Bóng đá điện tử 2023 có vui không?
It’s a big birthday celebration over at the Konami offices currently, as the studio commemorates 28 years of football gaming. They are doing so with new eFootball updates Show It started off as Goal Storm in 1995, moving to International Superstar Soccer (1997-2001), and of course the iconic PES (2001-2021). How we miss the glory of PES. Nowadays, Konami’s football iteration has been titled eFootball, since 2021. Today marks the release of tons of content coming to the free-to-play eFootball 2023, all in honour of Konami’s storied past The Return of an Iconic ModeThose of you familiar with eFootball 2023’s format, instead of its competitor FIFA, will know that Konami prefer to release content periodically, with the game being overall free-to-play. It’s a model likely to be adopted by future footballing titles such as UFL – perhaps we will see it in EA Sports FC? One of the most notable additions to eFootball this time around is the return of Co-op mode, which enjoyed a beta period throughout June. On the 13th July, the Co-op mode will receive a dedicated campaign, which will bring with it rewards when you play a certain number of games Campaigns and ChallengesFor veteran eFootball players looking to challenge themselves, the 28 year anniversary content release will more than facilitate. This four-week celebration period will see the launch of two Challenge Events. Firstly, the Legend Challenge Event will see you attempt to defeat the champions of different leagues around Europe. Expect to be given a tough time by the defensive Italian champions Napoli, and be left mesmerised by the tiki taka gameplay of Barcelona. Each time will provide a vastly different challenge The eFootball Festival is goFor some multiplayer challenges, look no further than the Golden Goal Challenge Event. You’ll be playing against other eFootball fans in a golden goal format. And you know what that means? The first to score a single goal, wins the match. It’s fast, frantic football Finally, the campaigns and challenges within this event will reward you handsomely. These come with the promise of Epic Players, Show Time contracts, 200 coins, and a whopping 440,000 GP currency Let’s Get Celebrating with the latest eFootball updatesWith the game free-to-play, why not get involved in the party by downloading eFootball 2023 for yourself? The game is available on Xbox Series X. S, Xbox One, PS5, PS4 and PC. You can find the link to download eFootball on Xbox on the Xbox Store In a deleted scene in Pulp Fiction, Mia Wallace says that there are two types of people. Beatles fans and Elvis fans. You can like both, but you like one more than the other. We didn’t like either but the point kind of works for FIFA and PES. Back in the day we were PES people. In fact, we were ISS people. To this day, ISS Pro Evolution Soccer remains one of the best football games ever made Since those halcyon days on the PS1, EA and Konami’s fortunes have shifted somewhat, as have their flagship footie titles. Where ISS was seen as the simulation and FIFA was the more arcade-y game back on PS1 and PS2 (PES4 also is one of the best football games ever made) these days EA have kind of had things their own way for a while with the FIFA games. They’re not just seen as the better simulation but they’ve pretty much had the genre sewn up for a decade. Indeed, a chap from EA told us four or five years ago that PES hasn’t even been a blip on their radar for a decade While EA continued to churn out FIFA games, all of which hit the top of the gaming charts and stay their for ages, Konami seemingly gave up on PES in 2019 when they released eFootball, a game that was hamstrung by a clunky, unfamiliar name that had now dropped the PES from the title, but also a fairly disastrous launch. Indeed, we fired it up, said ‘what the fuck is this shit?’ and uninstalled it almost immediatelyThe problem was that the game had gone free-to-play and in that process, everything was stripped out of the game. The career modes, the couch multiplayer, the leagues and cups. Everything was gone except for a new take on MyClub which was PES‘s answer to FIFA‘s Ultimate Team mode. We never liked either of those and combined with some dodgy controls, laggy gameplay and rough graphics, it looked like our interest in Konami’s footballing efforts were done forever On a personal level, all my happy memories of the old ISS/PES games were tied to Master League, the mode that saw you struggle with a piss-poor team full of famous old names like Vorlander and Minanda before earning enough points to buy better players. Winning games, building up your team and putting together your dream squad was interesting enough to me to keep me hooked all the way up to PES 5. After that the series came in and out of my gaming life, mainly thanks to the occasional review copy, but, as with FIFA, they were trying to cram too much into it and after two decades of incremental updates (for both series), I had kind of lost interest in ever playing a football game for funBut then I fired up eFootball 2020. While still lacking in all the modes you’d normally get in a football game, what it did have was the Dream Team mode. Here you’d start with a basic squad and you’d win matches (against the AI or an online opponent) and earn GP (one of eFootball‘s currency systems) and buy new players. Unlike FIFA, the game was pretty generous with rewards for logging on, taking part in events, watching videos and so on and so, before long, I’d put together a half-decent side of affordable players I went online and promptly got beaten by some prick with a team full of galacticos (mainly built from Liverpool players which made me hate the a bit more). But before long, I’d earned more points, bought better players and developed the ones I had using the game’s experience system (which lets you train up players and enhance their various statistics) and then I was handing out some beatings of my own and all without spending a penny on the game On the pitch, things are absolutely fine. I’ve spent two decades essentially using 1-2s and lobbed through balls and my tactics work as well in eFootball as they do in FIFA 22. The action itself is as slick as it needs to be. The ball is nicely unpredictable giving the gameplay a slightly random, chaotic feel which is what you want from a football game. Building up play from the back is rewarding, the defending can be gloriously shambolic or incredibly effective and shooting feels satisfying. What’s more, for the first time in over a decade I actually feel a degree of excitement when I score now. Nó gần như hoài niệm Anyway, that’s been my eFootball experience in the last few months and it’s still my go to game when I want to chill out and play something that I’m not reviewing or don’t want to think too much about. But now Konami have dropped a major update. Chúng tôi đang ở phiên bản 2. 