Here comes one of the best soccer game, FIFA 15!!!
Okeee, sesuai dengan judul post ini kami akan memberikan kalian beberapa review tentang game FIFA 15. Game ini dapat dimainkan di beberapa platform seperti PC, PS3 maupun PS4, Xbox 360 maupun Xbox One, Nintendo 3DS, Wii, dan juga di smartphone berbasis iOS, Android, Windows Phone.
Gila kan? Dihitung-hitung lumayan banyak juga platform yang dapat digunakan buat main game ini. Udah kaya kampanye aja ya :v Review-review buruk itu jadi black campaignnya :D
Dan gak perlu buang-buang waktu kalian untuk membaca review, langsung saja kita lihat review yang dikutip dari gamespot!
Perhaps more than ever, this year's FIFA
comes down to the little details. If you played last season's game, then
the visuals, game modes, on-pitch action, and means of interaction will
be immediately familiar. As a result, the learning curve in FIFA 15 is
almost nonexistent. What's different is the degree of style and elegance
with which everything is executed, giving the game a sense of
refinement that was lacking last season. If last year's game was a
skeleton of what FIFA wanted to achieve over the course of this console
generation, then consider FIFA 15 the first layer of meat on top of
that.
Nowhere
is this more obvious than with goalkeepers, whose new animations make
them instantly more lifelike in terms of both look and behavior. Their
movements are more diverse, allowing skilful players to perform a range
of spectacular gymnastics in an effort to keep the ball out of the goal.
More importantly, their movements hint at a keeper's basic thought
processes, which does a great deal to humanise keepers and shake that
feeling of playing against a pre-programmed machine.
If
you're on goal and one-on-one with a keeper, it's not uncommon to see
him initially rush out from between the posts and attack, only to decide
that it's a bad idea and hightail it back to his line. Similarly,
running out from the goal to punch or catch the ball from a corner
results in lots of backtracking when a keeper realizes that either a
friendly defender or opposition attacker is going to get to it first.
While
these actions create a seemingly dynamic environment in which players
act and interact with each other in absence of your direct input, they
have little effect on the outcome of a match. There's a slight
improvement in a keeper's ability to save long strikes, but they still
tend to concede the same percentage of shots as last season; the overall
impact on gameplay has been balanced in such a way so as not to disrupt
the established difficulty of netting a goal.
That's
no bad thing, though. FIFA has done a good job over the last half
decade of avoiding regular instances of scorelines that look as though
they belong to basketball or American football. To change such a thing
now would be to change the nature of an incredibly popular series.
Having said that, it's now somewhat easier to score the kind of goals
that you'd expect to see in an end-of-season highlight reel. Goalkeepers
might be that much better at stopping long shots, but truly outrageous
efforts seem to find the twine more often than you'd reasonably expect.
"Once the final whistle is blown, that's what FIFA 15 does: it makes you feel like a star."
On
a number of occasions I scored goals from the edge of the centre
circle, the ball zooming straight into the top corner with the precision
of a guided missile or a Maradona handball. Arjen Robben and Yaya Toure
seem to be especially adept at executing this kind of extravagance,
with even missed shots coming back into play following a fumble by the
keeper.
The formation and ideology of the team you're
playing against makes a significant difference to whether you can score
those ridiculous shots, though. On higher difficulty settings, AI teams
drastically change their approach depending on the circumstances. If
you're playing as Manchester City in a Premier League game against a
Burnley side struggling to avoid relegation, then you're going to face a
strategy designed to limit your time and space on the ball. In
instances such as this, it becomes extremely difficult to get the likes
of Yaya Toure into a position from which he can launch a deadly
long-range strike, with Burnley's central midfielders working hard to
fill the gaps and limit your options.
Being
aware of these differences in approach throughout the game is
important, because teams frequently adapt to the scoreline and the
clock. If you're a goal up in the last few minutes, rival managers often
tell their players to push forward and grab that equalising goal.
Should you not be ready for these changes, or fail to adapt to them,
then it's easy to be caught out.
