2006 FIFA World Cup review:
2006 FIFA World Cup is more robust than the typical World Cup videogame, but even then, its feature set is far below that of FIFA 06. That said, it’s only $30, so if you don’t own FIFA 06, and you’re hankering for a football fix while watching this year’s World Cup, it’s worth a look.
2006 FIFA World Cup review:
2006 FIFA World Cup does a good job of re-creating the carnival atmosphere that surrounds the competition, but it suffers from frequent and obnoxious slowdown.
2006 FIFA World Cup preview:
2006 FIFA World Cup does a good job of re-creating the carnival atmosphere that surrounds the competition, but it suffers from frequent and obnoxious slowdown.
2006 FIFA World Cup review:
2006 FIFA World Cup does a good job of re-creating the carnival atmosphere that surrounds the competition, but it suffers from frequent and obnoxious slowdown.
2006 FIFA World Cup review:
In FIFA, that's exactly what you have to do. When I want to take down England with Argentina, I want Diego Maradona leading the attack, not the guy who currently plays striker for Argentina. Still, the classic moments feature has been missing from this series for some time, so we're happy to meet EA halfway.
2006 FIFA World Cup preview:
Although as of press time it was unconfirmed whether or not the GameCube version supports progressive scan, an attempt to run the game while holding down B seemed to work, and the game looked quite lovely. There are some occasional dips in framerate when the action gets intense on the pitch, but hopefully those are problems that will get resolved during the final animation overhaul.