Online play allows you to upload your "Master League" teams and pit them against other players and their squads. There are five divisions in "Network" mode and you will begin as an Amateur. Winning games and collecting points will increase your rank and eventually enter you into a new division.
The ranking system is based on the entire network of players, and is renewed periodically as games are won or lost. What is surprising is that each year Konami deliver a game that appears to be so similar, yet feels so different to the game that preceded it.
It may be as regular as clockwork, but it's no simple cash-in. It's really rather pointless for me to gush about how brilliant Pro Evo 5 is to play, or go on for five paragraphs about how it once again plays a better game of football than FIFA. What's more important are the reasons why this is the best game in the series to date and just how it differs from the four games that have gone before it.
The biggest difference, and the area that you'll notice straight away, is in tackling. Pressuring your opponent by using the 'X' tackle 'A' on Xbox has been a technique used by Pro Evo players for some years, and while not perfect, did exactly what you wanted it to do: put pressure on the opponent.
Moments into Pro Evo 5 you'll realize that this 'holding X' mentality needs to be thrown out the window, in favor of a more restrained defensive approach. Pressing from behind will almost always result in a free-kick, so it's vital that you time your challenges and try and take the ball from in front of the opposing player.
Even though the ref is more likely to blow than in previous games, he also plays advantage in a far more realistic way. It's still not perfect, not by any means, but on the whole the attacking player will get the chance to continue if there is no reason to stop play. Offside decisions still seem a little too strict, with the referee's assistants using their hawk-like vision to spot a leg mere inches ahead of the last defender.
You'll often be allowed to go on and score, only to realize it doesn't count moments later, but the strictness of decisions is definitely something that could be worked on. On the attacking front there's a new first-touch system not quite as elaborate as FIFA's and more realistic dribbling abilities.
The first touch system allows you to take the ball with more control than in previous games, and now only the very best players can get past defenders. Pro Evo 4 allowed attackers to dribble past defenders far too frequently, and this change makes the game all the better.
The side-step has also been moved solely to the d-pad, and no longer needs to be used in conjunction with a shoulder button. They also managed to license a bunch of fan favorite players, like Sol Campbell and Patrick Vera, though they did miss out on some key players like Ruud Van Nistelrooy known in-game as Von Mistelroum. Soccer games are great fun to play locally, even for casual fans of the sport. With Winning Eleven 9, Konami implemented online play, so you could play with your friends from the comfort of your own homes at a moment's notice.
You could finally settle arguments about which team was better from your own couch. Movement is swift and intuitive, and the whole game flows really nicely.
These tight controls took away from the fact that Konami had failed to nail some big club and player licenses, and made the game a lot more of a rounded product. World Soccer: Winning Eleven 9 is one of the most loved soccer games of all time, and earnt many awards for its sales figures. Browse games Game Portals. Write a comment Share your gamer memories, help others to run the game or comment anything you'd like. Send comment. Download World Soccer: Winning Eleven 9 We may have multiple downloads for few games when different versions are available.
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