INFORMATION
FIFA 99 is a good choice for the neophyte, and an almost
essential upgrade for the die hard soccer enthusiast. EA Sports has produced
some of the finest soccer games on any platform. Last year’s two versions of
the FIFA franchise came replete with more options, stunning graphics, and hours
of gameplay than ever before. With terrific animations, dozens of special moves
and in-game strategies, it begs the question: Is there room for improvement,
aside from just keeping up with new hardware and processing speeds? Little, but
there is some. EA tweaked the graphics, added commentary and celebrations,
beefed up teammate AI, and “smartened” sideline control – making FIFA 99 a
better choice for the neophyte, and an almost-essential upgrade for the
die-hard soccer enthusiast.
All the moves you expect from an EA Sports FIFA title are
here: flick passes, diving headers, slide tackles, and rainbow kicks. FIFA 99
adds new moves like directional chest-trapping to bring the ball down away from
enemy players. You can fake the receipt of a pass. And draw fouls. And push the
goalie down with the touch of a single button. It’s now possible to volley an
airborne ball directly to a teammate’s head or feet. Shots on goal now include
a chip shot and a poke shot to disarm the unsuspecting keeper. These aren’t the
same static goalies of last year’s editions either. Instead of automatically
grabbing and holding the ball every time, sometimes they kick the ball away,
other times they fail to gain control and leave it in play, dangerously close to
the goal. Plus, you can now have a hand in their control, and though this
primarily means deciding when to pick up or drop the ball, it’s now possible to
charge enemy strikers. The threat of charging goalies makes offensive timing
more of a critical issue.
SCREENSHOTS
SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS
1.System= Pentium III, CPU 500 MHz
2.RAM= 128 MB
3.Video Memory= 16 MB
4.Size= 44.98 MB
5.OS= Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows XP, Windows Vista,
Windows 7 also Windows 8
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