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Virtual reality table tennis game From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eleven Table Tennis is a virtual reality (VR) table tennis game developed by For Fun Labs, Inc., and available on Steam, Pico, and Oculus gaming platforms.[2] Eleven Table Tennis was included as exhibition sport for the inaugural Olympic Esports Week, which took place in Singapore from 22 to 25 June 2023.[3]
Eleven Table Tennis | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Roman Rekhler, Hamzeh Alsalhi, Oscar Vazquez[1] |
Publisher(s) | For Fun Labs |
Platform(s) | |
Genre(s) | Virtual reality |
Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
The game supports multiple languages, and uses a VR handpiece as paddles and a headset as an immersive environment for the game.[4]
Multiple modes are available to play the game.
Game matches proceed against a predefined AI difficulty level. The game lasts for 3 sets, with the player who scores the 10th and 11th point consecutively winning the game.
This mode allows the player to choose an opponent's level of skill, distance from the player's own location, city, or country, and the replay interval (which defaults to 4 hours). Setting the replay interval to 0 allows those two players to be connected again automatically immediately after the game finishes.
In practice mode, the player can practice or play multiple mini games. The game's publisher has announced a partnership with STIGA Sports which will add more game modes to the gameplay.[5]
By selecting "auto-serve for the AI" and setting a fixed location and fixed size of the table area, the ball will be returned by the AI almost 95% to that area and within the fixed size. This mode has no scoring.
The second practice mode is machine-based. By setting altitude, speed, and curve on the machine, players can coordinate a custom practice mode which will keep serving balls in the selected manner. This mode has no scoring.
There are other mini games built-in, including beer pong, quadrants, and wall tennis.[6]
GamesRadar+ describes this game as a "super realistic table tennis simulator".[11] Ian Hamilton, writing for UploadVR, described the game as life like and engaging game as it was reviewed during the COVID-19 lockdown time.[12] The game is included in the list of best 41 VR games currently available in the market by CNET.[13] There is a review by professional players who played it and than reviewed it. The game is described by them as real to the extent that their gameplay was improved by playing table tennis in the VR.[14] This game was reviewed from fitness perspective as well. The reviewer gave a score of 7/10 after testing its fitness potential.[9]
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