The centerpiece of this NBA Jam is the Classic Campaign mode, the  traditional gauntlet of all of the NBA's teams -- beat one, and it's  right on to the next. There's little else to it, but it's there where  you'll get the best of what the game has to offer: violent shoves and  steals, the bombastic (and repetitive) announcer, the showboating slam  dunks, and of course, the players' cut-out-style heads that never stop  looking goofy on their polygonal (and well-animated) bodies. But that  more than works, and it's a genuine wonder why no previous Jam  developers tried such a head-slappingly obvious approach after the  original arcade game.    If Jam only included the campaign like the original, that might have  been enough, but the Remix Tour mode is where Jam goes in a different  direction. Like Campaign, Remix Tour has you battling the entire league,  but in groups of three minigames selected among Remix 2V2 (a flashier  exhibition game with power-ups),
Arcades have had their share of successful sports games, but before the heyday of Golden Tee or Big Buck Hunter, there was NBA Jam, the ultimate in simplified, friendship-jeopardizing gameplay. EA's new NBA Jam  wrests itself from the hands of developers who tried too hard to make  the franchise "modern," when that's the least that needed to happen.  What we get now is a nearly pitch-perfect refresh of Jam that connects  with how a generation remembered it: a two-on-two basketball game that  barely played by league rules.  
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