

Man, Roger Clemens MVP Baseball on SNES takes me back. The second you boot it up, you're hit with that classic 16-bit baseball vibe—chunky pixel players, a crowd that looks like they're made of LEGO bricks, and that satisfying thwack when you connect with a fastball. The pitching mechanics are weirdly deep for an old-school game; you actually have to time your button presses to nail the curveballs.
Batting feels a little stiff at first—like you're swinging a tree trunk—but once you get the hang of it, smashing a homer into the bleachers is stupidly satisfying. Fielding? Yeah, it’s janky. Your outfielders sometimes move like they’re stuck in molasses, but that’s part of the charm. You’ll yell at the screen when your shortstop botches an easy grounder, then cheer when he somehow makes a diving catch the next inning.
It’s not the prettiest or smoothest baseball game out there, but if you grew up with a SNES, this one’s a nostalgia trip worth taking. Just don’t expect modern mechanics—this is pure, unfiltered ’90s baseball.
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