Reviews / previews
Because EA's World Cup 98 game, released last
summer, is still so fresh in my memory (and still on
my hard drive), I feared FIFA 99 would be little more
than a minor update in a new box-more club teams,
few advances.
I was wrong. FIFA 99 substantially improves upon
WC98 (and FIFA 98) in several key areas. The first
and most obvious is graphics. While the default
camera is further away from the action, the players
and their whopping 835 animations are amazingly
detailed and realistic. As in Madden 99, there are
three different player sizes, and players' heads track
the ball, enhancing the feeling that you're watching
real soccer teams.
Much attention has been paid to balls in the air, and
now you get excellent chest traps and the ability to
head a ball toward a teammate's head or foot. It
makes for some wonderful aerial volleys where the
ball can travel halfway down the pitch without hitting
the turf, then be struck wickedly on goal with the
fabulous bicycle or scissors kicks.
The "regular" fakes (holding button 7 or 8 and juking
with the D-pad) are also beautifully implemented and
add nice variety-step-overs, for instance-to the
players' lifelike dribbling. And of course EA added
more special moves, including a dive and sliding hook
shots that look just perfect.
EA also quickened the game's pace and improved
teammate and defender AI. Your forwards make
slicing dashes through the box to beat opponents to
your crossing pass, and defenders mark tightly at
their end of the field. Goalie AI is also
top-notch-they're appropriately aggressive in knocking
away or grabbing crosses and diving on loose balls.
You now have the option to take control of your goalie
and have him rush a defender. This new
"semi-automatic" goalie feature is one I rarely took advantage of, however,
because left unattended they do better than I would.
Scoring can be tricky. It usually requires one
or two good passes in the box, as in real life.
I'd also prefer NHL 99's convention where,
when shooting on goal, Down-Left on the
D-pad is the lower-left corner of the goal,
Up-Right is the upper-right corner, and so
on. In FIFA 99, toward the goal is a high
shot, away is a low shot, and left and right
are Up and Down on the D-pad (depending
which way you're facing).
While I'm always amazed at the well-timed
and appropriate commentary, the color guys
(Mark Lawrenson and Chris Waddle take
turns) have this habit of echoing the key
word of John Motson's play-by-play
commentary, especially on goalie saves. I'm
also not as fond of Fatboy Slim's soundtrack
as I was of WC98's, but the sound effects
are once again first-rate, with the crowd
cheering and whistling (European's version of
booing) at appropriate moments, and players
grunting when they strike the ball hard.
There's also plenty to master-EA added
Portugal and Belgium, bringing the total to
12 international leagues. Including
international teams, there are now 246 with
real players (except for those in the North
American league) and real stats. As before,
you can buy and sell players, plus set four
in-game strategies and tweak player
positioning to your heart's content.
Factor in the excellent multiplay (though it
still lacks Internet capabilities), ability to
create custom cups and leagues, and once
again EA has done a sport proud with a strategically sound, graphically
stunning, and highly addictive game.-- Willem Knibbe / GamePro
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