FIFA Series
Encyclopedia : F : FI : FIF : FIFA Series
The FIFA Series is a popular series of football (soccer) video games, released yearly by EA under the EA Sports label. Since its debut release in late 1993, it has been one of the most profitable and well known video game franchises. While there was no major competition when EA released both the first titles in their Madden NFL and NHL series, football video games such as Sensible Soccer, Kick Off or Matchday Soccer were being developed since the late eighties and were already competitive games in the Football Market when EA announced a football game as their next addition to the EA Sports label.
- 1 History
- 2 Games in the series
- 2.1 FIFA International Soccer (aka FIFA '94)
- 2.2 FIFA Soccer '95
- 2.3 FIFA Soccer '96
- 2.4 FIFA '97
- 2.5 FIFA '98: Road To World Cup
- 2.6 FIFA '99
- 2.7 FIFA 2000
- 2.8 FIFA 2001
- 2.9 FIFA 2002
- 2.10 FIFA 2003
- 2.11 FIFA Football 2004
- 2.12 FIFA Football 2005
- 2.13 FIFA 06
- 2.14 FIFA 07
- 3 Soundtracks
- 4 2006 FIFA: Road to World Cup
- 5 Other titles
- 5.0.1 FIFA World Cup licenced games
- 5.0.2 UEFA European Championship licenced games
- 5.0.3 Street soccer games
- 5.0.4 Management games
- 6 External links
History
The key points of EA's massive advertisement were the isometric view of the ground (when all other games used either top down, side scrolling or birds' eye views), detailed graphics and animations and of course, the FIFA endorsement (although it did not feature real player names). It was shipped for Christmas 1993, named FIFA International Soccer, and was released for most active platforms of the time.
While FIFA 95 did not add much other than the ability to play with club teams, FIFA 96 pushed the boundaries. For the first time with real player names, the PC, 32X and Sega Saturn versions used EA's Virtual Stadium engine, with 2D sprite players moving on a 3D stadium. FIFA 97 had crude polygonal models for players and added indoor football, but the pinnacle was reached with FIFA 98:Road to the World Cup. This version featured improved graphics, a complete World Cup with qualifying rounds (including all national teams registered in FIFA) and refined gameplay. Months later, World Cup 98, EAs first officially licensed tournament game, improved Direct3D support, gave each team a unique kit and broke the sequence of poor video games based on tournaments started by US Gold's World Cup Carnival in 1986 and continued until Gremlin's Euro 96.
The following years' releases were met with criticism: buyers complained about poor gameplay, bugs that were never fixed, bad support and little improvement over the previous title. That led to a decrease in the games' popularity, but fans were still willing to give EA a tabula rasa each year. As both emulation and the console market expanded, FIFA was being challenged directly from other titles such as Konami's Pro Evolution Soccer (known as Winning Eleven in Japan and the U.S.). By FIFA 2003 EA made a determined effort to improve the game, and a year later, included a new mode (Football Fusion) that allowed the ability to play games from TCM 2004 using FIFA's engine, and when Konami announced that PES3 would also have a Personal Computer release, EA doubled the efforts the revive the series.
As it is now, both FIFA Football and Pro Evolution Soccer have a large following but FIFA Football enjoys a substantially higher volume of sales in comparison to Pro Evolution Soccer.
Games in the series
FIFA International Soccer (aka FIFA '94)
- Tagline: "FIFA International Soccer has it all... experience sheer brilliance."
- Cover: David Platt shielding the ball in England vs. Poland; Pat Bonner punching the ball away from Ruud Gullit in Netherlands vs. Republic of Ireland.
- Released for: Sega Mega Drive/Genesis, Master System, Mega CD, Game Gear, SNES, DOS, Amiga, 3DO. Game Boy
FIFA Soccer '95
- Tagline: "The best console football can get."
- Cover: Erik Thorstvedt (Tottenham Hotspur) flying for the ball, mérdãs heading the ball in a Norway vs. USA match.
- Released for: Sega Mega Drive/Genesis
FIFA Soccer '96
- Tagline: "Next Generation Soccer."
- Cover: Ronald De Boer chasing Jason McAteer in Republic of Ireland vs. Netherlands.
- Released for: Sega Mega Drive/Genesis, Sega 32X, SNES, DOS, Sega Saturn, PS1, Game Gear, Game Boy.
FIFA '97
- Tagline: "Emotion Captured"
- Cover: David Ginola (Europe), Bebeto (Americas)
- Released for: Sega Mega Drive/Genesis, SNES, DOS/Windows, Sega Saturn, PS1, Game Boy
FIFA '98: Road To World Cup
- Alternate Titles: Rumbo a la Copa del Mundo (Spanish), En Route Pour La Coupe du Monde (French), Die WM-Qualifikation (German)
- Tagline: "Your only goal - qualify"
- Cover: There were several regional covers for this game. Among them, David Beckham, Andreas Möller, Raúl, David Ginola and Roy Lassiter were featured.
- Released for: SNES and Sega Mega Drive (PAL only), Windows, Sega Saturn, PS1, Game Boy,Nintendo 64.
"Song 2" by Blur was used as the intro track for the game. The Crystal Method also did 4 songs for the game, More, Now Is The Time, Keep Hope Alive and Busy Child.
FIFA '99
- Tagline: "All The Clubs, Leagues and Cups"
- Covers: Dennis Bergkamp (Main), Rui Costa (Portugal), Fabien Barthez (France), Fernando Morientes (Spain)
- Released for: Windows, PS1, Game Boy Color,Nintendo 64
FIFA 2000
- Alternate titles: FIFA 2000 - Major League Soccer (US).
