Fifa Street 4
The Rule the Street (Career mode) offers a substantial and long single-player campaign. The progression scheme is formulated almost exactly on NBA Street, and it's similar to Def Jam: Fight for NY.
'Fifa Street 4' now goes in-game and has glitchy graphics, albeit the game is almost playable. The graphics issues are the feet and legs of. From the creators of the award-winning EA SPORTS FIFA Football franchise, and inspired by street football styles and stars from around the world, FIFA Street is.
You'll earn skill bills and reputation points. Skill bills are exchangeable for either character building points for your player or teammates. Rep points, earned by beating teams ranked higher than yourself, qualify you for Cups worth mucho dinero. You also earn money to pay for the chance to buy players from other teams. First, you pay a designated amount of cash. Second, you play that team, and if you win, you add that player to your squad.
Lose, and you lose the cash, and you'll have to do it again. Overall the cash system works fine, but it feels like it's just been thrown over into this game without any substantial modifications, stylizations, or without any real thought to making this game special or distinct. This is another area in which the game feels like it's been churned out quickly and thrown into the market, as if it were created from a game factory and hurled at retailers to sell for full price, despite the obvious flaws and sub-par quality. It's terribly unpolished and clearly rushed. Sure, you earn new clothes to dress your player in -- shoes, hats, glasses, what have you, but it all feels so useless because the street soccer isn't any good. If the soccer were good, these normally neat but fluffy features would highlight the natural goodness of the game. Off expiration codes.
But because it's a poor game on so many levels, with lousy controls and feckless execution, these features feel like bad fluff. Factory-made fluff.
The list of complaints goes on. The game is poorly balanced. Try sending a high pass to a striker and eye his ability to bicycle kick a pass from anywhere on the field, not matter where he's facing, and he'll kick it toward the goal. He could be facing north and the goal is west, and bam! That ball goes west.
There are bugs. I have frequently shot the ball through the opposing goalie. I know this because I watched closely in the replays (10 times just to check) how the ball shifted through the stomach of the opposing goalie. Or try this famous FIFA move that's been possible in nearly every single FIFA game to date.
Fifa Street 4 Ps4
Dribble the ball from one side of the field to the other. Slowly created a zigzag pattern in a slow trot, so the defender is able to catch up. When you reach the opposing goalie area, move parallel to the goalie, back and forth, so the defender is just a hair behind you. Eighty-five percent of the time this obvious, dull, and terrible play works like a champ. Eighty-five percent sounds like a money play to me.
Fifa Street 4 Pc
Fifa Street 4 Xbox 360
This trick launches the ball far away from you. Graphics If the gameplay doesn't hook you, or perhaps just quietly disappoints (though, honestly, there is nothing quiet about this game), the technical and graphic side won't impress either. The motion capture work and animations are a mixture of both beautiful and horribly interpolated animations. On the one hand, the motion capture work is actually quite pretty. If you're just sitting back in the defensive area and pulling off tricks without a defender around, the mo-cap looks smooth and fluid. But pull off these same moves quickly with a defender around, and watch the mo-cap work get in the way of the gameplay. The poorly edited clips and jerky animations jolt your player from one sequence to the next.