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Electronic Arts’ FIFA Soccer franchise was – for a while – in second place in the soccer game market. FIFA 2009 put an end to that, and the 2010 version looks very much as if it’s going to maintain the high standards. Key additions to the latest version are much improved goal-keeper AI and reactions. No longer does your keeper simply lie forlornly…
Electronic Arts’ FIFA Soccer franchise was – for a while – in second place in the soccer game market. FIFA 2009 put an end to that, and the 2010 version looks very much as if it’s going to maintain the high standards. Key additions to the latest version are much improved goal-keeper AI and reactions. No longer does your keeper simply lie forlornly on the deck if a chip goes over him, now he will attempt to get back to the goal line and tip the ball away. The additional AI also means that the keeper will look to narrow angles and generally cause the strikers more mental stress than has been available in the past. And he’ll need to. Outfield players are now armed with a new ‘Urgency’ system to complement the 360-degree dribbling that how adorns the game. These are all helped out by the ability to actually muscle other players (legally but firmly) off the ball. 360-degree dribbling? Yes, no longer do you have to track around in huge circles in order to go in a straight line. There is far more – and far tighter – control than ever before. The fluidity of this means that the game flows more as you have to remember fewer button presses. Pre-game training has also been improved with the addition of a new set-piece creator that enables you to plan several multi-player moves that can be quickly incorporated in a real-game situation; strategy and real footballing knowledge will be at a premium to get the most out of the game. Another addition to training is the ability to train with your real-life mates (up to four of them at a time) locally as you prepare to take you team into the global game of multi-player, ranked FIFA 2010. Online FIFA is thrilling, testing and could see you recruited into international teams. Oh, you’ll also get to map your very own face onto a virtual player to really rule the world.
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Based on the computer-animated film starring the voices of Ray Romano, Dennis Leary, and John Leguizamo, Ice Age 2: The Meltdown is a 3D platform game that closely follows the movie's storyline. Players will guide animal characters Manny, Sid, Diego, and the rambunctious Scrat in an adventure that involves saving each species from the melting...
Surf's Up is an exciting arcade surfing and extreme sports video game. Set at the annual 'Reggie Belafonte Big Z Memorial Surf Off' where surfers from around the world are ready to risk it all for glory, players will experience the rush and thrills of surfing in exotic surf spots around Pen Gu Island, and can rip it up as one of 10 characters from...
If you spend a lot of time with your favourite gaming handheld in public, you've probably heard this sentence once or twice before. While most people have no problem subscribing to beliefs that attribute increased reaction times and better hand-eye coordination to regular exposure to games, 'making you smarter' isn't usually a trait associated...
Based on award-winning director Peter Jackson's big-budget remake of the landmark 1933 Cooper and Schoedsack film, this video game version of King Kong is designed to convey the action and excitement the massive monster inspires, as well as the poignancy and emotion of the melancholy 'beauty and the beast' storyline. Gameplay comes in two styles:...