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The FIFA series from Electronic Arts is one of the most populated franchises to date. With instalments of the game produced every year from the late eighties, the game has been refined many times, and FIFA 2001 shows the development improvements quite well. This latest release, available as a graphically lush PS2 title, features motion-captured…
The FIFA series from Electronic Arts is one of the most populated franchises to date. With instalments of the game produced every year from the late eighties, the game has been refined many times, and FIFA 2001 shows the development improvements quite well. This latest release, available as a graphically lush PS2 title, features motion-captured animation from Lothar Matthaus. With its official licence intact, and fifteen domestic leagues available as well as all the major (and not so major) international teams, FIFA 2001 is an essential purchase for the hardcore footy fan, not simply because of its authenticity of detail, but because EA are finally catching up with Konami’s majestic ISS series. The gameplay tweaks in FIFA 2001 mean higher artificial intelligence for the opposition, and smoother flowing player movements under your own control. Fortunately, thanks to the graphical enhancements of the game and the incorporation of Sony’s fully analogue controller, FIFA 2001 is technically one of the most accurate and advanced football titles to date. New controls mean that you can pass the ball at different speeds, depending on how much pressure you apply to the analogue buttons. As a complete title, FIFA 2001 is the most polished and comprehensive in the series, and if you were one of the lucky 165,000 punters in the UK to secure a PS2 at launch, EA’s gleaming new title is worth more than a cursory glance. One of the better launch titles, no argument.
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For everyone who ever dreamed of being a cowboy, Call of Juarez: Bound in Blood lets them experience the wildest Wild West ever created. This Western-themed first-person shooter takes its inspiration from Spaghetti Western movies, and features all of the elements that those movies are famous for: gunslingers, outlaws, duels, prison breaks, bank...
Poor old Rayman, he just doesn't seem to catch a break. Not only has he been bumped right out of the gaming limelight by his nefarious foes, the Raving Rabbids, but now he's having to put up with the little blighters taking over the telly. If you've come across those rascally Rabbids before, you'll know that can only be bad news for Britain's...
Funfair Party gathers a variety of 20 funfair themed mini-games, from simple target shooting to memory and reflex games inside or outside the circus tent. Scattered across four zones, you must throw knives, balance the clown, feed the animals and shoot bottles - all with the Wii Remote. When you're done, the 'clap-o-meter' reports the crowd's...
Just as Street Racer for the Super NES is similar to Super Mario Kart, Street Racer for the PlayStation is similar to Mario Kart 64. Filled with twists and turns, this go-cart racing game allows you or you and a friend to choose from eight different cars, each with its own distinctive character behind the wheel. Up to eight people may play if you...