Team
management menus have been reworked so you can make these kinds of
changes more quickly and easily, with big, bold icons being the design
order of the day. It's much easier to assign different instructions to
individual players, which gives you more flexibility when it comes to
specifying which attacking players you want to drop back, or whether you
want your striker to run in behind the defense.
You can
also switch between basic counter-attacking, long-ball, and possession
based schemes at the press of a button. The kinds of options available
are in no way as exhaustive as in the likes of Football Manager, but
they at least provide a simple means of having your players move in a
way that suits your favoured style.
The goal is not to make you feel like a football manager or a central defender grinding out a tough one goal victory on a bitter winter night. That would be too realistic, and not exciting enough.
In
truth, FIFA is such a mainstream proposition that tactical options of
great depth and complexity would be counter-productive to what the
series is trying to achieve. The goal with FIFA 15, as with almost every
other FIFA game, is to replicate the most interesting parts of what you
see on TV, hence the ability to score goals of sublime lavishness. The
goal is not to make you feel like a football manager or a central
defender grinding out a tough one-goal victory on a bitter winter night.
That would be too realistic, and not exciting enough.
The
supremely popular FIFA Ultimate Team mode shares this highlight reel
feel, with star players now available on short loan periods for those
times when you can't afford to purchase them outright. Rather than grind
out those tough early victories using your team of journeyman
footballers, you can now just loan the likes of Lionel Messi and Zlatan
Ibrahimovic, immediately making you feel like the manager of a credible
team.
If
you're not interested in spending the time and money to build up a
quality Ultimate Team squad, you can dive into Tournament Mode returns,
which makes a welcome return in FIFA 15. There are a huge amount of
tournaments on offer, with major competitions such as the English FA Cup
and German Deutscher Pokal rubbing shoulders with comparative minnows
like Mexico's Apertura and Norway's Braathens Cup. Licensing
restrictions means international tournaments, such as the World Cup,
European Championship, and Copa America are missing, which is a shame.
Career
continues to be the deepest mode, allowing you to take on a role as a
player or a manager. As manager your job revolves around winning
trophies and building a working team, while as a player you need only
worry about performing well enough to cement your place as a first-team
regular. If you played career in FIFA 14 then you'll know what to expect
here, with improved presentation and scouting options being the only
real changes to the working formula.
Increasingly,
however, FIFA is all about online play, and it's there that the focus on
big shots and attacking football comes into its own. Scoring a sublime
goal is all the more satisfying against a real human player, especially
if that person is a friend you can taunt afterwards. The new consoles'
video sharing ability means you can also share the moment with everyone
else that you know online, whether they're interested or not. After all,
nothing makes you feel more like a star than sharing your game winning
goals on your parents' Facebook page.
Once the final whistle is blown, that's what FIFA 15 does best: it makes you feel like a star. Goalkeepers may appear
more skilful, but spectacular goals are frequent enough to make you
believe that you're incredible at defeating them. Tactical options have
just the right amount of depth to allow you to change the course of a
game and call yourself a genius for doing so, but not so much that
you're at risk of confusing yourself. Ultimate Team still requires you
to grind (or pay real cash) to put together a top team, but loaning in
great players lets you perform magic instantly.
Such an
approach might not have an enormous amount of depth, but that's not so
much of an issue for a series that sees one core release every year. If
you're looking for football that is exciting, exaggerated, and immensely
entertaining, FIFA 15 is the game to get.
Jadi gimana bros? Tertarik dengan grafik dan segala jenis fitur yang ditawarkan dari FIFA 15? Kalian bisa langsung download di situs terpercaya atau kalian dapat membelinya dengan Ultra Games. Hanya dengan mencontact admin dari situs ini (Contact Us), anda akan diberi instruksi yang lengkap cara membelinya :)
Then, this is it. Enjoy our next posts!
Jadi gimana bros? Tertarik dengan grafik dan segala jenis fitur yang ditawarkan dari FIFA 15? Kalian bisa langsung download di situs terpercaya atau kalian dapat membelinya dengan Ultra Games. Hanya dengan mencontact admin dari situs ini (Contact Us), anda akan diberi instruksi yang lengkap cara membelinya :)
Then, this is it. Enjoy our next posts!
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