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Backyard Sports
(aka: Backyard Baseball)

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Backyard Sports (Video Game)
Backyard is back and it's time to play ball!
note 

"Hi-de-ho, sports fans!"
Sunny Day

Backyard Sports, formerly called Junior Sports and then Humongous Sports, is a children's sports video game franchise created by Humongous Entertainment and currently managed by Playground Productions.note  It features slightly simplified (and lightly exaggerated) versions of various sports (mostly those that are popular in North America) that are meant to be easy to pick up and play, with the earlier games on PCs being point-and-click games. It's known for having all the players (plus the commentators) be children, with a diverse cast of thirtynote  kids being playable throughout the series, as well as several professional athletes caricaturized as children also made playable for the specific sports they play. It is the only game series that had licensing from all the major professional sports leagues (and their affiliated players associations) in North America:note  Major League Baseball, Major League Soccer, the National Football League, the National Basketball Association, and the National Hockey League. The series was originally only Competitive Multiplayer but most of the most recent (as of 2024) original games starting with Backyard Football '10 added Co-Op Multiplayer.

There have been over thirty games published in the series, the first few of which are regarded as quite good and the last few of which are regarded as awful. There are six main brands associated with the series:

The series has also spawned a 2002 TV special (NFL Backyard Basics: Football Tips from the Pros) and a few books, as well as a Comic-Book Adaptation (a prequel to the game Sandlot Sluggers).

The series has infamously changed hands several times after Atari, Inc. (formerly Infogrames) shut down Humongous Entertainment in 2005 and relegated it to a brand name. After an ill-fated reboot in 2010 that saw only two games without sports licenses (Backyard Sports: Sandlot Sluggers and Backyard Sports: Rookie Rush), Atari SA (which bought out the remaining shares of Atari, Inc./Inforgrames in the late 2000s) declared Chapter 11 bankruptcy and they later sold off the Backyard Sports brand in July 2013 auction proceedings to private equity firm The Evergreen Group, who placed the brand under a portfolio company called Epic Gear LLC. Epic Gear did nothing with their brief control of the brand and sold it to Day 6 Sports Group, a company that was founded in 2014 to create children's sports products, that same year. Day 6, with publishers Fingerprint Network, tried to reboot it as a Mobile Phone Game series—which is far from the series' original computer game roots—on February 6, 2015 with two games released that day, Backyard Sports: Baseball 2015 and Backyard Sports: Basketball 2015, to no avail. It was later reported in 2016 that a film adaptation of the series was in development by Cross Creek Pictures (Black Swan, The Woman in Black, Rush) and Crystal City Entertainment, with Brian Oliver and Ari Daniel Pinchot producing, but nothing else has been reported about this since. Day 6 would be acquired by a European investment film the same year and then quietly shut down in 2020. Pinchot and Stuart Avi Savistsky would later purchase the brand in 2021, and establish Backyard Sports LLC to handle the franchise. In August 2024, Playground Productions announced that they were rebooting the Backyard Sports franchise and launched a new line of merchandise to go with it.

The first phase of the reboot was a series of remasters of the first games of each sub-series and the second game of Backyard Baseball for Windows via Steam, mobile devices, and modern consoles, as well as making licensing deals and releasing new merchandise to help draw attention back to the franchise. Mega Cat Studios handled the remasters using hacked CD-ROM copies of the original games (the source codes are lost). The first of these, Backyard Baseball '97, was released for Windows via Steam on October 10, 2024. Backyard Soccer '98 was released next on November 27, 2024. Going slightly out of order from the original games' release order, Backyard Baseball '01note  was released on July 8, 2025, and Backyard Football '99 released on September 9, 2025. In the meantime, Baseball '97 has since been ported to mobile devices, releasing on iOS and Android on March 27, 2025, and consoles, releasing on PlayStation 5 and Nintendo Switch on June 12, 2025, while Baseball '01 and Football '99 received their mobile ports the same day as the Windows release. Basketball '01 and Hockey '02 rounded out the series of re-releases on November 13, 2025, with their Steam releases being free to keep, while Soccer '98 and Basketball '01's mobile ports were also made free upon their releases the same day.

The second phase of the reboot began in 2026 with the release of the first original works in the franchise since 2015. An animated special produced by Lighthouse Studios called Backyard Sports: The Animated Special was released to YouTube release on January 29 (following a premiere at Dave & Buster's Hollywood Boulevard location on January 24). Mega Cat Studios is also developing a new original Backyard Baseball entry to be released on July 9, 2026.


List of games in the franchise:

