Sensible Soccer 2006 - PS2 review

Sensible soccer is back, but should it be praised or binned with the rest of those nostalgia purchases?

Sensible Soccer 2006 - PS2. Gaming, PS2, Sports games, Codemasters 0
Reviewer
Stuart Miles
Review Date
16 June 2006
Manufacturer
Codemasters
Price as reviewed
£35
Latest price
compare

Our score

8/10 8/10 See more with this score

Full Review

Enjoying the football? Thought so, so what better timing then for Codemasters to release a revamped, remade version of its classic footie game: Sensible Soccer.

Rather than going down the realism route of EA's Fifa World Cup or Konami's Pro Evolution Soccer Codemasters has based Sensible Soccer 2006 in the world of "pick up and play" fun.

Before you panic, that doesn't mean it has gone all "Speedball" on you, although the top down gameplay will bring back fond memories.

Now, when we say its all about "pick up and play" gaming, that's because there are just four keys to learn and nothing more. Shoot, pass, run and of course the directional joystick.

With easy controls comes easy gaming and the matches are fast paced, but simple.

Those looking for a bit of three-dimension action will be pleased to hear that the cutscenes and replays are just that and in keeping with the game all the cartoon players have overly large heads.

When it comes to gameplay, you can have up to four players playing at once in any game. Beyond that, choices include friendly, tournament and DIY tournament where you can make your own tournament up with however many teams and what specific teams if you're not fussed with seeing if you can do better in the World Cup.

Of course the teams are just there to give you a feel for who you want to play and without the Fifa licence real life players such as Lampard and Gerrard become Lemperd and Garrerd.

Where it sometimes causes annoyance in games that are trying to emulate real-life as much as possible, here we found that it didn't really matter. Afterall, all we were concerned about was getting the little red guy to get it past the little yellow guy (we were playing England vs Brazil and losing at that point).

Verdict

While Sensible Soccer 2006 is a great memory trip, it is not without its foibles, mainly that there isn't any commentary and once you get past the gameplay - the graphics are as if they came straight from the Amiga, the computer Sensible Soccer first debuted on.

Furthermore, we were surprised that considering the lack of mind blowing next generation graphics the game still took and incredibly long time to load inbetween matches.

Qibbles aside, the gameplay certainly holds up and for lads wanting to continue the footie after the World Cup has finished, or merely after a night at the pub, this will bring back a slice of nostalgia without the horrible side effects.

Good clean fun.

Full tags
Gaming, PS2, Sports games, Codemasters
UK Shopping
game.co.uk, gamestation.co.uk, Amazon.co.uk, play.com, ebay.co.uk
US Shopping
Amazon.com, ebay.com

share Subscribe to RSS feeds email story save story print story pdf

Comments

(Will not be published)

  (Next time sign in to bypass captcha)

Compare prices

Sensible Soccer for PlayStation 2
(Sports, published by: Codemasters)

£0.00 (inc. VAT)
Compare prices for all sellers (£0.00 - £0.00)

Top 10 Broadband

Compare 50+
broadband packages

Home Broadband »

Pocket-lint poll

Q. Do you use the same password for everything?

Vote YES Vote NO

» LAST TIME
When asked Do you check emails, twitter or surf the internet in the loo? 65% said yes and 35% said no

creative deals

About Pocket-lint

Pocket-lint is your one stop shop for gadgets, technology and consumer electronics, bringing you the low-down on the latest televisions, cameras, phones, GPS and much more. Whether it's learning about what's hot in the world of Apple, finding out about the latest home cinema kit from Samsung and Sony or merely seeing what not to buy, we have you covered. So check out our reviews, news, comment, hands-on photo galleries and videos. Enjoy.

Top products

tip us on news

reviews hub

Rss feed

Follow us on Twitter