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Saturday, November 3, 2012

pro evolution soccer 2013 review


 




This latest version of Pro Evolution Soccer feels oddly preordained. Where a match played on its great rival FIFA is at the whim of an object as bouncy and round as, well, a football, a match on PES 2013 feels like you’re performing actions set in the stars by footballing gods.
Passes ping between players with unerring accuracy. Real football sees mis-hit shots flying off into space, or passes bouncing off clumsy legs to run free until they’re collected. Every one of PES’s booted balls seems to nestle in the instep of a player as if they were feet-seeking missiles. They’re all accompanied by a soft little pop, the kind of noise a corner shop penny floater makes when hit perfectly.
Konami’s vision of football feels divorced from reality in other ways. Sprint with the ball and it’ll ride back against your runner’s feet, relentless backspin killing almost all pace. Deliver an acceptable forward pass and chances are the eventual shot will be strangely scooped, too high and soft to trouble the keeper. PES determines the power of its kicks by the amount of time the button is held – I say ‘button’ because even the purest of PC purists should be using a pad – but the opportunity to accurately hit even a simple shot is seemingly measured in picoseconds.
Tackling is similarly unsatisfying: players have a tendency to sashay past each other, not through individual foot-skill, but thanks to a strange ethereality that’ll suddenly place both the ball and its attached man on the other side of a defender. Great when it’s in your favour, infuriating when you were sure you had told your defender to slide just before that shot got away.
Pro Evolution Soccer 2013 review
You can also play in the lesser-known Zombie League.
These complaints sound damning – they’re not. PES responds best to players who’ve had hours honing their control with some of its more esoteric sub-systems, like the close control options that allow skilled ballsmiths to take it around other players, and it can be smooth and responsive enough to allow for beautiful, creative passages of play.
But they’re few and far between compared with the Barcelona-shirted FIFA elephant in the room. That game produces several moments of panic and elation a half; PES is lucky if it can bang out one in a game. FIFA also has the edge in performance: PES 2013 makes little use of the PC’s grunt, chugging out a muddy, bleak vision. Matches are littered with replays by default, demanding a visible loading time and two instances of the game’s logo per video.
There’s more than enough stuff to do in this year’s PES: knockout cups, online matches, a peculiarly weak training tutorial, even a licensed Champions League. But no matter how many menu options, there’s still only a slightly underwhelming representation of football at the end of them. Not copying the sport to the letter is fine, but Konami have lost the chaos and magic of football in their translation

fifa 2013 review

There has never been a console generation that has lasted as long as the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 era. That’s hardly a breakthrough insight, but it is one that has created an interesting set of circumstances. We’re now in territory every bit as uncharted as a new console generation. Developers and publishers have never been as acquainted as they are right now with the hardware and software development kits they’re using today, and if it’s true that we need to know the box before we can smartly think outside of it, then there has never been a better time for developers to innovate in the true sense.
Nonetheless, sports game franchises should be particularly prone to stagnation in such protracted conditions. Licenses usually require the publisher to bring a new product to market every year, and for a genre with more mainstream appeal than most, it’s been a very long time indeed since sports games have been able to appeal to their broader audiences using that briefest, most powerful message: “This new one looks way better.”
It should be unsurprising that publishers are prepared to confess to a little waywardness – walk for long enough in the desert and anyone can start going in circles. Madden, admits EA Sports boss Andrew Wilson, hasn’t been as innovative as other titles from the label’s stable.

FIFA 13 Ultimate Team trailer

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TRAILER by Gameplanet Staff 27 Aug, 9:24 am
This year, FIFA includes five new innovations which EA believes will revolutionise artificial intelligence, dribbling, ball control and physical play.

Real-world player form to be reflected in-game in FIFA 13

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NEWS by Gameplanet Staff 16 Aug, 9:39 am
 
Real-world player form to be reflected in-game in FIFA 13
A new feature in FIFA 13 will see real-world drama such as injuries, suspensions, team form, and media gossip reflected in-game through commentary and gameplay.
The feature, dubbed Football Club Match Day, will drive real-world news ripped from headlines around the world into the game.
Through Football Club Match Day, players can follow their favourite club and play along with the beats of its real-life season.