    List of games 
  • Backyard Baseball
    • Backyard Baseball (1997, Windows, Mac OS)
    • Backyard Baseball 2001 (2000, Windows, Mac OS) – First entry with MLB and MLBPA licenses, first game to have one pro athlete from every team,note  first game with the ten-point skill system, tabbed menus, and info bar on the bottom; second and last SCUMM game with online play (Windows exclusive), last game to be self-published by Humongous Entertainment
      • Backyard Baseball '01 (2025, Windows, iOS, Android) – Remaster by Mega Cat Studios; first remaster with pro athletes to be released (28 of 31 return),note  only sequel entry to be remastered, only remaster to maintain its original major league license (and to have an almuni association license), online play removed (can be restored on PC with a simple file edit), pro player card scans removed
    • Backyard Baseball (2002, Game Boy Advance) – Developed by Game Brains; first portable console game in the franchise
    • Backyard Baseball 2003 (2002, Windows, Mac OS) – Last SCUMM engine Baseball entry; switched to a different studio for voice acting (AudioGodz).
    • Backyard Baseball (2003, Nintendo GameCube) – First 3D Baseball entry, first entry to replace color commentator with a new one,note  last game published by Infogrames before they switched to the Atari name
    • Backyard Baseball 2005 (2004, PlayStation 2, Windows) – PS2 version published as simply Backyard Baseball
    • Backyard Baseball 2006 (2005, Game Boy Advance) – Developed by Game Brains
    • Backyard Sports: Baseball 2007 (2006, Game Boy Advance, PlayStation 2, Windows; 2007, GameCube) – Developed by Game Brains; first game titled with the Backyard Sports name, first post-Humongous game in the franchise
    • Backyard Baseball '09 (2008, Windows, Nintendo DS, PlayStation 2, Wii) – Developed by FarSight Studios (Windows, PS2, Wii) and Mistic Software (DS)
    • Backyard Baseball '10 (2009, Nintendo DS, Wii, PlayStation 2) – Developed by Mistic Software (DS) and FarSight Studios (Wii and PS2)
    • Backyard Sports: Sandlot Sluggers (2010, Nintendo DS, Wii, Xbox 360) – Developed by HB Studios (Wii, 360) and Powerhead Games (DS); loses MLB and MLBPA license
    • Backyard Sports Baseball 2015 (2015, iOS, Android) - Developed by Day 6 Sports Group and published by Fingerprint Network; one of the only two games in the brief 2015 reboot
    • Backyard Baseball (2026, Windows, macOS, PlayStation 5, Nintendo Switch, Xbox Series X|S) – Developed by Mega Cat Studios; first original game published by current rightsholders Playground Productions and first original game in the 2024 reboot era
  • Backyard Soccer
    • Backyard Soccer (1998, Windows, Mac OS)
      • Backyard Soccer '98 (2024, Windows; 2025, iOS, Android) – Remaster by Mega Cat Studios; mobile versions Rereleased for Free
    • Backyard Soccer MLS Edition (2000, Windows, Mac OS) – First entry with MLS and MLSPA licenses, first game with female pro athletes (three players from the 1999 US women's national soccer team), first game published by Infogrames
    • Backyard Soccer (2001, PlayStation) – Developed by Runecraft; first home console game in the franchise, first game to be released outside North America (as Junior Sports Football), removes MLS license, only PlayStation game in the franchise
    • Backyard Soccer 2004 (2003, Windows, Mac OS) – Last game released for "Classic" Mac OS, last game (pre-2024 reboot) using the characters' original designs
  • Backyard Football
    • Backyard Football (1999, Windows, Mac OS) – First game with a major league license (NFL) and players' association license (NFLPA), first game with pro athletes as kids, first game with custom players (and only game with such under the four-point stat system), first game with online play (Windows exclusive), last game using the four-point stat system (until the 2026 Backyard Baseball)
      • Backyard Football '99 (2025, Windows, iOS, Android) – Remaster by Mega Cat Studios; loses NFL and NFLPA licenses, one athlete replaced by new Backyard Kid,note  online play removed (can be restored on PC with a simple file edit)
    • Backyard Football 2002 (2001, Windows, Mac OS) – Replaces online play with LAN play
    • Backyard Football (2002, Game Boy Advance) – Developed by Torus Games; first game to use the non-clubhouse menu
    • Backyard Football (2002, Nintendo GameCube) – Developed by Left Field Productions and Humongous Entertainment; first game for the GameCube, first game using the characters' first redesigns
    • Backyard Football 2004 (2003, Windows) – First game alongside Backyard Basketball 2004 published by Atari after Infogrames' rename
    • Backyard Football 2006 (2005, Windows, PlayStation 2, Game Boy Advance) – GBA version developed by Torus Games; Windows and PS2 games last original game developed by Humongous Entertainment
    • Backyard Sports: Football 2007 (2006, Game Boy Advance) – Developed by Torus Games
    • Backyard Football '08 (2007, PlayStation 2, Wii, Windows, Nintendo DS) – Developed by FarSight Studios (PS2, Windows, Wii) and Torus Games (DS), released as simply Backyard Football on Nintendo platforms; first game released on the Wii
    • Backyard Football '09 (2008, PlayStation 2, Nintendo DS, Wii, Windows) – Developed by FarSight Studios (PS2, Wii, Windows) and Torus Games (DS)
    • Backyard Football '10 (2009, PlayStation 2, Wii, Xbox 360) – Developed by FarSight Studios; first game released for an Xbox console (and only entry on such console with a major league license), last game released on PlayStation 2, and last Football game with the NFL and NFLPA licenses
    • Backyard Sports: Rookie Rush (2010, Nintendo DS, Wii, Xbox 360) – Developed by HB Studios (Wii, 360) and Powerhead Games (DS); last Atari-published game in the franchise
  • Backyard Basketball
    • Backyard Basketball (2001, Windows, Mac OS) – Last SCUMM game to not have a major league license (excluding remasters), but it still has two pro athletes (Kevin Garnett and Lisa Leslie)
      • Backyard Basketball '01 (2025, Windows, iOS, Android) – Remaster by Mega Cat Studios; removes Kevin Garnett, Rereleased for Free
    • Backyard Basketball 2004 (2003, Windows) – First game alongside Backyard Football 2004 published by Atari after Infogrames' rename, first Basketball entry with the NBA and NBAPA licenses
      • Backyard Basketball NBA (2003, PlayStation; released in 2004 for PAL regions as Junior Sports Basketball) – First game for the PlayStation 2, NBA license not in the Junior Sports Basketball release
    • Backyard Basketball (2004, Game Boy Advance) – Developed by Mistic Software
    • Backyard Sports: NBA Basketball 2007 (2006, Game Boy Advance; 2007, PlayStation 2, Windows) – Developed by Mistic Software (GBA) and Game Brains (PS2 and Windows); last game released on Game Boy Advance
    • Backyard Basketball (2007, Nintendo DS) – Developed by Mistic Software; first game released on Nintendo DS
    • Backyard Sports NBA Basketball 2015 (2015, iOS, Android) - Developed by Day 6 Sports Group and published by Fingerprint Network; the other game in the brief 2015 reboot
  • Backyard Hockey
    • Backyard Hockey (2002, Windows) – First game running on the Yaga engine; has the NHL and NHLPA licenses
      • Backyard Hockey '02 (2025, Windows) – Remaster by Mega Cat Studios; only Yaga engine remaster, only remaster using the characters' first redesigns, only remaster without a mobile release, loses the NHL and NHLPA license, replaces four pro athletes from the original release with four different pro athletes from the same era (but reuses the originals' kid designs), Rereleased for Free
    • Backyard Hockey (2003, Game Boy Advance) – Developed by Mistic Software
    • Backyard Hockey 2005 (2004, Windows)
    • Backyard Hockey (2007, Nintendo DS) – Developed by Mistic Software
  • Backyard Skateboarding (2004, Windows) – Only action sport and non-team sport game in the franchise, only sport not being remastered by Mega Cat, has just one pro athlete (Andy Macdonald)
    • Backyard Skateboarding: Game of the Year Edition (2005, Windows) – Updated Re-release adding a fifth level, another unlockable kid, additional challenges, enhanced resolution, and bug fixes; last game ever developed by Humongous Entertainment before Atari renamed them to Humongous, Inc. and split off the developer's assets
    • Backyard Skateboarding (2005, Game Boy Advance) – Developed by Full Fat

