

You should see a screen like the one below.

Open ScummVM and click “Add Game.” Navigate to find the Backyard Baseball folder and click “Choose.”Ħ. It should open a folder called Backyard Baseball.ĥ. Download Backyard Baseball 1997 here, or Backyard Baseball 2001 here.Ĥ. Save to your desktop, or wherever is convenient for you.ģ.

Press ok, select the game, and press start! On a PC:Ģ. Find the folder you created and click “Choose.”ĩ.

Now, open up ScummVM and click “Add Game” on the right hand side. Select all the contents of the ISO drive and drag them into the folder you just created.Ĩ. Create a new folder on your desktop (or wherever you will remember) and call it Backyard Baseball. It should open a drive that looks like this.Ħ. It will reveal an ISO file called Backyard Baseball 2001. Once the ZIP file has downloaded, double click to open it. Open the DMG file and drag ScummVM into your Applications folder.Ĥ. Just like the real Little League, quirky personalities, contagious clumsiness and hysterical hijinks are a big part of the game as your kids laugh their way through to the pennant.ĭo you want to play the game too and get all the memories rushing back? Here’s how! On a Mac:ġ.Download the video game emulator ScummVM.Ģ. Backyard baseball the number one selling sports CD-ROM for kids, captures all the enjoyment of playing sandlot baseball with friends from the old neighborhood. In the game, the player will need to pick and manage his or her team of neighborhood kids and take them up all the way to the Backyard Baseball World Series. There have been lots of computer simulations of Baseball, but Backyard Baseball is specifically aimed at children. Backyard Baseball 2005 Item Preview 51PW8NGPWBL.jpg. Software All software latest This Just In Old School Emulation MS-DOS Games Historical Software Classic PC Games Software Library. It’s a full-on nostalgia sesh, featuring real gameplay and cameos from Sunny Day, Vinnie the Gooch, and the one and only Pablo Sanchez. They dive into the colorful personalities of each character and reminisce on what made the game so special in the first place. They bring on Nick Mirkovich, one of the game’s co-creators, to talk about the game’s inception and its evolution through the years, and speculate on why the game remains so firmly embedded in the minds of this generation. Inspired by an article by Zach Kram at the Ringer last year, Bobby and Alex take a deep dive into the history of “Backyard Baseball,” the kids-video-game-turned-cult-classic that they grew up with.
