There is definitely still room for improvement in the match's engine graphics and animations, with the potential for more life-like player animations and an improvement in the crowds. The lighting has been improved, which makes a huge difference, and smaller details like the pitch being affected by the weather also helps to improve things. There have been no issues with any animation errors causing ridiculous goals to be conceded, and while there still seems to be too many goals scored from certain set-pieces like corners, this has definitely been rectified to a good degree. What is most important is that previous mistakes from the last few years have been avoided. That said, there is of course a 3D match engine, and thankfully it has had a moderate upgrade with hundreds of new player animations, and a much more life-like sense of a football match. Most of the "graphics" discussion would be limited to the menus. As fans of the series will know, graphically there isn't a lot to shout about. Meanwhile, an elite club and financially powerful owner will demand glory from the off. Taking over a small club will come with lower demands but lower rewards. It also helps to highlight just how powerful the owners of clubs are - with this system helping to add the sort of gameplay challenge a title like this needs. However, it was never laid out in such a clear and focused way, and it helps greatly in building immersion and making the user feel in total control. It isn't an entirely new feature in the sense that the club boards used to give this information in previous titles. Everything from what type of players the club will look to sign, to the year-on-year competition aspirations. Now when a manager joins a club they will set out a particular vision of how the club should run. Take for example the new club vision system. 2020 seems to have finally struck that balance correctly, with additions that give the player more information and transparency, while not dramatically impacting the flow of the game. For some, these are difficult words, and indeed the series has suffered over the last five years in trying to make things more immersive, while ensuring the gameplay is not bogged down by complications. If there is one aspect that defines this edition, it is a focus on ever increasing realism, and a deeper level of immersion. With so much control over how a team plays football, there is an abundance of strategies to employ. Setting up tactics is a doddle within the menus, and it is interesting and positive in this year's edition that there doesn't yet seem to be an overall tactic that is particularly underpowered. Clean, streamlined, and with an abundance of information - it makes getting through the slog of a season very easy. In that regard, the UI in this year's edition is perfect, and is a natural development on last year's almost, equally well-developed interface. Most of the time in the game will be in one of the many menus, creating tactics, buying and selling players or setting up training routines. Finding some undiscovered gem developing a team to play a new revolutionary passing system or formation winning the European Cup with a team in every league, these kinds of challenges are all possible and keep gameplay fresh for hundreds of hours. It never really gets appreciated the sheer amount of work that has gone into scouting all these players and staff members - a credit to Sports Interactive by itself. Take control of one of thousands of clubs or nations around the world, with numerous licensed leagues and clubs and hundreds of thousands of real-world football players, each with their own bespoke stats as a result of actual scouting. The core gameplay of course never changes. When it comes to a guaranteed time sink, 2020 is as reliable as ever. Communities are formed, stories are told, and addiction to the cause is inevitable when individuals get sucked into the off-script drama that only a game like Football Manager 2020 can provide. From taking the local town team from nowhere to the heights of the Premier League, to recapturing the glory days of a tired European giant in one of the continental clubs, the variety of challenges on offer in Football Manager is unparalleled. Taking control of a football club and guiding their fortunes up the leagues just never gets old.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |