This game has it all, not just the routine goings on
that
take place in a football managers day, but also those
things that make the front pages of the tabloids,
rumours
of player transfers, players who seem to get into
trouble
every week, and the all too common dodgy referees and
their decisions. This game has absolutely everything;
it has serious depth and detail. If all this sounds too
much for you, you can select how much involvement you
have in the game from the start. Obviously you do need
to have control over team selection and transfers. You
don't have to take part in the tactics as the players
can decided which player they will mark and how far
they
can wonder round the pitch. Although you will probably
want to control the tactics yourself, give your players
individual roles and positions.
After a short while you will be adjusting the smallest
details and tweaking the figures in order to better
your
team.
The XBox version of Championship Manager has been
compromised,
although not as much as some people expected. If you
like
numbers read this and you will be in a state of utopia.
There are more than 80,000 players, leagues from Japan,
France, Argentina, Scotland and Greece etc; there are
a total of 3,000 teams to choose from.
That's the good news, as for the bad news the major
point
is the number of leagues you can run simultaneously. In
the PC version you can run all 26 leagues but the XBox
version can only run three leagues simultaneously. Plus
you can't edit the player's stats. So the bad news
isn't
all that bad unless you are a global football manager
wanting to take over the world.
This shouldn't detract from the game as it is
fantastic,
it's as good as the PC version even though it has a
couple
of concessions.
Every major league is in here which is very important,
because without this depth you loose the illusion of
living
and breathing football, and the game would loose most
of its appeal. Apart from the aforementioned compromise
it's all here, the tactics, the coaches, the media, the
training and even club fines.
This is what makes the game so good, the attention to
detail that so many games lack in this day and age.
The concessions shouldn't detract from the game as it
is fantastic, plus Championship Manager on Xbox is as
good as the PC version even with the fore mentioned
concessions.
If you have an Xbox and you want to become the next
Sven,
by this now.
9.0