ly crosses came in. EA FC 24 Coins Though some players still had over-exaggerated ragdoll wipeouts, their physics and motions have definitely improved over last year, with player movement, impacts and ball control
being as polished as ever.
Dribbling has always been an important element of gameplay, and this aspect has been drastically expanded upon for FC 24. Several new moves have been added, and players can now face away from the net when dribbling on the field, allowing
for some fantastic movement which really switches up your options when on the attack. Free kicks also received a long-awaited change, with the attacking player now able to set up more intricate fake runs, and AI team-mates creatively
trying to find open space instead of pre-determined locations and static runs.
Conversely, the defending player can now add more people to his wall by guiding a player over next to it, where he will automatically join it. Players can even encroach upon the freekick taker to try and throw him off his game, but
beware - if you get called out on it, you'll be getting carded. Freekicks were probably one of the weakest points in the franchise, having had the same formula for several years now -- it's good to see that a fresh system has been put
into place.
For those who like to get vocal with their gaming, it was announced that FC 24 will also feature full Kinect integration. While some may have jumped in worry upon hearing that, likely thinking that they actually have to make kicking
motions or scissor kicks to play the game, the truth is much more simple -- and much more useful. Players can use Kinect to shout commands to substitute players, change formations and switch tactics on the fly, without pausing the match.
While it wasn't playable on the show floor, this feature will certainly save time and minimize gameplay interruptions, allowing fans the courtesy of non-stop gameplay from start to finish.
In short, EA Sports have spent a large portion of its time focusing on hundreds of tiny changes that, added together, overhaul the entire experience. EA Sports FC has always been a top-notch sports game, as evident by its vast outselling
of main competition Pro Evolution Soccer, and this year is looking to bring gamers more of what has become a highly stable and enjoyable annual product.
In this week's roundup, we check in on Guillermo Del Toro's inSane, grill some bologna with the newest NASCAR game, gaze in awe over FC 24 screenshots, become befuddled as a Star Trek Online dev knocks their own multiplayer, mark Remedy
off as another next-gen gaming developer,Fut 24 Coins try not to get in the middle of the Notch vs. FortressCraft DDoS attack and listen to Cliffy B tell Japanese developers what's what about multiplayer.