We’re hoping it’s now the tennis game we want it to be.
Keep an eye out for a full review from us of the latter too. Choose from multiple game modes, with singles and doubles games, local and online.
The Xbox Store will play host to the download of both the Wilson Kit and the Xbox Series X|S version of Tennis World Tour Complete Edition. Play as the world's top players, master each surface, perfect your game and strive to dominate the world circuit. Hey, if you want to stump up the extra cash, who are we to tell you what to do! But yeah, it’s a little off that NACON couldn’t bring it upon themselves to include it in the Complete Edition of the game. We guess that means it’s not actual ‘complete’? But anyways, if you want some new kit, then the Wilson Kit DLC for £1.69 will deliver it.
There’s more though and perhaps a little cheekily of NACON, on the same day as this Complete Edition has hit Xbox Series X|S, another DLC drop has arrived, one that isn’t included in the Complete Edition.
You can see some of the changes in the video below. Further to that, the Career mode is being expanded with more official tournaments and doubles matches. For a start there are 48 playable tennis stars on hand, and there are also Signature Moves in place as well, allowing each player to his their own style. These are scenes that were never made part of the film, so maybe Miramax doesn’t technically own the rights to them, they only exist as pages that Tarantino wrote himself, and it’s these physical pages that the NFTs would be based on.It may be able to deliver on that too, as this Complete Edition for £49.99 builds in new features too. It could be that because the NFTs are coming from Quentin Tarantino’s “hand written” script, that his lawyers believe he still retains the rights. There could be a hint of the argument to come in the statement from Freedman. Still, they seem quite sure that the contract language is on their side. Quentin Tarantino’s side isn’t going into specifics about which part of the writer/director’s contract gives him the rights to sell NFTs, which maybe isn’t that surprising considering his attorney is being critical of Miramax for releasing contract specifics to the public. Miramax enumerated several of those rights, but indicated that only those rights were reserved. But Miramax’s callous decision to disclose confidential information about its filmmakers’ contracts and compensation will irreparably tarnish its reputation long after this case is dismissedĪccording to Miramax, the suit comes down to a portion of Quentin Tarantino’s contract that deals with “reserved rights,” which rights to Pulp Fiction Tarantino still has, as opposed to which rights Miramax took over when the studio produced the movie. Quentin Tarantino’s contract is clear: he has the right to sell NFTs of his hand-written script for Pulp Fiction and this ham-fisted attempt to prevent him from doing so will fail. And he took Miramax to task for even discussing the contract publicly, saying… The ATP Cup has been patched into the Xbox Series XS and PlayStation 5 Tennis World Tour 2 Complete Edition. In a statement to The Wrap, Quentin Tarantino’s attorney Bryan Freedman said that the contract absolutely does give him the appropriate rights. Miramax claims Tarantino’s contract with the studio doesn’t give him the rights to NFTs. Miramax is attempting to stop Tarantino from selling NFTs connected to Pulp Fiction, and now the writer/director’s side has spoken out, and they’re not mincing words.įollowing a cease and desist letter Miramax has filed a lawsuit against Quentin Tarantino in an attempt to get him to stop selling non-fungible tokens, NFTs, based on unused script pages from Pulp Fiction. HThe war of words has begun between lawyers for Miramax and Quentin Tarantino, and while the language might not be quite up to par for a Tarantino script from a style standpoint, it’s just as powerful.