Summary

  • Home Sports, an upcoming VR game, is reminiscent of Nintendo's Wii Sports with motion controls and simple visuals.
  • Both games feature similar sports like bowling and golf, making Home Sports an accessible title for VR beginners.
  • Home Sports will launch on December 11 for Quest 3S and Quest 3, supporting up to five sports and four player multiplayer.

Resolution Games' upcoming VR and mixed reality title Home Sports bears some similarities to Nintendo's own Wii Sports game. Nintendo's motion-controlled console, the Wii, was one of the most successful systems of all time, so much so that it had its own imitators. Wii Sports is usually considered one of the defining games that would demonstrate the system's motion controls. The premise is pretty simple, as players would be able to use the Wii motion controller to play a variety of sports like golf, baseball, and bowling.

Nintendo would revisit the concept of motion-controlled sports games on not only the Wii, but also successor systems like the Wii U and Nintendo Switch. Games like Wii Sports Resort and Nintendo Switch Sports attempted to capture what made Wii Sports so fun, with mixed results. Other companies outside of Nintendo have also tried to make their own variations on the concept, either through motion controls or other platforms like VR. Some VR sports games, like All-In-One Summer Sports, have been praised for their use of VR and integration of a mixed reality mode for the Quest 3 Headset. A new mixed reality game will be coming this December for Quest 3 that takes a little bit of inspiration from Wii Sports.

Developed by Resolution Games, Home Sports is an upcoming VR Sports game that will launch on December 11 for the Quest 3S and Quest 3 headsets. The game supports up to five different sports: pickleball, hockey, bowling, mini golf, and badminton, supporting up to four player multiplayer. Home Sports can be played within one app and via local or online multiplayer as well.

Home Sports' Similarities to Wii Sports

The main comparison to Wii Sports that could be drawn from this game is its use of motion controls and rather simple visuals. Both the Wii and Meta Quest 3 headsets have a separate controller peripheral that is used to play. For example, both Home Sports and Wii Sports' bowling games require the player to actually move around the controller, simulating the motion of throwing a bowling ball.

The closest direct comparison that can be made between Home Sports and Wii Sports' game lineup is how they share bowling and golf as a game mode, along with badminton and tennis having similar parallels to each other too. Based on the Home Sports' simplicity, it seems like a good title to introduce gamers to VR gaming, similar to how Wii Sports demonstrated its motion controls.

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Wii Sports Tag Page Cover Art
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Systems
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Released
November 19, 2006
ESRB
E For Everyone due to Mild Violence
Developer(s)
Nintendo EAD
Publisher(s)
Nintendo
Multiplayer
Online Multiplayer
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Warm up and throw yourself into the action with the hit sports game that will have you hooked faster than you can swing a tennis racquet! Wii Sports offers five distinct sports experiences, each using the Wii Remote to provide a natural, intuitive and realistic feel. In Tennis, you'll grab the controller like a racket and swing – the game will register forehands, backhands, volleys, lobs, slices, spin and power depending on how fast you swing and at what angle. Baseball will have you gripping the controller like a bat and swatting fastballs out of the park in a home run derby. In Golf you'll step up to the tee, hold the controller like a golf club and swing naturally to smack the ball onto the green. In Bowling, players raise the Wii Remote in their hand just like a bowling ball, and then swing their arms to roll the ball. When Boxing, using the Nunchuk controller as one glove and the Wii Remote as the other, players dodge, weave and punch their opponents.

Platform(s)
Wii
Genre(s)
Sports
Playing Tennis in Wii Sports