The series in general provides examples of:

  • Anachronism Stew: The pros being kids in modern times. Not only that, but also by the time some of the pros were born, others would've already been teenagers or even adults. NFL Backyard Basics handles this by having the present-day pros turn into kids while they're in the Clubhouse.
  • Ascended Extra: In Baseball, Vinnie the Gooch mentions a former Rockets player named Joey MacAdoo. Nine years later, Joey is one of the new Backyard Kids.
  • Big Brother Worship: Amir Khan, to Achmed. In some games, he even gets a massive stat bonus if he and Achmed are on the same team.
  • Business of Generic Importance: Some of the various professional fields in the series are generic locations, such as "Pro Sports Arena" and "University State College", "Parks Department #2", and "Big City Stadium".
  • Celebrity Power: The pros, who are always better than the neighborhood kids. Justified if you think about it, since the pros specialize in their respective sports while the neighborhood kids play many different sports.
  • Celebrity Star: The pros.
  • The Computer Is a Cheating Bastard:
    • When creating teams in Versus mode, picking one of the Webber twins or the Khan brothers will result in the computer selecting the other on the very next turn. Every time.
      • Oddly enough, it gets inverted if you choose either Sally or Ronny: the computer will chose the other one, despite Ronny actually having decreased stats if you pair him with his sister.
    • In Baseball, the AI is also capable of having created kids who have almost all stats maxed out, which is impossible to do without the cheat character Lemon Boy. The AI is also has access to pitches not available to the player, such as sliders and sinkers.
  • Commuting on a Bus: Amir, Gretchen, and Stephanie were demoted to being generic kids in Baseball 2007.
  • Cousin Oliver: Joey, Samantha, and Arthur.
  • Desk Jockey: Many of the announcers.
  • Early-Installment Weirdness: The first three games seem heavily stripped down compared to the later ones. The first two lacked the pro players that would become such an icon of the series mere years later, Baseball only allows for one-color teams instead of two, the menu navigation was completely different and did not use the streamlined forward-and-back arrow mechanic, the player stats were measured on a one-to-four scale instead of one-to-ten, you couldn't pick a home field for a season game, and several other things that would be considered major staples are completely absent (for instance, the "power-up obtained" sound). The outfield viewpoint also featured hand-drawn figures instead of the CGI ones that became more prominent later on.
    • The NFL teams in Football '99 were just as customizable as the Backyard teams, letting you not only change their colors, but also replace their hometown with an adjective. The later games avoid this by clearly segregating the Backyard and Pro teams.
  • Easter Egg: Hold shift while clicking on Pablo Sanchez's player profile, and he'll say a phrase in English.
  • Five-Token Band: The series featured 30 characters and lot of them were of different ethnicities, so most of the time you could make your team like this trope. These included nine Black kids (Keisha, Jocinda, Dante, Stephanie, the Dobbses, Mikey, Ricky, and Ernie), three Hispanic kids (Maria, Jorge, and Pablo), three East Asian kids (Luanne and the Kawaguchis), two South Asian kids (the Khans), and thirteen white kids (Annie, Billy Jean, the Webbers, the Delvecchios, Lisa, Dmitri, Gretchen, Kimmy, Pete, Reese, and Marky).
  • Four-Fingered Hands: The characters have these in the classic games. Averted since they moved away from that art style and still is as of the 2024 reboot, which uses a cartoony art style that invokes the classic era.
  • Gender-Equal Ensemble: The original Backyard Kids consist of fifteen boys and fifteen girls.
  • Geographic Flexibility: The Neighborhood changes in every game.
  • Glitch Entity: The generic kids can be put on your team in Backyard Baseball through editing the coach file, but since they were never intended to appear on the Strategy screen or Meet the Players their graphics are garbled into pieces from other graphics. At worst, they crash the game from trying to display non-existent ones.
    • This is averted in games starting with Backyard Hockey however, as they are all properly set up yet only scripted to not appear on the bleachers.
  • Holiday Mode: Some games have a dynamic menu that changes with the season. However, in all games, playing the game on a kid's birthday will buff their stats for the day.
  • Hurricane of Puns: Many teams in the original Backyard Soccer have names that are puns.
  • In-Series Nickname: Every playable character has one. There are only a few real-life players who actually have their real-life nicknames in-game: Carlos "El Pibe" Valderrama, Zach "The Beast" Thornton, Frank "The Big Hurt" Thomas, Randy "The Big Unit" Johnson, and a couple others.
  • Jack of All Stats: Meta-example—the neighborhood kids are always overshadowed by the pros because the pros specialize in their respective sports, while the neighborhood kids play many different sports. Each specific game also has their own general Jack of All Stats. Ex. in Baseball 2001/03, it's Sally Dobbs, and in Soccer it's Lisa Crockett.
  • Lampshade Hanging: The announcers often do this.
  • Later-Installment Weirdness: Before the reboot, there were many examples where the "modern era" of the series, usually defined to be games made after 2006's Backyard Sports: Baseball 2007 (which incidentally was the first game to not be developed by Humongous), differed massively to earlier games of the series.