- Covers: Sol Campbell (Main), Simão Sabrosa (Portugal), Eddie Pope (US), Mehmet Scholl (Germany), Giovanni Rosso (ISR), Raí (Brazil), Emmanuel Petit (France) Jaap Stam (Netherlands), Ramon Vega (Switzerland), Pär Zetterberg (Belgium)
- Released for: Windows, PS1, Game Boy Color, Nintendo 64 (in beta release only).
Robbie Williams provided an original theme song with "It's Only Us". This song was also featured on the first and only FIFA Soundtrack CD release by EMI. He allegedly did this on the condition that the football team he supports, Port Vale, were included in the game, which they were, as a special feature team.
FIFA 2001
- Covers: Paul Scholes (UK), Thierry Henry (France), Lothar Matthäus (Germany), Edgar Davids (Netherlands), Ricardo Sá Pinto (Portugal), Gaizka Mendieta (Spain), Ben Olsen (US), Shimon Gershon (ISR), Leonardo (Brazil)
- Released for: Windows, PS1, PS2. An N64 beta version does exist of this game via THQ, also released on Game Boy Color
FIFA 2002
- Covers: Thierry Henry (UK and France), Gerald Asamoah (Germany), Sibusiso Zuma (South Africa), Haim Revivo (ISR), Ruud van Nistelrooy (The Netherlands), Roberto Carlos (Brazil), Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Sweden), Nuno Gomes (Portugal)
- Released for: Windows, PS1, PS2, GameCube (America only)
Fans were anticipating another FIFA:RTWC (FIFA: Road To The World Cup), containing all international teams and the option of squad selection. However, many of the international teams in the game were not licensed, some confederations such as Africa were not even complete. Gorillaz headlined the soundtrack of this game with the song "19/2000 (Soulchild Remix)".
FIFA 2003
- Covers: Roberto Carlos, Ryan Giggs, Edgar Davids (Main); Landon Donovan (US / Canada).
- Released for: Windows, PS1, PS2, GameCube, Xbox, Game Boy Advance, Mobile
FIFA Football 2004
- Cover: Alessandro Del Piero, Thierry Henry, and Ronaldinho
- Released for: Windows, PS1,PS2, GameCube, Xbox, Game Boy Advance, Ngage, Mobile
FIFA Football 2005
- Tagline: "A great player needs a great first touch."
- Cover: Patrick Vieira, Fernando Morientes, and Andriy Shevchenko (Main) Oswaldo Sánchez, Fernando Morientes, and Andriy Shevchenko (North America)
- Released for: Windows, PS1, PS2, GameCube, Xbox, Game Boy Advance, PSP, Gizmondo, Ngage, Mobile
FIFA 06
Developers of the FIFA series made a complete overhaul of the game's engine for the 2006 installment of the game, asserting it has dramatically increased the control of play, having rewritten more than half the programming code for the game. In addition to a renovation of the game play engine which discards the "Off the ball" system, developers boast a significantly more involved career mode and the introduction of “team chemistry” which will determine how well teams play together. This installment will break with a long tradition of commentating from John Motson and (more recently) Ally McCoist, replaced by ITV's Clive Tyldesley and Sky pundit Andy Gray (who has already worked in the series as guest commentator in FIFA 98).
FIFA 07
FIFA 07 is likely to be the next game of the FIFA series. It is to be released in October 2006 for Windows, Sony's PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable, Microsoft's Xbox, GameCube and Nintendo DS. For the first time it will be released on Xbox 360 and a secondary version of the game is to be released in November for Sony's PlayStation 3 and Nintendo's Wii.Soundtracks
Licenced music tracks from artists such as Blur and The Crystal Method were first used in the FIFA series with the release of FIFA Road to World Cup '98.
2006 FIFA: Road to World Cup
In 2006, EA Sports introduced FIFA: Road to World Cup where players can "Immerse yourself in the action and heritage as you lead your nation from the qualification rounds all the way to the FIFA World Cup Finals in Germany." This title was originally launched with the Xbox 360 console. This version preceded the release on the PS2, Xbox and other consoles by several months. The 360 version offered superior graphics, though at the expense of many gameplay features.
The game is now available for most platforms including, Xbox, PS2, GameCube, and the PC.
Other titles
Outside the yearly series, but also from EA Sports:- Zico Soccer and Tactical Soccer, two Super Famicom titles released only in Japan where the player does not control the players directly, but gives orders to them.
- FIFA 64 (first FIFA game released on the Nintendo 64 in late 1997 and similar to FIFA 97)
- Stars series (2000 and 2001)
- FIFA Soccer World Championship (released in Japan only, it was the first installment of the series on Playstation 2; 2000)
- Champions League 2004-2005
FIFA World Cup licenced games
- World Cup 98
- 2002 FIFA World Cup
- 2006 FIFA World Cup
UEFA European Championship licenced games
- Euro 2000
- Euro 2004
Street soccer games
- FIFA Street (2005)
- FIFA Street 2 (2006)
Management games
- FIFA Soccer Manager (1997)
- Total Club Manager (also known as Fussball Manager in Germany) series
- Premier League Manager '99, 2000
External links
FIFA Football Fan Websites- [Tell FIFA's developers what you want in FIFA 07]
- [The Unofficial Site of Fifa World Cup 2006]
- [FIFA 06 Online]
- [EA Sports' FIFA 06 official website]
- [IRFO - Iranian FIFA Online]
- [Shane Magee's FIFA Interactive World Cup Tips]
- [Interview with FIFA 06 Producer, Marcel Kuhn]
- [FIFA HIstory]
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
