

Other key rookie cards in 1991-92 Upper Deck Hockey include Peter Forsberg and Dominik Hasek. Rookie cards in that part of the set include Keith Tkachuk and Nikolai Khabibulin. The WJC cards include several teams, not just Canada. These gave collectors the first cards of Teemu Selanne, Nicklas Lidstrom and Alexei Zhamnov.

The Low Series checklist also has subsets dedicated to Soviet Stars and the Canada Cup. No doubt in response to the popular Team Canada cards from the World Junior Championships in 1990-91 Upper Deck Hockey, the international flavor is expanded even further. The first series is comprised of 500 cards while the final 200 came in High Series packs. Once again split into a Low Series and a High Series, a complete 1991-92 Upper Deck Hockey set has 700 cards. See also: 1990-91 Upper Deck Hockey Cards 1991-92 Upper Deck Hockey Set Details Values might not reflect that today, but that's a matter of overproduction, not set quality. Strong photography and another tremendous crop of rookies make 1991-92 Upper Deck Hockey one of the decade's top releases. Whether or not you're a diehard hockey fan, Brett Hull Hockey 95 offers addictive action that rivals (and IMHO even surpasses) EA's better-known NHL Hockey 95.How do you follow up a stellar debut? For 1991-92 Upper Deck Hockey, it was to continue to focus on the good stuff. You can customize up to 4 lines for offensive and defensive situations, and keep track of breakaways, one-timers, and even power-plays for in-game statistics. And lest anyone bemoan the lack of simulation-style options, Brett Hull 95 does not disappoint. Game length is very flexible: you can play a full 84-game season, half-season, 11-game short season, playoffs, or exhibition games. Fights, which no hockey game can do without, are realistically bloody, with a surprisingly wide range of punches you can make.įamous commentator Al Michaels calls the shots with his distinctive booming voice, and you can view instant replays of wrap-arounds, blue-line blasts, crushing checks, and more. skating ability, aggressiveness, shot accuracy, and strength). The game features over 600 real-life NHLPA pros, thanks to it being fully endorsed by the association, each with his own set of attributes (e.g. Konami's Blade of Steel, and even the SNES version of this game) will be pleasantly surprised with the game's fluid animations and outstanding controls, especially with a gamepad. One of the best action-oriented hockey games ever made, this 1995 version of Accolade's Brett Hull Hockey series is widely regarded as the best game in the series, even though two more sequels would be made.įans of console-based hockey games in particular (e.g.
