|
[Affiliate Program]
|
Reviewed in the July 99 issue of PC Zone. Its the World Cup. Not the real one, obviously. Craig Vaughn steps up to defend England's honour. The lack of decent cricket games on the PC is as criminal as Geoffrey Boycott's infamous fisticuffs in a certain French hotel. Until now willow-heads have been stuck with Empire's International Cricket Captain (PCZ#66, 68%), a creaky management simulation and Codemasters' action game Brian Lara Cricket (PCZ#75, 85%). Clearly the sport is seriously under-represented on the PC, possibly as a result of its staid and boring reputation (let's face it, we all played cricket at school and it was only ever fun if you were batting, or snogging that girl from 5E in the outfield). Undeterred, EA have stepped in with the official game of this year's World Cup which they've presented with Sky Sports-like production values. Although Cricket World Cup 99 offers less diverse opportunities than Codemasters' effort (CWC 99 is restricted to representing the World Cup), EA have included the full-blown tournament, a genuinely useful training mode and a One Day match option. Regardless of which you opt for, the game engine animates the players in spookily lifelike fashion courtesy of the Hollioake brothers, who allowed themselves to be motion-captured - but there are a few rough edges. These include the infamous Voodoo 'flat crowd graphics' TM, bowlers who face the wrong way but still catch the ball, and fielders who perform heroically with their backs to the action. BACK TO SCHOOL Batting is even more fun. Again the mouse controls your player's movement at the crease, and a circle in the grass gives an indication of where the ball is likely to pitch - a simple mouse click sends bat after ball. Timing is crucial though: play a stroke prematurely, or too late and you could end up cutting the shot or, worse still, edging it to the slips. Thankfully you can also opt to play a defensive shot or back off entirely (practising that desperate 'I never touched it' expression employed by successive England openers over the last decade). Fielding can be either manual or automated, and is handled in similarly sensible fashion. TOUGH AS OLD BOOTS STAT WILL DO NICELY PCZ Verdict |
Revised:
Saturday, 16 March 2013. |