Description
Control either Julius Irving or Larry Bird in front of a single basket, in a game of one on one. The user can select to play either to a certain score or for a certain amount of time. When on offense, the player can rotate to keep away from his rival, take a shot from a distance or move in to the basket for special up-close slam-dunks. When on defense, you can try to take your rival's ball or jump up to block a shot. Particularly good set-ups get a slow-motion replay. You can even smash the glass on the backboard, which will send an irate janitor onto the court to clean up the mess.
Alternate Titles
- "One On One" -- Original Name
- "One-on-One" -- Atari/Commodore Diskette Title
- "Julius Erving vs. Larry Bird One-on-one" -- Alternate Title
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Trivia
One of the first products from a newly founded Electronic Arts, designed by company creator Trip Hawkins and programmed by Eric Hammond. This game became a smash hit on the Commodore 64, where its complicated copy-protection became famous not only with hackers intent on breaking it, but with users who had to listen to it tear their old behemouth 1541 floppy drives a new one. This was also the first computer game with celebrity endorsements. The concept was created by Hawkins based on his recollections of the 60's era "One on One" televised sports contests, sponsored by hair tonic Vitalis.