NBA 2K (series)

This article is about the game series. For the first installment of the NBA 2K series, see NBA 2K (video game).
NBA 2K
Genres Basketball
Developers Visual Concepts
Publishers Sega (1999–2004)
2K Sports (2005–Present)
Platforms Various (see table)
Platform of origin Sega Dreamcast
Year of inception 1999
First release NBA 2K
November 10, 1999
Latest release NBA 2K16
September 29, 2015

The NBA 2K series is a series of basketball video games developed and released annually since 1999. The NBA 2K series was exclusive to the Sega Dreamcast when it was first introduced by Sega to address EA Sports's decision to not publish any sports games. The series was originally published by Sega, under the label Sega Sports and is now published by 2K Sports. All of the games in the franchise have been developed by Visual Concepts. Its primary competitor in the marketplace is the NBA Live series from EA Sports.[1]

History

The first four games of the series featured commentary from fictional announcers "Bob Steele" and "Rod West" (voiced by Bay Area sports radio personalities Bob Fitzgerald and Rod Brooks who works at KNBR 680 San Francisco. They also host a radio show called "Fitz and Brooks"), but since NBA 2K3 the game's announcing team has been something of a revolving door, featuring commentary from the likes of Bill Walton, Tom Tolbert, Kevin Frazier, Michele Taffy, and Bob Fitzgerald. The color and play-by-play commentary in NBA 2K6, NBA 2K7, and NBA 2K8 is provided by Kevin Harlan and Kenny Smith, with Craig Sager providing sideline reports. Peter Barto is the PA Announcer. NBA 2K9 features commentary from Kevin Harlan and Clark Kellogg with Cheryl Miller as the sideline reporter on most versions of NBA 2K9 and NBA 2K10. Starting with NBA 2K11, Doris Burke replaces Miller as the sideline reporter on most versions of the game. On most versions of NBA 2K12, Steve Kerr joins Kevin Harlan and Clark Kellogg in the commentary booth. In NBA 2K16, Greg Anthony would replace Steve Kerr and join Kevin Harlan and Clark Kellogg in the game's commentary booth. In the PlayStation 2 versions starting with NBA 2K9, no sideline reporter is featured in the game.

In 2002, Sega implemented the American television network, ESPN's brand with their Sega Sports video games. The ESPN brand was used for three games, with the second game even being renamed ESPN NBA Basketball, until ESPN signed a 15-year deal with EA Sports.

In 2005, Sega sold the NBA 2K series along with Visual Concepts to Take-Two Interactive. The series is currently published by 2K Sports, a publishing label of Take-Two.

The series has been present on the seventh-generation of consoles starting with the release of NBA 2K6 for the Xbox 360 in November 2005.

The PlayStation 3 version of NBA 2K7 was the first version to support motion sensing controllers with a free throw shooting mechanic that has the player move the Sixaxis controller in a motion similar to a real free throw shot, but was discontinued for later games in the series.[2]

NBA 2K11 was the first installment in the franchise to have support for stereoscopic 3D screens, although this feature was made available via an update only for PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 versions. NBA 2K12 became the first game in the series to have "built-in" support of 3D for PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 versions, and the first to include motion controls using the PlayStation Move. NBA 2K14 became the first game in the series to support the new-gen consoles, PlayStation 4 and Xbox One.

Installments

Titles in the NBA 2K series
Title Developer Publisher Platforms Release date Cover athletes
NBA 2K Visual Concepts Sega Dreamcast November 10, 1999 Allen Iverson
NBA 2K1 Visual Concepts Sega Dreamcast November 1, 2000 Allen Iverson
NBA 2K2 Visual Concepts Sega Dreamcast, GameCube, PS2, Xbox October 24, 2001 Allen Iverson
NBA 2K3 Visual Concepts Sega PS2, Xbox, GameCube October 7, 2002 Allen Iverson
ESPN NBA Basketball Visual Concepts Sega PS2, Xbox October 21, 2003 Allen Iverson
ESPN NBA 2K5 Visual Concepts Sega PS2, Xbox September 28, 2004 Ben Wallace
NBA 2K6 Visual Concepts 2K Sports PS2, Xbox, Xbox 360 September 26, 2005 Shaquille O'Neal
NBA 2K7 Visual Concepts 2K Sports PS2, PS3, Xbox, Xbox 360 September 25, 2006 Shaquille O'Neal
NBA 2K8 Visual Concepts 2K Sports PS2, PS3, Xbox 360 October 2, 2007 Chris Paul
NBA 2K9 Visual Concepts 2K Sports PS2, PS3, Windows, Xbox 360 October 7, 2008 Kevin Garnett
NBA 2K10 Visual Concepts 2K Sports PS2, PS3, PSP, Wii, Windows, Xbox 360 October 6, 2009 Kobe Bryant
NBA 2K11 Visual Concepts 2K Sports PS2, PS3, PSP, Wii, Windows, Xbox 360 October 5, 2010 Michael Jordan
NBA 2K12 Visual Concepts 2K Sports iOS, PS2, PS3, PSP, Wii, Windows, Xbox 360 October 4, 2011 Michael Jordan/Larry Bird/Magic Johnson
NBA 2K13 Visual Concepts 2K Sports Android, iOS, PS3, PSP, Wii, Wii U, Windows, Xbox 360 October 2, 2012 Derrick Rose, Kevin Durant, and Blake Griffin
NBA 2K14 Visual Concepts 2K Sports PS3, PS4, Windows, Xbox 360, Xbox One, iOS October 1, 2013 LeBron James
NBA 2K15 Visual Concepts 2K Sports PS3, PS4, Windows, Xbox 360, Xbox One, Android, iOS October 7, 2014 Kevin Durant
NBA 2K16 Visual Concepts 2K Sports PS3, PS4, Windows, Xbox 360, Xbox One, Android, iOS September 25, 2015 (Early Tip Off Edition) September 29, 2015 (official release) Anthony Davis/Stephen Curry/James Harden/Michael Jordan/Tony Parker/Dennis Schröder/Marc and Pau Gasol

References

  1. Flysenberg. "index - NBA2k". http://www.reddit.com/r/NBA2k/wiki/index. Reddit. Retrieved 15 February 2015. External link in |website= (help)
  2. NBA 2K7 PlayStation 3 Features 2ksports.com

External links

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