Championship Manager v Apply the official Championship Manager September Patch. Game or Patch Questions? Visit FileForums. Magazines Banners. Championship Manager Game Updates. Hmm, let's see We were. Silly, but understandable. As you'd expect, you're not going to be able to tell what's changed in CM by looking at screenshots. It's all about what happens behind the scenes, as it were, and in this specific case, what's happening in the game's match engine.
Before you get to the matches though, you've got tactics, squad selection, training, scouting and all the usual gubbins to go through before you can begin watching people kick a ball around a park. Everything is done up in a-swishy blue Sky Sports style, with tickers, information panels and such offering a more pleasing aesthetic than Football Manager.
Elsewhere, there are hundreds of little things to talk about with regards to the workings of the game, far too many to adequately address here, so I'll just restrict myself to the more pleasing additions. One of the first things is the player comparison tool, which is much easier to interpret at a glance than its counterpart in Football Manager, with attributes broken down into Physical, Attacking, Mental etc.
Status lozenges ie the bits next to a player's name on the squad screen are also better done than in FM, cycling through each one rather than placing one thing above another and potentially keeping critical information from the player. A quick pointer hover also lists all the lozenges at once, which is welcome.
The scouting system is well presented too, but one thing that did annoy slightly was that new reports were produced every game day, with player positions not highlighted in the said list, meaning you had to click through each player to find out how useful they'd be to you.
And so to the matches themselves. After you've wasted hours fiddling about in the amazingly fun set-piece editor, you'll move onto the team talk screen. This is more comprehensive than FMs equivalent, with different tones and individual criticism or praise to dish out. The match engine itself looks lush, with more detailed and better animated characters, crowds and stadiums all adding to the experience.
In my first friendly in control of Liverpool, Ryan Babel did a neat little step over to bamboozle a Portuguese full-back; Andriy Voronin got done for pushing the keeper while a goalmouth scramble was taking place; and Fernando Torres obeyed my instructions and got booked for 'going to ground' too easily in the box.
These little touches are all, of course, present in FM, but you can actually see them getting played out now and go "Ah, yeah, that idiot Voronin just shoved the keeper over," rather than watch a load of stickmen have a bit of a jostle and then a free kick be given. With Championship Manager one of the oldest names in the game we will have to take our team all the way to the top.
If you want a football game that isn't like FIFA or Pro Evolution Soccer PES and that actually focuses all its attention on buying and selling players, managing the squad, planning the training sessions a very important part of the game and the tactics that your team is going to use, you'll definitely like Championship Manager.
In the training section, the game will let us choose the individual training of each player, try out our tactics playing a training match with our best players against the reserves and B squad, train specific movements penalties, shots on goal, 1-on-1, The game has very good graphics, that we will follow from the sideline, being able to give different orders to our players when the ball goes out of touch, or choose when to substitute certain players.
Take your team all the way to the top with Championship Manager and keep them there! Windows Games Soccer Championship Manager Championship Manager is a game in which you have to manage a football team.
Download Championship Manager and take your team to the top of every competition Vote 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
0コメント