me to buy New York and make them Tampa Bay because Boggs was there.
RBI Baseball '94 (Tengen, Genesis) - Again, no Genesis.
NEITHER MLB NOR MLBPA LICENSE
Super Bases Loaded 2 (Jaleco, Super NES) - The numbers on the backs of jerseys, the unique camera, and the edit teams made this a frequent rental and eventually a title I owned.
Sports Illustrated Championship Football & Baseball (Malibu Games, Super NES) - Rented it one time. I remember one of the football players' names was C.Schultz and that the baseball players had no names. That's about it.
Relief Pitcher (Tengen, Super NES) - I don't even remember seeing it on video store shelves. A compilation video many years later is where I learned it existed.
Super Baseball 2020 (Electronic Arts, Genesis) - The SNES port from '93 was a 21st-century pickup for me. By then, the controller was out of whack.
TO CONCLUDE
The baseball video game market really picked up. Was some of it because both sides were expecting a strike? Was it part of the cause of the strike? Or were this wave of baseball video games and the real-life players' strike just coincidental?
Whatever the case, 1994 gave us all of these baseball video games and several more.
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