    • In Baseball 2007, some iconic characters, such as Amir, Jocinda and Kenny were cut from the main cast with their only appearance being as a non-playable generic. In place of them were several new characters which, to some people in the fanbase, don't fit the personalities of the original 30 kids. Additionally, the artstyle has changed, some of the characters' personalities were flipped entirely (for example, Vicki would Take A Level in Jerkass by portraying her as edgy) and Sunny Day and Vinnie the Gooch/Abner Dubbleplay has been replaced completely by Jack Fouler. This was also the first game, other than the Backyard Football Gamecube port, to have Pablo speak completely in English.
    • The Sandlot Sluggers and Rookie Rush games also had another art style change, this time portraying them more realistically, and also included a break from traditional gameplay with a story mode.
    • The latest original games, Basketball 2015 and Baseball 2015 for mobile would include yet another artstyle change. The game only included ten of the Backyard kids this time (not even including any kids added during the modern era), plus the game would include many pros, a very high majority of which are locked behind a paywall which is the norm for mobile games even to this day.
  • Leitmotif: Every playable character has one. When the games went 3D, each character got a new leitmotif except Pablo.
  • Mad Libs Dialogue: Sunny Day. Her partners avert this, however (as does Sunny herself in NFL Backyard Basics).
  • Master of All: Pablo Sanchez is the best character in almost every game, especially in the Baseball series where he can play virtually any position and excel. In later installments however his pitching was nerfed significantly.
  • Non-Uniform Uniform: Most noticeable in the original baseball games where a player's uniform consists of their everyday outfit with the team's colors.
  • Not Quite Starring: Obviously, the pros do not do their own voices (except in NFL Backyard Basics).
  • Only Known by Their Nickname: The custom players, due to technical limitations — except in early games where it was just "Custom Player".
  • Only Six Faces: There are only a few "custom" player faces available.
  • Overshadowed by Awesome: The kids, by the pros.
  • Parental Bonus: The references to 1980s culture.
  • Product Placement: Parodied with 110% Juice.
  • Punny Name:
    • The announcers and certain unlockable players and coaches were filled with them. Sunny Day is the biggest example, along with Chuck Downfield, Buddy Cheque (Check), and Barry Dejay (Bury the J).
    • A few fields also had puns. In the Basketball games there was Broadside Barn ("couldn't hit the broadside of a barn"), and the Hockey games introduced Duksana Pond ("ducks on a pond").
  • Race Lift: The generic kids have a different appearance in every game, and this can include different skin tones.
  • Recycled Soundtrack: A few of the menu themes in Football 06 were borrowed from previous games in the series.
  • Revisiting the Roots: Playground Productions' marketing for their reboot of the series focuses entirely on the aesthetics and kid designs from the SCUMM engine games. Even the remastered promo art for Backyard Hockey '02 is altered to be more in line with these, despite it being the PC debut of the kids' 2002-2005 redesigns.
  • Secret Character: There have been many, Mr. Clanky being the most common.
  • Spotlight-Stealing Squad: The advertising always revolved around the pros. As of Backyard Sports: Sandlot Sluggers, they were gone until the handheld games in 2015.
  • Stealth Pun: Sunny Day's name is a nod to the name of Humongous Entertainment's co-founder Shelley Day.
  • Team Shot: In every game except Backyard Skateboarding.
  • Tie-In Novel: The Backyard Books.
  • Took a Level in Badass: The kids' stats vary between sports, causing kids with awful stats in one sport to suddenly become very good in another. For example, Ricky Johnson has a terrible batting stat in Baseball, but is an excellent kicker in Football and Soccer.
  • Unnamed Parent: No kid's parents have names.
  • "Where Are They Now?" Epilogue: Upon winning a championship, photos of your team's players celebrating their victory are usually shown alongside the credits. How they celebrate depends on the game.
  • Wolverine Publicity: The pros. This was actually a bit gradual though; in the original Football, Steve Young is on the cover, but Jocinda and Amir are front and center while Steve hangs in the background. Then on Baseball 2001, Cal Ripken is the most predominant character on the cover, but Stephanie still stands out quite a bit, so it's about half-and-half. Soccer MLS Edition is where this starts to kick in though — Brandi Chastain and Cobi Jones now are front and center on the cover while Reese sort of floats in the background. Then comes Basketball where Kevin Garnett takes up more than half the box art complete with his real-life portrait next to him, while Kimmy floats off in the background. And finally with Basketball 2004, there aren't any Backyard Kids at all on the cover...then it somehow manages to escalate even more with Skateboarding GOTY where Andy MacDonald is the only kid present across the entire box. Yes, that includes the back of it too! Either way, the pros gradually took up more and more of the advertising until one has to wonder if the marketing team even remembered the Backyard Kids were in the game too, even though they always represent half (or more) of the cast.
  • World of Pun: Most team names are puns, as are those of most of the announcers.

