The "winner" of the fight will be the player who tapped the most times. If two players fight over possession of the puck long enough, a brawl may break out between members of both teams. The referee will collect the puck, and a face-off will occur back in the original zone that the puck was shot from. If a players shoots the puck from their zone all the way into the opposing team's zone, crossing the center line(red line) and the opposite team's goal line in the process, and it is collected by a member of the opposite team, the shooter will be called for "Icing". If this also results in a draw, the game repeats the pattern of extra period and shootout until one player comes out ahead. If the players are still tied after the extra period, the game goes into a shootout, where each member from both teams goes one on one against the goaltender in an attempt to slip more pucks into the goal. If the teams are tied by the end of the third period, the game goes into an extra two minute period of overtime. After the second period, a small intermission featuring Zamboni machines is shown before the teams will switch sides again. After the first period, the teams simply switch sides. Each game is composed of three periods, the lengths of which are determined by the amount of time that was selected when teams were chosen. The object of the game is to shoot the puck into the opposing team's goal more often than your opponent can shoot the puck into your own goal. If two opposing players fight for the puck for a certain amount of time, other players join into the fight, resulting in the player from the losing team in the fight to be put in the penalty box for a period of time. Teams are composed of different combinations of light, medium, and heavy skaters. Teams are made up of five players including the goaltender, as opposed to six in real life. Each game is made up of three periods, with the victory going to the team who has the most points at the end of the game. The objective for both team is to hit a black puck with a hockey stick that each player carries into the opponent's goal. The arena is similarly designed to a real-world ice hockey rink, coated in ice, with a goal on either side. The play and mechanics of Ice Hockey are mostly similar to that of ice hockey in real life. It was later re-released for the Wii's Virtual Console service in Japan, North America, and some PAL regions. It was originally released in Japan for the Famicom Disk System, and was later released in North America and in some PAL regions for the NES. Ice Hockey is a 1988 game published and developed by Nintendo based on the sport of the same name.
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