It's hard not to get excited about the annual release of EA's FIFA franchise. This season we were promised more leagues and teams, new skill moves, a clever Be A Pro mode, and the most satisfying FIFA gameplay to date. But, inevitably, FIFA 08 does what its predecessors did before it: excellent graphics, sound and presentation elements capped off with lackluster gameplay.
Keep in mind that 08 is a marked improvement over last year's next-gen effort, dogged by silly AI and Swiss cheese goaltenders. Some may even say that FIFA 08 is a realistic soccer sim in which goals are seldom and the satisfaction is in the offensive build up. We, on the other hand, say that players are slow and clunky, and even the best offenses such as Arsenal have trouble scoring against doormats like Derby, no matter the difficult setting.
Offenses are now armed with slick skill moves like step-overs and Ronaldinho's flip flap, although they aren't as effective as expected for the game's most agile players. Not even Cristiano Ronaldo's sterling step-overs -- an all out seizure from the waist down -- seem to faze cement-footed defenders. Instead, players get into open space by accelerating from a slow jog to a jailbreak sprint, which never seems to fail along the wing. But from there, probing the defense and creating offensive chances proves difficult as defenders suddenly become impervious to attack. Yes, goals are that much more rewarding, but they tend to feel as products of dumb luck rather than a monumental offensive triumph.
The defense is not nearly as stalwart in multiplayer games and the added presence of a friend suddenly renders defensive AI as meaningful as a Spice Girls reunion tour. The only plays to be made are usually done by your selected player as the CPU takes a hands-off approach. While EA boasts that its AI uses a "35-point decision engine" and "1,000 potential player reactions per second," we would have preferred if our CPU-controlled brethren "played defense."
Still, FIFA 08 improves in both passing and shooting as you have noticeably more control over the trajectory of long, aerial passes and cracks from the top of the box. The only real hole in the passing game -- and it's a doozy -- is the lack of control when waiting to receive a pass. Your player is simply stuck in the mud as a slow roller approaches, and these are too often intercepted. On the pitch, fans are still going to enjoy EA's revamped gameplay, but the occasional, aforementioned gaffes are more frustrating than watching a marathon session of Footballers' Wives.
But EA does score with the new Be A Pro mode in which you select an individual player and use him throughout the course of an entire match. It's addicting to fill up your performance meter with something as simple as a jostle for a header or an on-target pass. Sadly, this mode is really practice for an online 11-on-11 mode next season rather than a full-fledged feature complete with player contracts and a flat in Notting Hill.
Visually FIFA 08 is lovely, with fluid animations and accurate player models. The colors and lighting seem to explode off the set, much more so than its competition from Konami. The broadcast duo of Andy Gray and Martin Tyler provide adequate, if uninspired commentary. The highlight of the audio department is clearly the crowd as authentic team chants ring throughout the stadium. EA is always a winner in the presentation department.
Perhaps the biggest improvement in FIFA 08 -- and all of the EA Sports games this year, for that matter -- come in the online space. Along with traditional online leagues, interactive leagues make their next gen debut, allowing you to play along as your favorite squad against other online players and their favorite sides. The cumulative winner has ultimate online bragging rights. Also included is a nifty video editor for the rare times you do reach the net.
FIFA 08 is a satisfactory update to the franchise, but still has yet to really hit its stride on the next-gen platforms. It took the FIFA team years to get it right on the PS2. Let's hope we don't have to wait quite so long for this FIFA to reach its amazing potential.