Certain installments of the series provide examples of:

  • Abandoned Warehouse: A stage like this, appropriately called Vacant Warehouse, appears in Backyard Soccer. Notably, it's the only pick-up field with walls allowing for indoor soccer play like in the Off the Wall Indoor Invitational.
  • Achievement Mockery: In the re-release of Backyard Soccer '98, there are achievements for losing a season game, losing ten season games, and losing a game that goes to penalty kicks.
  • Adapted Out:
    • In Baseball '01 (the re-release of Baseball 2001), Ken Griffey Jr., Barry Bonds, and Frank Thomas are absent from the game, as they did not consent to have their likeness in the game. They are replaced with generic kids that have unique names, and the former of the three was replaced by Mo Vaughn in the game's intro. Separately, "Oakland" is removed from the Athletics' name since the team no longer plays there and are playing without a city designation from the 2025 through 2027 seasons until their new permanent home in Las Vegas is complete.
    • Similarly, in Football '99 (the re-release of Football), Brett Favre is absent as he also did not give his likeness (or Playground Productions decided not to bother with him) and is replaced by a new character in the form of Chuck Downfield's little brother Chase. The NFL logos are also gone due to EA holding exclusive rights, leading to the NFL teams being replaced by a mixture of Soccer's A-Division teams, Football teams from other games in the series, and a few original ones.
    • The opening cutscenes of Basketball '01 and Hockey '02 are completely removed from their respective games as they are both fully pre-rendered (unlike with the other four remasters, which have pixel animation rendered within SCUMM itself) and contain things that Playground Productions does not have the licenses for (Kevin Garnett, the MLS branding, and other Humongous Entertainment games in Basketball, and the NHL and NHLPA licenses in Hockey).
  • All Deserts Have Cacti: Cactus Gulch in Backyard Football.
  • Anachronism Stew: Backyard Baseball '01 is a retroactive example for its source game. The Cleveland Indians become the Cleveland Guardians and the Athletics are no longer based in Oakland, but the Angels are still shown as being based in Anaheim instead of Los Angeles, the Marlins still represent all of Florida instead of just Miami, the Tampa Bay Rays still call themselves the "Devil Rays" and use a manta ray as its logo, and the Montreal Expos still exist as Canada's National League team instead of moving to the American capital and becoming the Washington Nationals.
  • Area 51: Area 51½ (also known as A Nameless Field) from the Soccer series. It can only be unlocked by editing an INI file.
  • Artifact Title: Some of the games, especially later ones, feature no backyards at all. This is most prevalent with Backyard Hockey, where none of the rinks take place in a backyard, and a good majority of them aren't neighborhood rinks either.
  • Artificial Stupidity: The Mul-T-Puk air hockey minigame in Backyard Hockey has exceptionally stupid AI. This video says it all.
  • Ascended Glitch: The infinite ollie bug in the original Backyard Skateboarding was patched in the Game of the Year Edition but did get the honor of getting a new power-up that accomplished a very similar effect, possibly to an even greater degree than the original. The turbine power-up allows you to jump as much as you want, and unlike the infinite ollie bug, you don't have to charge it, you can just spam the heck out of the space bar and your character goes flying.
  • Awesome Music: Invoked and lampshaded in Backyard Baseball 2001/Soccer MLS Edition/Soccer 2004; one of the Credits Gags is "Click here to listen to the awesome credits song. Oh, and see the Smarty Pants who made this game."
  • Bait-and-Switch: Resse Worthington pulls one of these in Backyard Baseball '97, 2001, and 2003. After using his inhaler, he stances at the plate, but with his bat upside-down. He promptly twirls it right-side-up with an Eyebrow Waggle, as if either to say, "I knew that", or "Just joking!".
  • Banana Peel: There is a powerup called Banana Peel in Backyard Hockey which sends the opponent into a Slippery Skid, even though there is no actual banana peel in the powerup except for the icon.
  • Barrier Warrior: A force field that lasts a few minutes is a powerup in Backyard Football.
  • Battle in the Rain: The some of the opening cutscene in Backyard Football 2002.
  • Bigfoot, Sasquatch, and Yeti: There is a Yeti team in Backyard Hockey 2005.
  • Bowdlerization:
    • In most professional hockey games, a fight will break out to settle a disagreement. Needless to say, that sort of violence would never fly in a game intended for kids, so the Hockey series will have fouls or roughing settled by a game of Rock–Paper–Scissors. Buddy Cheque even lampshades it, by saying it's "what the fans pay to see" despite how mundane it is.
    • Due to cultural changes since the original Backyard Baseball 2001 release, Baseball '01 changes Cleveland's baseball team from the "Indians" to their current name the "Guardians", replacing the Chief Wahoo logo with the team's current "C" logo and even adding new voice lines from both Sunny Day and Vinnie the Gooch to reflect the name change.
  • Call-Forward: The replacement teams in the Steam release of Football '99 include several teams that would debut in later Football games, such as the Orcas and Labrador Receivers.
  • Clock Tower: There is one in the neighborhood in Backyard Skateboarding.
  • Clumsy Copyright Censorship: The logo for the Steam release of Hockey '02 has a blank circle where the NHL logo would've gone, and the replacements for the NHL teams still have the same color schemes as the teams they're replacing, so, for example, the Melonheads' color scheme is red and white rather than their usual green and purple. Additionally, the game is supposed to have the NHL and original Backyard teams in separate menus, but here it's now split into Backyard teams that can't have their colors changed, and ones that can.
