We're inching closer and closer to FIFA 13's late September bow. And from the sound of things based on our recent visit to EA's development studio in Canada, your career mode is in for some major overhauls. Perfect timing in the middle of multi-million euro transfers, right?
The world's biggest football (or soccer, if you prefer) franchise is back, and this year FIFA is making tweaks and tactical changes that should give it even more dominance over rivals like PES. Here is everything we know about FIFA 14 so far.
We’re mindful of overstating this - regular readers might be aware of previous false dawns for FIFA on PS2 - but maybe, just maybe, this is the year FIFA emerges as a legitimate alternative to Pro Evo, not only for casual fans, but hardcore gamers, too. Truth is, the process has already started. We’re at EA’s offices in Vancouver, Canada, ready for our FIFA 09 hands-on. Before play, however, we’re given a presentation
FIFA 09 is a fantastic game, but you’ve probably won every cup there is to win and moved on to something else by now . Well, get ready to come crawling back, as EA is set to release downloadable content for the game in the form of virtual trading cards.
For basketball, there's NBA Jam. For football, there's NFL Blitz. And
for soccer, there was Fifa Street, EA's over-the-top arcade-inspired
soccer game. But after a few successful iterations, EA Sports has gone
back to the drawing board with the Fifa Street series, and revealed a
newer, more realistic Fifa Street that more accurately represents actual
street soccer - a brand of soccer that has been rising in popularity
over the last few years. We took the game for a spin, and came out
missing the insane action of the past Street games, but appreciative of
the new additions...
Oct 22, 2007
Cristiano Ronaldo stops with the ball and eyes his opponent. With a daft flick of the foot he starts to juggle the ball, flicks it into the air and catches it behind his neck. Angry at Ronaldo's showboating, the defender moves in for a tackle. Ever ready, Ronaldo taps the ball into the air and blasts a kick straight into the defender's nuts. He collapses in pain, and Ronaldo moves on down the pitch. Welcome back to FIFA Street.
The FIFA Street franchise makes the jump to Xbox 360
Last summer, we played Fight Night: Round 4 for all of a week. And then… well, we never played it again. Partly because fighters felt a little too weedy, partly because the game’s Total Punch Control felt a bit unwieldy. That’s why we were so pleased to see the radical changes being made to Fight Night Champion at a recent EA event. With a simpler, more intuitive punching system and the most wince-inducing, meaty punches we’ve ever seen with our eye holes, EA’s latest boxer really could be a champ.

We won’t lie. We’re really conflicted when it comes to Fight Night Champion. On one blood-stained glove, it’s arguably the most surprising and thrilling game in the series. And on the other… well, lets just say the boxing is currently more ‘Hulk smash!’ than sweet science. Based on our hands-on with the game at a recent EA event, it’s definitely got all the hallmarks of a champ… just with a bit of chump snuck in there, too.
We didn't expect to have to write this preview. After all, the 360 version of Fight Night Round 3 just shipped back in February '06 and practically defined the term "next generation". Its graphics and action were so over the top, we figured we'd be lucky if the developers at EA Canada could port them onto the alien PlayStation 3 console within the time limit with only minor sacrifices.
Damn, when you're wrong, you're wrong. While this PS3 version of Fight Night is 80% identical to its
The best-looking boxing game ever made hits stores on Dec. 5, and we've had a chance to step into the ring with a finished version. Fight Night Round 3 combines an impressive roster of boxing greats with a smart, almost rhythmic control scheme - old news to anyone who caught it on the Xbox 360 or any of the other systems it arrived on back in February. But while those versions of the game were fun, visceral and overall amazing, you haven't really seen Round 3 until you've seen it on the