The Australian Open is getting in on the newest trend in the sports world by re-creating tennis matches in video-game form ...
The Australian Open's animated tennis livestreams are making a splash. U.S. leagues have used similar technology to put ...
The Australian Open now shows an AI-generated version of tennis matches on YouTube and some of the results are hilarious.
They look like they’re straight out of a video game, like Wii Tennis. The players’ bodies and faces have been replaced with Miis, basically. What gives? Per reporter Bastien Fachan ...
Screengrab of Australian Open TV stream showing the players as Wii Tennis characters. If you have stumbled upon the live streaming of Australian Open matches on YouTube, you may have noticed that ...
Australian Open (AO) broadcast may seem similar to previous years if youre watching on the television. However, if youre watching online via the official Australian Open TV YouTube channel youll ...
The Australian Open don’t own all of their broadcasting rights (fairly common), so they’re live-streaming a Wii Tennis-like version of the matches on YouTube – love this It follows a ...
Tennis fans hitting YouTube to see live matches from the Australian Open could be forgiven for thinking they've accidentally clicked on a channel recreating the tournament in Wii Sports ...
Carlos Alcaraz was depicted as a cartoon with a large head (Picture: Australian Open) The Australian Open is live streaming an alternative Wii Tennis-style broadcast during this year’s Grand ...
According to tennis reporter Bastien Fachan, that’s why matches of the Australian Open are currently being streamed online in what looks like Wii Sports Tennis. (It’s not actually Wii Sports ...
The characters used to depict some of tennis' biggest stars have an uncanny resemblance to those from the classic Wii Sports video game, a connection made by many online. Each country typically ...
The first major professional tennis tournament of the year ... broadcast that makes players look like something out of Wii Sports. The Australian Open organizers rolled out what they are calling ...