  • Color-Coded for Your Convenience: Inverted with the Chameleon powerup in Football, in which the defense's uniforms change color to match the offense's uniforms.
  • Continuity Nod:
    • In Basketball 2004's credits, one picture shows Gretchen Hasselhoff posing for a portrait; the portrait is based on her appearance in the original games.
    • In Baseball 2005's Starlite Orchards, you can see the intro movie from Football 2002 playing on the big screen.
    • Also, Buddy Cheque (the Hockey commentator) makes an offhand reference to Vinnie the Gooch, the original commentator for the Baseball games.
  • Continuity Reboot: Arguably, Backyard Baseball 2007.
  • Covers Always Lie: Although Soccer 2004 was the last game to feature the kids' original designs, the box art depicted their then-new appearances.
  • Company Cross-References:
    • In Baseball games, sometimes after a pitch, Vinnie the Gooch will say "It was in there like swimwear".
    • In Basketball, before the game begins Sunny might comment her Pajama Sam watch says it's game time.
    • In Hockey 2005, one can find Freddi Fish and Luther frozen under the ice in Mammoth Cave.
  • Credits Gag: If you simply hover the mouse over the credits button in Backyard Baseball 2001, Backyard Soccer MLS Edition and Backyard Soccer 2004, you get some humorous messages at the bottom of the screen.
    • In the original Backyard Baseball, "No hot dogs were consumed in the making of this game. Okay, maybe a few." The 2024 remaster ends with "To the good people from Humongous Entertainment, Thanks for everything. Sorry we removed every mention of your company from the game. Legal made us do it." This line would be added in all of the later remasters as well.
  • Deadly Gas: A powerup in Backyard Football 2006.
  • Defeat Means Playable: Backyard Skateboarding, for the bosses. Also, Jimmy Knuckles in Sandlot Sluggers.
  • Department of Redundancy Department: Football 2002 has the NFL license, and thus the Miami Dolphins are a playable team. However, one custom team name is the Orcas, which are a species of dolphins.
  • Do Not Touch the Funnel Cloud: Played straight in Backyard Football, where the twister powerup blows the opponents away when they touch it.
  • Drive-In Theater: Starlite Orchards Drive-In in Backyard Baseball 2005.
  • Early Installment Character-Design Difference: The Backyard Kids' designs in Baseball '97 are slightly less refined than they are in Soccer '98 and the rest of the SCUMM engine games, due to Soccer '98 having to alter their outfits to accommodate secondary colors. Additionally, several more kids are shown wearing baseball caps all the time, whereas in later games it's only Pablo, Kenny, and Stephanie who do.
  • Easier Than Easy: T-Ball mode in Backyard Baseball.
  • Easter Egg:
    • All your base are belong to Humongous.
    • Entering "Houstons" as a coach name in Backyard Football 2002 adds the Houston Texans as a team name and logo.
    • In the original Football, the kicker for the Dolphins in season mode is named Ray, the same name as the kicker who wanted to kill Dan Marino (who happens to be in the game himself).
  • Effortless Achievement: All of the re-released games on Steam have an achievement for starting the game for the first time, entitled "Not Just a Collector".
  • Fantasy Helmet Enforcement: In Backyard Skateboarding, a message shows up saying that kids should always wear helmets and pads while skateboarding.
  • Fire, Ice, Lightning: Powerups in Baseball are based off all three (Fire Ball and Big Freeze pitches, plus the Screaming Line Drive), along with water (the spitball).
  • Flying Saucer: In Wheeler Acres in Backyard Baseball 2005.
  • Friendly Local Chinatown: A stage in Backyard Football 2004.
  • Ghibli Hills: The forest in Football 2006.
  • Glorious Mother Russia: The Cagey Bees team in Backyard Soccer.
  • Guide Dang It!:
    • Baseball 2001 is missing the controls guide for the gamepad, making first-timers hard to understand the controls and must learn them during gameplay. That is, until Baseball 2003 finally documents them, although the controls have been changed since the previous one.
    • Soccer 2004 has four new powerups in which those are based on Basketball, they are 110% Juice, Super Speed, Slow Speed, and Ice Cream Truck. That being said, the instruction manual for that game don't describe about powerups either.
    • Merry Olde Englandland in Backyard Skateboarding has coins that are on top of the castle towers, but there is no way of reaching them normally, which is a pretty bad thing in a game where hard-to-reach areas are usually accessed by grinding on hard-to-see power lines and wires. What's the solution, you ask? You jump into perfectly normal looking rocks which teleport you to the towers. There is no hint in the entire game that you're supposed to do this, and on top of that, it doesn't even work on all the rocks! The Game of the Year Edition partially solved this by adding wooden arrows pointing to the specific rocks, but even then, that's still hardly an indicator the rocks actually do anything.
  • Hyperactive Metabolism: Juice heals you in Baseball and Basketball.
  • An Ice Person: Freezing is a powerup in several of the games.
  • It's Always Spring: Averted in Football 2004, where the climate changes with real-world climate.
  • Joke Item: The powerup The Fang in Baseball. It will always be a ball even if it is thrown in the strike zone.
  • Kung-Fu Sonic Boom: The Sonic Boom powerup in Football, which knocks over all kids on the opposing team.
  • Limit Break: Hot Hand and Dunk in Basketball.
  • Loading Screen: A few of the games have a loading screen appear just before the game begins. Some of them, such as Hockey 2005 or Football 2006, have controls or random facts appear while this occurs.
  • Meaningful Name: In Backyard Hockey, Beverly Backstop is the best goalie in the game...because she stops the puck.
  • Millennium Bug: The original Baseball (released in 1997) has an example of this. In certain instances, whenever the game tries to render a date with the year as 2 digits, years 2000 and later will be presented as numbers 100 and larger.
