The digitized voice is about the biggest technological advancement you're going to find in Double Dribble. This isn't NBA Live 08, so you're not going to see rivulets of sweat stream down your players' bump-mapped faces while their glazed 3D eyes burn a hole through your soul. You're playing with sprites, and barely detailed ones at that. That is, until you go in for a slam dunk. Then all hell breaks loose. The game cuts to a close-up of your character -- suddenly cast in silver, due to color limitations -- going up to the hoop and slamming the ball in with a satisfying *thunk*. Or a *clang*, if you only hit the rim.
Double Dribble may have turned heads back in the day for its then-realistic slam dunk animations, but it's still worth playing today for its simple but satisfying gameplay. There's passing, shooting, stealing, dunking, and a limited number of fouls in play, so that pretty much covers the basics. I haven't played a basketball sim since the NBA Jam series went 3D, so it's refreshing to go back to a time when your only buttons are "pass" and "shoot." Call me Basketball Grandpa, but that's the way it should be. Consarn it.
Okay, so I'm not really up on my basketball games, so I'm probably not the fairest judge of what makes a good one. All I know is that Double Dribble is something I can play and win at, sometimes. While sports games generally don't tend to age well (oh hey sup Volleyball), Double Dribble still shines, thanks to its tight gameplay and a really fun two-player mode. Here's hoping that Konami's best NES sports title, Blades of Steel, finds its way to the Virtual Console soon.
Double Dribble is worth $5, assuming you can deal with its lack of depth. There's no tournament mode, and if you plan on playing against the computer, there's only three difficulty levels (and only one that isn't insanely hard). Still, I'm still going to call it a better buy than NBA Live 08, because I can.
Here's a gameplay video that looks really boring, but come on, imagine it's 1987. You'd be really excited about this.