2010 FIFA World Cup (Wii) by Electronic Arts
List Price : £39.99
Price Save : £9.99
SalesRank :1455
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LowestUsedPrice: £1.75
You don't just get to play in the tournament itself though, but as many of the qualification rounds as you're interested in. Whether you choose to play as one of the early favourites or try and take a minnow like Luxembourg to global glory every option is available.
2010 FIFA World Cup (Wii) Feature
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- Win the 2010 FIFA World Cup: Compete as one of 199 teams in a virtual reproduction of the 2010 FIFA World Cup. Represent your favourite country and play in any of the 10 official stadiums that come to life with the pageantry and festivity of the official tournament.
- Play the Official Tournament with Friends: You and up to 31 friends can re-create the official tournament. Choose a country and advance through the tournament by taking on and defeating your friends one at a time to write your own history.
- Spectacular Presentation: 2010 FIFA World Cup comes to life in spectacular fashion with a South African art style designed for Wii that captures the emotion and pageantry of the official tournament, including all 10 official licensed stadia. Experience confetti cannons, streamers, flags and fireworks as if you were in South Africa.
- Global Elimination Tournament: Compete in Global Elimination, a multiplayer, knockout-style tournament against up to three friends. Draft and strategically select countries to play as, create alliances and gang-up on rivals until only one player is declared the winner.
- Build Zakumi's Dream Team: Take on all 32 countries who have qualified for the World Cup in head-to-head matches with challenges. Begin with random players and then steal your opponents' players after each victory. Win a challenge and pick a player until you have conquered the world. Take your Dream Team to a friend's house on your Wii Remote.
- Strike It System: Non-stop football action pits you against friends in head-to-head challenges utilising the Strike It System. Shake the Wii Remote perfectly in order to either score or defend free-kicks, penalties, and corners, creating frantic action on the pitch.
Reviews By LaughingDeals : Date 23 July 2010
.Reviews By R. Wells : Date 5 May 2010
For a long time, I've been in the PES camp when it comes to football sims but when my wife bought me FIFA World Cup, I thought it would be much the same as more people seem to be moving into the FIFA camp. Wrong.
Passes can only go in 8 directions, because there are no pointer-style runs and passes like PES. This would be OK if it didn't lead to hospital passes in the defence that end up being easily intercepted because your player is between angles.
I have to say the heading and free kicks system is good (timing is essential to winning the ball in the air and beating the keeper).
It's probably only me, but I found that playing on easy I would win 13-2 or something rediculous, but on medium I couldn't make the passes I wanted to make in order to get close to goal.
There are a few nods to the wii control systems (shake to header, shake to shoot, shake to sliding tackle) but they're not exactly imaginative and lead to one-dimensional gaming.
I found that the only way to get near goal with any degree of success was to pass it around on the ground and blast it at a diagonal to the goal. On PES, due to the level of control, there isn't one right way to score a goal and there is a subtlety of touch and movement that FIFA World Cup sadly lacks.
To sum up:
GOOD BITS
Heading and free-kick system
Properly licensed teams
Full world cup lineup, groups and teams
BAD BITS
Poor controls
Not enough difficulty levels
Limited interest (the World Cup will be over in July, and will you want to play it then?)
No offside control
Dumb players who don't come back from offside positions
Monotonous shooting (corner - header, corner - spectacular volley, repeat until ball goes in net)
OVERALL
As an arcade-style game with the right names and teams for the next two months, it's not too bad, but if you want subtlety of control and to stay interested, get Pro Evolution Soccer 2010 (Wii) (or even FIFA 2010, I'm sure it's a much bigger game).Reviews By S. DOLAN : Date 1 Jun 2010
Bought this game for my son. He is obsessed with the World Cup so this game can do no wrong. For him the control system is easy and can score loads on Easy so he's happy. However, for a proper gamer, this game lacks depth and won't keep interest very long. The graphics and gameplay pale in comparison to what I've seen on the PS3 and XBox and while the Wii as a machine isn't in the league of those two the depth of the game is what is most disappointing. On other consoles you can start the World Cup from the qualifying stage and I guess feel a real sense of achievement when you qualify and ultimately win the World Cup. On the Wii version you can only start from the World Cup group stage and win an unlockable to start later in the tournament at the group stage. Why would you want to start later? Free kicks are too easy to score from if the other person gets their timing wrong. Scoring some from the half way line isn't realistic and the slow motion every time you take a shot can be annoying particularly when you need several shots on goal. Might just be me but I've also found once the opponent takes a shot at your goal you can do nothing to save it.
As I say, if you're buying for a child then it's a fun game in the short term. For a serious gamer it won't hold your interest for much longer than the World Cup.Buy 2010 FIFA World Cup (Wii) Now
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