Gary's done good, Jimmy. All the
lads done good. It was the right
result on the day, Jimmy, they
gave 469035470000 per cent.
Meanwhile, we have Gary (in by
helicopter for the press launch -
pass the roamaphone) lending
his name to this little number
from Gremlin, another of that
company's management game-cum-footie action simulations
a la
Footballer Of The Year. That
game, which came out a year or
so ago, was a bit of a mishmash
- beautifully programmed but a
little deficient in the game
department. And, well, this is
much the same.
Super Soccer isn't as glossy
as its predecessor, possibly 'cos
there's rather more to it, but I'm
not sure this hybrid approach
can ever be very successful.
Most people want either a
management game (like
The
Double or
Football Director) or a
straight ahead action simulation,
like
Match Day. Combine the two
and you don't take the best of
each - you just take half of
each. And two halves don't
always make a whole.
(Thank
you, Wittgenstein. Ed)
You're playing six-a-side, in a
division of 20-odd, but you only
play seven games a season.
Confused? In fact you can
change the rules to play any
number of games if you wish.
Your players are graded in terms
of skill (0 to 99) and age (youth is
best) and you have a squad of
10 (two subs, two reserves). To
upgrade your team you can
recruit a player, trade players
with other clubs and improve
your team by giving them extra
training. All these cost training
points - you start with 250 of
these and you get more and
more all the time (why and how,
I'm not quite sure).
In terms of sheer information,
this game's almost as
comprehensive as
The Double,
but Johnson Scanatron put it to
better use. Choosing your team
and then keeping it together is
both very easy and reliant on
large quantities of luck. There
isn't the subtlety here of many
other similar games.
Then we move to the game
itself, which to be frank is not a
patch on
Match Day II. It's harder
to control, less well animated
and generally less fun to play.
You can choose joystick control
of centre forward or goalie (all
the other members of the team
will be looked after by the
computer), and if you take
control of the coach too, you can
decide on your attacking and
defensive tactics (three choices
each). Or if the game bits bore
you to death, you don't need to
watch them at all, and can go
straight to the results.
It's perfectly playable and all
that, but there's nothing here that
would recommend itself to fans
of any of the games I mentioned
above. It's got a pic of Gary
Lineker on it, of course, which
may sway some people, but if
you're really determined to buy it
you shouldn't let that put you off.
Otherwise, in the words of the
French midfield maestro Michel
Platini, "Malade comme un
perroquet, Brian, je suis choked,
et gutted.."
| Ratings given by other magazines |
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| Info supplied by the SPOT*ON database |
| YS Cross-references |
| |  | Gary Lineker's Superstar Soccer (in Soccer Squad) | YS44 | |
| |  | Gary Lineker's Superstar Soccer (in Gary Lineker's Collection) | YS79 | |
| Some info from Sinclair Infoseek+SPOT*ON |