SMOOTS World Cup Tennis
Arcade tennis with a cartoonish spin, but thin content and lukewarm reception make it a hard sell even for casual sports fans.
Compare Prices(0 stores)
Loading prices...
We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.
Screenshots & Media

About SMOOTS World Cup Tennis
SMOOTS World Cup Tennis is a lightweight arcade tennis game from Kaneda Games, built around simplified controls and a cartoonish visual style rather than simulation depth. If you are expecting anything close to the timing-heavy shot systems of a Virtua Tennis or the tactical layer of Top Spin, dial expectations back considerably. This is firmly in the "pick up and rally" camp, designed for short sessions rather than ranked ladder climbing or deep mechanical mastery. On the surface, the arcade approach is not a bad idea. The Smoots character lineup is goofy and approachable, and the basic shot mechanics are simple enough that anyone can start hitting the ball within minutes. For a couch co-op session with someone who has never touched a tennis game, that accessibility has real value. The problem is that the accessible floor and the skill ceiling end up being almost the same altitude. There are no meaningful build decisions, no stamina systems to manage, no serve mechanics that reward precision practice. What you see in the first fifteen minutes is essentially what the game has at two hours. From a strategy and systems perspective, which is where I spend most of my time evaluating games, SMOOTS World Cup Tennis is nearly empty. There is no progression loop worth tracking, no unlockable mechanics that change how you approach a match, and no AI behavior that forces adaptation. The opponent AI does not vary its patterns in ways that would push a player to develop reads or counter-strategies. For anyone who cares about decision depth, that is a significant gap. The "World Cup" framing implies tournament structure, but the competitive scaffolding around match play feels thin. The Steam review score sits at 49% positive across a small review pool, which is a mixed signal worth taking seriously. A low review count can swing wildly, but consistent feedback pointing at shallow content and technical roughness is a pattern, not an outlier. There is no Metacritic score to cross-reference, and the feature list on Steam is bare. No mod support, no workshop integration, no community tools that might organically extend the game's lifespan the way a strong mod ecosystem can for even a modest title. Who is this actually for? If you have younger players in the house who want something bright, simple, and immediately playable, SMOOTS might hold attention for an afternoon. For anyone expecting replay value, mechanical growth, or a reason to return after the first session, it is unlikely to deliver. The arcade tennis genre has stronger entries worth exploring first. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Reviews & Ratings
Game Info
- Developer
- Kaneda Games
- Publisher
- Plug In Digital
- Release Date
- Jun 1, 2016