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Grandslammer Tiger Woods has a natural flair for whacking a ball with a metal stick. He’s been the face of several of EA’s PGA Tour games, and he’s here for the 2002 update. With many EA Sports updates, new statistics, more players and extra bonuses are the only improvements featured, but for PGA Tour 2002, the company has gone to the trouble of…
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Grandslammer Tiger Woods has a natural flair for whacking a ball with a metal stick. He’s been the face of several of EA’s PGA Tour games, and he’s here for the 2002 update. With many EA Sports updates, new statistics, more players and extra bonuses are the only improvements featured, but for PGA Tour 2002, the company has gone to the trouble of creating a completely new game engine. The game now includes noticeably enhanced visuals and refined ball physics. These are the two most important factors with Golf games, and EA’s efforts really make all the difference. Spanning a total of seven courses, there are a massive 126 holes and a practice driving range to test and improve your skills on. To become a master of this game, you simply have to put in hours of practice. In theory, it’s a good idea to learn each and every hole in the game, but that only works if the environments remain identical each time. As with real life golf, this rarely happens. Wind and weather are the two most influential and unpredictable factors in golf, and players of this accurate simulation need to be able to dig themselves out of any golfing nightmare they are faced with. You must learn to judge how wind speed and terrain will affect the ball and compensate accordingly. If you can do that, you’ve mastered PGA Tour 2002. A genuine golf simulator, but great for a casual post-pub/school gathering, Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2002 is one of those games where you can sit down, chill, and just enjoy playing. Refreshing.
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...
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...
In-line skating comes to the flourishing category of 'extreme sports' video gaming in X-Bladez. Players choose one of six characters to flip, spin, and grind through slalom and circuit courses in an assortment of 3D environments. Race for speed or hot dog for style. Time-of-day and weather effects add variety to the look and mood of the virtual...
Red Steel is an exclusive Wii launch title that takes full advantage of the console's innovative controller and puts players directly into the action-packed first-person experience with the weapon in their hand - literally. An engaging storyline unfolds as you learn that your fiancée has been kidnapped and her father - a Japanese mafia kingpin -...