EA has no plans to include women's soccer in FIFA

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NEWS by Matt Maguire 15 Aug, 1:18 pm
 
EA has no plans to include women's soccer in FIFA
Despite the US women’s soccer team winning gold at the Olympics, fan requests, and a petition, EA has said it's not currently planning on introducing women's soccer to the FIFA series.
"We get literally thousands upon thousands of suggestions from our fans for new features and we have to evaluate those suggestions, such as the inclusion of female players in the game, against our resources, priorities and overall fan feedback,” said executive producer David Rutter.
“At present, we don't have plans to include female players in the game."

pro evolution soccer 2013 review







This latest version of Pro Evolution Soccer feels oddly preordained. Where a match played on its great rival FIFA is at the whim of an object as bouncy and round as, well, a football, a match on PES 2013 feels like you’re performing actions set in the stars by footballing gods.
Passes ping between players with unerring accuracy. Real football sees mis-hit shots flying off into space, or passes bouncing off clumsy legs to run free until they’re collected. Every one of PES’s booted balls seems to nestle in the instep of a player as if they were feet-seeking missiles. They’re all accompanied by a soft little pop, the kind of noise a corner shop penny floater makes when hit perfectly.
Konami’s vision of football feels divorced from reality in other ways. Sprint with the ball and it’ll ride back against your runner’s feet, relentless backspin killing almost all pace. Deliver an acceptable forward pass and chances are the eventual shot will be strangely scooped, too high and soft to trouble the keeper. PES determines the power of its kicks by the amount of time the button is held – I say ‘button’ because even the purest of PC purists should be using a pad – but the opportunity to accurately hit even a simple shot is seemingly measured in picoseconds.
Tackling is similarly unsatisfying: players have a tendency to sashay past each other, not through individual foot-skill, but thanks to a strange ethereality that’ll suddenly place both the ball and its attached man on the other side of a defender. Great when it’s in your favour, infuriating when you were sure you had told your defender to slide just before that shot got away.
Pro Evolution Soccer 2013 review
You can also play in the lesser-known Zombie League.
These complaints sound damning – they’re not. PES responds best to players who’ve had hours honing their control with some of its more esoteric sub-systems, like the close control options that allow skilled ballsmiths to take it around other players, and it can be smooth and responsive enough to allow for beautiful, creative passages of play.
But they’re few and far between compared with the Barcelona-shirted FIFA elephant in the room. That game produces several moments of panic and elation a half; PES is lucky if it can bang out one in a game. FIFA also has the edge in performance: PES 2013 makes little use of the PC’s grunt, chugging out a muddy, bleak vision. Matches are littered with replays by default, demanding a visible loading time and two instances of the game’s logo per video.
There’s more than enough stuff to do in this year’s PES: knockout cups, online matches, a peculiarly weak training tutorial, even a licensed Champions League. But no matter how many menu options, there’s still only a slightly underwhelming representation of football at the end of them. Not copying the sport to the letter is fine, but Konami have lost the chaos and magic of football in their translation

mine craft

What is Minecraft?

Minecraft is a game with few boundaries. The single player version has been described as "virtual lego with zombies." The multiplayer versions, both survival and infinite build mode, are slightly more complicated than that. The game is split up into 2 game modes: Creative & Survival.

Creative

Creative is the original game mode released by Minecraft which still remains one of the most popular today due to you being able to build without the hassles of mobs (more on that below) and the fact that creative game mode is 100% free to everyone.

Survival

Survival is the newest game mode available to premium members only. In survival you need to gather items and resources in order to craft better tools and food to help you build stronger and safer structures to keep out of harms way. It is safe to walk around at day time but as soon as the sun goes down you want to get somewhere safe or else the mobs will be after you!

Minecraft Ventures


You can build anything you like, craft tools to help you gather resources, farm, hunt, sail and, of course, mine!