- Back to Home »
- PES 2014 »
- PES 2014 Joystiq first review
Posted by : Bagoez Pencinta Chelsea Fc
Sabtu, 15 Juni 2013
In my time with Pro Evo 2014 at E3, I managed to cross a ball into the box and finish the play off with a beautifully executed header to score a goal. I was rewarded with a morale-boosting moment where my team collectively showed more passion on their faces than I’ve seen in a soccer game before.
Sure, my Pro Evo 2014 demo had other bells and whistles. The ball physics were more refined, yet appropriately unpredictable. A clear developmental focus on physical contact between opponents strengthened the one-on-one struggles you’d see on the field, where the ball might randomly bounce away while two players with locked arms tussle. The on-field play wasn’t perfect, as one pass was called offsides because the game targeted a player downfield when two teammates waited in between, but general on-field play is better than ever. While these are all great improvements, they’re also exactly what we’ve come to expect from annual sports games.
Delivering more emotive faces through the use of tech such as the Fox Engine isn’t something other developers have spent nearly enough time on. It jumped out as the secret ingredient in pushing the genre forward in a different way that brings us closer to our love for the sport of soccer. This might all be aided by the returning PES ID feature, in which Konami has faithfully recreated 100 (up from 50) different individual athlete’s faces and movements in the game. Still, it’s the Fox Engine that might set Pro Evolution Soccer 2014 apart from FIFA, not a lack of playable clubs.”