  • Multi-Mook Melee: In Baseball 2005, the Fielders' Challenge is against an endless team of dummies.
  • No Animals Were Harmed: From the original Baseball's credits: "No hot dogs were consumed in the making of this game. Okay, maybe a few."
  • No Communities Were Harmed: Tokyo Field in Baseball 2007 is an obvious replica of Tokyo Dome.
  • No Ending: Football on the GBA has no ending at all. You don't even get a trophy for winning the Cereal Bowl.
  • No Fair Cheating: In Soccer, throw-ins that enter the goal without being touched are considered out of play, just like in actual soccer.
  • Nostalgia Level: Steele Stadium in Baseball for GameCube/Baseball 2005, looking exactly as it did in the original (except it is in 3D).
  • Obvious Rule Patch:
    • In the original Baseball, the only way to get a batting power-up was to reach base off a special pitch. However, in order to get a special pitch in the first place, the pitcher has to strike someone out. Obviously, this meant a skilled player might never have the opportunity to ever obtain a batting power-up. Baseball 2001 fixed this by also making them obtainable through turning double plays or triple plays.
    • Football 2002 had a power-up called the Invincible Run. It was extremely unbalanced and did little more than make a touchdown completely guaranteed unless the player ran across the field way in advance until the power-up wore off, but even then if the opposing player was anywhere past a third of the way down the field, the power-up would last too long and the running back would typically make it to the endzone before it wore off. The GameCube version Nerfed this pretty considerably by having the running back slow down every time he was tackled when the power-up was in effect.
  • Oddly Named Sequel 2: Electric Boogaloo: Backyard Soccer MLS Edition is the only one to not be named after a year, up until Sandlot Sluggers.
  • Old Save Bonus: Having a Basketball PS2 save file unlocks Barry Dejay in Baseball PS2.
  • One Stat to Rule Them All:
    • Batting in Baseball.
    • Outside shooting from Backyard Basketball. Create a custom character, max that stat, repeatedly throw 3-pointers from anywhere on the court.
  • One-Steve Limit: While the Backyard Kids follow the limit to a T, they do not follow this limit when it comes to the Pro Kids, or even their replacements:
    • They don't avoid licensing pros who share a first name with a Backyard Kid or another pro they licensed, meaning, for example, Alex Gonzalez and Alex Rodriguez are both available in Baseball 2001, and Lisa Crockett and Lisa Leslie can both play with each other in Basketball '01. Lampshaded with Pablo Mastroeni's description in Soccer 2004, which says he's known as the "other Pablo".
    • Playground Productions' replacements for pros they couldn't/didn't license include Chase Wilton in Baseball 2001, and Chase Downfield in Football '99.
  • Palette Swap: Both Baseball 2003 and Soccer 2004 add new fields which clearly re-use the layouts of other ones; Casa de Pablo (Dirt Yards), Dubois Diamond (Eckman Acres), Scrapco Field (Playground Commons), and The Paveway (Cement Gardens) in the former, Adobe Flats (Sandy Flats), Crayne Construction (Tin Can Alley), Fappy's Farm (Eckman Acres), and Kamehameha Cove (Steele Stadium) in the latter.
  • Palmtree Panic: The Boardwalk in Baseball 2005.
  • Patchwork Map: The island in Football 2006.
  • Power-Up Letdown: The Chameleon play in Football, which turns your team uniforms into the offense uniforms. It really backfires, as it's still easy to tell what players are yours, and it's impossible to fool the computer. 2-player mode doesn't do any better; you can't highlight the pass icon over the defense, so the power up becomes worthless.
  • Product Displacement: The Humongous Rectangular Gardens court in Basketball '01 was initially full of product placement for other Humongous Entertainment games, most of which had to be swapped out in the Steam/Mobile rerelease:
    • An ad for Pajama Sam's flashlight was swapped out for Walter Weasel World, the theme park the kids go to in the endings for Football '99 and Football 2002.
    • An ad for SPY Fox: Operation Ozone was swapped out for Big Tony's Malt Shop, which is one of the stops the kids go on in the ending of Basketball '01.
    • An ad for Backyard Soccer MLS Edition now promotes the original Soccer, due to Mega Cat Studios not being able to edit MLS Edition's assets (at least, at the time; they could now thanks to updates to the modding tools), as well as not having the MLS license itself.
    • Humongous Entertainment logos were replaced with Mega Cat Studios ones.
  • Product Placement: In Soccer 2004, Carlos Valderrama mentions that his favorite TV program is Blue's Clues (which counts as one of Humongous' self-promotions, as they made many of Blue's Clues' Licensed Games).
  • Product Placement Name: The fictional brand 110% Juice sponsors the Player of the Game segment.
  • Recycled with a Gimmick: Football 2006 is Football... ON AN ISLAND!
  • Retraux: Babe Ruth in Backyard Baseball 2009 is done in a retro style.
  • Roger Rabbit Effect: NFL Backyard Basics.
  • Save Scumming: The six save slots in the original Baseball were probably meant for this.
    • And Save Scumming has many different uses— it helps, for instance, when you're in a tight spot, and need to get outs fast; you can save the game, come back to it, and rinse and repeat as many times as you need until you solve your problem. You can also save the game if something really good has happened for you, and you don't want it negated by something good for the other team.
  • Self-Insert Fic:
    • Typing in certain names for your coach in Hockey gave you three different teams featuring the game's art staff, producers, and programmers as kids.
    • As well, in Football 2004, Rhett Mathis, the original games' music composer, can be seen as an NPC kid on Season Mode teams.
  • Shout-Out:
    • Angela Delvecchio was the main character in a Friend to Die For.
    • The Webber sisters are based off the Williams sisters.
    • Although probably not intentional, Ronny Dobbs is also the name of quite possibly the most well known recurring character from Mr. Show.
    • Baseball 2003 has Keisha Phillips enter with her saying "Uh, oh, here she comes" (the hidden captions add "Maneater" at the end; making this a reference to the 1982 Daryl Hall & John Oates song "Maneater").
    • When choosing Lisa Crocket for your team in Football, she may say "Y'know what? I'm happy." (the hidden captions suggest that this is a reference to Droopy)
    • In Baseball 2005, go into the Record Book and look at BBL Champions. Bob Loblaw is a default one.
    • After striking a batter out in the original Baseball:
      Sunny: Another one down.
      Vinnie: And another one bites the dust. Heh, heh.
    • The King-Size Dome in Football 1999 and Football 2002 is a reference to the Kingdome in Seattle, as Humongous Entertainment was based in the Seattle metropolitan area.
    • Likewise with Scrapco Field in Baseball 2003 being named after then-named Safeco Field.
    • Several of the Generic Kids added in Baseball 2001 are named after the cast and crew of Pulp Fiction.
  • Silliness Switch:
    • Cheat codes in Basketball for the PS2 make really big and small heads.
    • Even more so in Football 2006, where cheats can give characters big/small heads, big/small hands, etc; even different footballs— from a watermelon to a chocolate eclair to a banana slug.
  • Single-Palette Town: Cyan Lane (which is, well, cyan) in Football 2006.
  • Slippery Skid: A powerup in Hockey causes this to happen.
  • Slippery Swimsuit: The credits of Backyard Baseball 2003 are shown alongside pictures of the kids having fun at a water park. In Reese Worthington's case, he's covering himself while his swimsuit is floating away.
  • Soundtrack Dissonance: The pros in Soccer MLS Edition did have unique themes, but they can't be heard in the "Meet the Kids" screen. Instead, the menu song/previous kid's theme keeps playing, resulting in things like a lot of pros using Billy Jean Blackwood's cajun leitmotif.
  • Spinning Paper: Whenever you unlock something in Baseball 2005.
  • Sprint Meter: The juice meter in Baseball.
  • Sprint Shoes: There are sprint skates in Hockey.
  • Stealth Pun:
    • There are a few examples, such as Duksana Pond in Hockey.
    • In some of the pros' endings, they are checking out something related to their team name.
  • Stop Poking Me!: One of Kiesha Phillips' quotes in Basketball is "Stop that clicking, man! It tickles!"
  • Stuff Blowing Up: The cannonball power-up in Soccer has the ball exploding if it successfully makes the goal.
  • Stylistic Suck: The song "Skate Rock Dude" in Skateboarding. This is the first time we hear one of Achmed Khan's songs, and it's exactly what a rock song by an eight-year-old Metalhead would sound like.
  • Superior Twin Teamwork: Putting twin sisters Ashley and Sidney Webber on the same team will give them both a random boost and improve their overall performance.
  • Super Mode: There is an invincibility powerup in Hockey.
    • In Baseball 2001 and 2003, some players will receive stat boots (or in some cases, decreases) if certain conditions are met (e.g. Maria Luna gets a boost when wearing a pink uniform, Kimmy Eckman gets a boost when playing at Eckman Acres, and Tony and Angela Delvecchio get boosts when playing against each other).
  • Super-Scream: The Screaming Line Drive in Baseball.
  • Super-Speed: A powerup in Basketball, Hockey, Soccer 2004, and Skateboarding.
  • Take That!:
    • Not in the game proper, but in a pitch for the original Backyard Baseball that former developer Richard Moe shared on the Humongous Alumni page on Facebook, there was one pretty harsh one towards EA Sports games.
    Designed for kids aged 5 to 10, Backyard Baseball will provide all the gripping realism of an adult-style baseball simulation but allow you to actually win, instead of having the computer beat you every single time by a score of 12 to nothing and you get so mad you want to rip the CD into little shreds and call up EA Sports and tell them how crappy their little game is because you can never get a hit, let alone a win and what’s the point of playing if you can’t do well at all, even once in a while, is that too much to ask?
    • A possible one in Baseball 2003: Both Ken Griffey Jr. and Alex Rodriguez have their stats decreased when playing at Scrapco Field. Said field's name is based on Safeco Field, then-name of the Seattle Mariners' home ballpark, for whom both previously played for and Humongous Entertainment's hometown team.
    • The Steam releases of the series have an achievement called "Not just a collector" for launching any game for the first time, a jab at Steam users who add any cheap/free games they can find to their libraries only to never actually play them.
  • Tomorrowland: Quantum Field in Baseball 2005.
  • Toon Transformation: The pros who visit the Clubhouse in NFL Backyard Basics.
  • The Trope without a Title: A Nameless Field (also known as Area 51½) from the Soccer series.
  • Under the Sea: The Aquadome in Baseball 2005.
  • The Voice: The mother calling for dinner in Dobbaguchi Arena in Basketball.
  • What Did You Expect When You Named It ____?: In Basketball '01, if the Bricks are down at halftime, Barry Dejay may lampshade how the team is named after the basketball term for a shot that bounces off the rim and misses.
  • A Winner Is You:
    • The GBA games, except Football, which has no ending.
    • Backyard Baseball 2001 and Soccer MLS Edition removed the rewards for winning, besides getting a picture in the Hall of Fame.
    • In the Football games on the PC, beating the game as Mr. Clanky's Tackling Dummies gives you a simple victory photo. Justified as this team only consists of robots who probably aren't programmed to ride rides at an amusement park.

Sunny Day: "This is Sunny Day, signing off!"

Alternative Title(s): Backyard Baseball, Backyard Football, Backyard Skateboarding, Backyard Basketball, Backyard Hockey, Backyard Soccer

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