Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The RoboCup Simulation League is one of five soccer leagues within the RoboCup initiative. [1] It is characterised by independently moving software players that play soccer on a virtual field inside a computer simulation. It is divided into four subleagues: [2] 2D Soccer Simulation; 3D Soccer Simulation; 3D Development
Association football video games are a sub-genre of sports video games. The largest association football video game franchise is FIFA by Electronic Arts (EA), with the second largest franchise being Konami's competing eFootball (formerly known as Pro Evolution Soccer or Winning Eleven). FIFA is also the most successful sports video game ...
The RoboCup 2D Simulated Soccer League is the oldest of the RoboCup Soccer Simulation Leagues. It consists of a number of competitions with computer simulated soccer matches as the main event. There are no physical robots in this league but spectators can watch the action on a large screen, which looks like a giant computer game. Each simulated ...
List of football video games may refer to: List of association football video games (soccer) List of American football video games;
High school association football video games (3 P) I. Inazuma Eleven video games (8 P) International Superstar Soccer (15 P) J. ... (1982 video game) Football Manager 2;
Nintendo World Cup is a soccer video game for the Family Computer/NES and Game Boy, developed by TechnÅs Japan and released in 1990. It is a localization of Nekketsu High School Dodgeball Club: Soccer, [a] the fourth Kunio-kun game released for the Family Computer.
The game was the first game to combine a management environment (including tactics, league play, transfers, and detailed player attributes) with a football game engine (based on that of Kick Off). Kick Off 2 was released in 1990 as a sequel to Kick Off. The game introduced a number of new features as well as several small alterations.
FIFA International Soccer (1993), the first game in EA's FIFA series of association football video games, released on the Sega Mega Drive and became the best-selling home video game of 1993 in the United Kingdom. In contrast to the top-down perspective of earlier association football games, FIFA introduced an isometric perspective to the genre.