0 and the game has officially updated its name to eFootball 2023. So what do you get in this new update?Well, disappointingly the answer may as well be ‘bugger all. ’ The ‘big’ news is that the two Milan clubs are now licensed (which means nothing to me as I just want to play as QPR) and some Mexican teams have been added. In terms of things you might want – you know, Master League, new game modes, the ability to edit kits or even see them properly when picking them for a match – well, none of that is in there. Indeed, if you hadn’t noticed the change in name, you’d be hard-pressed to even recognise this as an update Sure, there have been a few tweaks on the pitch. Things seem a tiny bit slower, defending feels slightly ‘different’ and Gareth Bale no longer seems to be as deadly on freekicks leading us to believe these might have been nerfed. Off the pitch there are a few new tunes in the menu (and to be fair, we’ve been mostly impressed with the songs before and after the update compared to the awful FIFA soundtracks we’ve been subjected to over the years) and the commentary has been updated a bit (it’s still not great but is occasionally funny because of just how weird it is)So, we have to admit we’re a bit disappointed with the lack of new content. On the plus side, our Dream Team has remained intact. We were worried that we’d have to build a whole new squad but so far it seems like progress in this game is permanent. That’s a way better deal than seeing your FIFA Ultimate Team destroyed each year while those games cost you £70 or however much they are now There’s some nonsense about new types of players you can earn but again, we’re doing fine with our squad that’s got Mbappe up front with Bale and Zaha supporting along with a defence and midfield full of 90+ rated players. So really, unless you’re one of those people who inexplicably spends money on this sort of thing, you’re not limited from building a world class team for free. And Konami just loves to fling free points at youTuy nhiên đây là vấn đề. The thing we like about eFootball is that it leaves out things we don’t care about. After doing it dozens of times do we really want to play an entire Serie A campaign for a trophy? Do we need to play through the European Championship yet again? Do we need a pretend inbox telling us that we’ve got to negotiate for some player or play the same mini-games over and over to increase a stat? The original football games Match Day, Sensible Soccer and so on didn’t need to cram in every possible off the pitch scenario and they did just fine Overall, eFootball continues to do just the things we want it to do. It’s minimalistic like we said before, but what really gets us is how much it feels like old PES. It’s unfussy, almost punk-like in its simplicity. The equivalent of a three minute song or an 80 minute movie. It’s not all good news though. The old series staples are still there too like team names that are literally the worst option they could have picked. QPR are Queen’S Park BW now. The BW stands for blue/white. The capital S is just eFootball being PES (who remembers the whole ‘Oranges’ debacle or when Crystal Palace were called ‘Crisis Bless?’). Brentford’s badge now hilariously says Hounslow on it rather than Brentford. CƯỜISo yes, it’s weird, it’s shambolic and it’s arguably unfinished but on the pitch it’s a lot of fun and off the pitch the squad-building stuff is fun and easy. There’s some weirdness about contracts which we’re not sure is particularly well-implemented but equally the whole thing is a lot less faffy than how FIFA handles contracts and fitness cards and all that extraneous nonsense. And look, yes, FIFA fans won’t be turned and PES fans might be disappointed but if you want a simple football game that gets the basics right and just lets you play without too many distractions then whisper it carefully but eFootball 2023 is actually pretty damn good Bóng đá điện tử 2023 8 Overall Ưu điểm + The football gameplay is genuinely good Nhược điểm - This update adds basically nothing Bản tóm tắt On the face of it, eFootball remains a skeleton of a game in a genre where we're used to more content than we can handle and this update really adds very little to change that. But for gamers who don't want all the faff of playing through modes we've had for decades and just want to get on with building a side and having fun with them on the pitch, eFootball 2023 is a pretty good option. Especially as it's free and you never really need to spend any money on it to enjoy it Is eFootball 2023 worth playing?If you're in the market for a footy game and you want something fresh after having experienced eFootball 2022, then 2023 is simply not for you . As you'll soon find out, there aren't a lot of areas where Konami improved the game enough for it to be considered a new experience.
Is eFootball gameplay good?Dòng cuối cùng. eFootball 2024 plays a decent game of footy , but just like the two versions that came before them it quickly becomes boring due to its lack of modes, strange design decisions, and how easy it is to build a top squad filled with superstars both past and present.
Is eFootball 2023 better than FIFA 23?FIFA 23 and eFootball 2023 allow players to use the formation and tactics of their choice. The former is ahead regarding custom tactics as it offers far more options, allowing greater control . Regardless of the manager, Konami is certainly ahead with their formation tweaks.
Is eFootball 2023 worth playing reddit?To summarize, it's excellent. I play both Quick Counter and Possession playing styles and I have found that the AI is very cooperative in both. The game has progressively improved since the "beta" stage and build-up play is intuitive and satisfying |