Non-player clubs also now rotate players more often based on factors such as fatigue, player form, and the relative importance of a match, so the lineup for a top team in the early rounds of a domestic cup may consist of less-able and younger players as opposed to a full-strength squad.
This results in more realistic performances and eliminates instances where stronger clubs would be fighting relegation and clubs with weaker players were winning the league. Results for simulated matches are more heavily based on team strength and do not appear to be as "random" as has been the case in the past. Pre-season friendlies have been introduced to the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 versions of the game, as a chance to flatten out any wrinkles in a team's lineup before the domestic season begins. For example, if the next match is against a low rated team, he will make sure that players normally on the bench will start the match. A new "Assistant Manager" can be used to take care of the team's line-up and to rotate the squad based on importance of the upcoming match. The "Total Football Experience" is a new feature in which football news from around the Manager Mode world is visible, including player transfers, fixtures and results in foreign leagues. EA has claimed that over 50 key improvements have been made to the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 versions. The Manager Mode has been revamped for FIFA 10, with many previous issues and criticisms addressed. Manager Mode enables the player to take charge of any club in any of FIFA 10's featured leagues. It is the first FIFA game to do so since FIFA 07, which sponsored Accrington Stanley for the 2007–08 season. The FIFA 10 logo appears on the front of the team's away shirt and on the back of the home shirt. Along with football magazine FourFourTwo, FIFA 10 is the co-sponsor of English League One club Swindon Town. The English version features British commentators Martin Tyler and Andy Gray, while Clive Tyldesley and Andy Gray were still become as commentator in PC, PS2, Wii and PSP.įIFA 10 is the second version of the game to sponsor a football club. Commentary is available in 12 different languages, with each language boasting around 25,000 phrases. The tagline for the game is "How big can soccer get?", and "Let's FIFA 10". As well as playing a friendly match, the demo allows users to upload created in-game videos and screenshots to EA Football World. The demo offered friendly matches with half lengths of three real-time minutes. The stadia used in the demo were Wembley Stadium (Xbox 360 version), and FIWC Stadium (PlayStation 3 version). The playable teams were Chelsea, Barcelona, Juventus, Bayern Munich, Marseille and Chicago Fire.
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The demo of FIFA 10 appeared on Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, and PC on 10 September in Europe, on 11 September in Australasia, and on 17 September in North America. Handheld versions of the game were also released for the iOS, Nintendo DS, PlayStation Portable, and mobile phones.
It is available for the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 2 and Wii. It was released on 2 October 2009 in Europe, 1 October in Australasia and 20 October 2009 in North America. Developed by EA Canada, it was published by Electronic Arts worldwide under the EA Sports label.
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FIFA 10 (FIFA Soccer 10 in North America) is the 17th title in EA Sports' FIFA series of football video games.