Dec 3, 2014 - Also Known as: Pro Evolution Soccer 2005 (Video Game), PES 2005 PC Highly Compressed,Winning Eleven 9 RIP. World Soccer Winning.
World Soccer Winning Eleven 9 brings 57 national teams, 138 licensed European club teams such as the Italian Serie A, Spanish La Liga, and the Dutch Eredivisie, and over 1,000 players to your fingertips. This title features online play for the first time in the series and is intended to unite soccer fans all over the world. Five modes of play include a 'Training' mode, 'Master League' mode, 'Cup' mode, 'League' mode, and 'Match' mode. In 'Master League' mode, create and manage your team and compete in four leagues to become the greatest lineup in the game. 'Match' mode allows you to pick two teams and play a single match, and there is an option to record games against friends for bragging rights. In 'League' mode, you pick the team you wish to join and play through a full season on that squad. In 'Cup' mode, pick from four different tournaments such as the 'International Cup,' 'European Cup,' 'Africa/America/Asia-Oceana Cup,' and the 'Konami Cup,' then battle to win the trophy.
Online play allows you to upload your 'Master League' teams and pit them against other players and their squads. There are five divisions in 'Network' mode and you will begin as an Amateur. Winning games and collecting points will increase your rank and eventually enter you into a new division. The ranking system is based on the entire network of players, and is renewed periodically as games are won or lost.
World Soccer: Winning Eleven 9 (Pro Evolution Soccer 5 in Europe) is a great game, and there's nothing surprising about that. What is surprising is that each year Konami deliver a game that appears to be so similar, yet feels so different to the game that preceded it. It may be as regular as clockwork, but it's no simple cash-in. It's really rather pointless for me to gush about how brilliant Pro Evo 5 is to play, or go on for five paragraphs about how it once again plays a better game of football than FIFA. What's more important are the reasons why this is the best game in the series to date and just how it differs from the four games that have gone before it.
The biggest difference, and the area that you'll notice straight away, is in tackling. Pressuring your opponent by using the 'X' tackle ('A' on Xbox) has been a technique used by Pro Evo players for some years, and while not perfect, did exactly what you wanted it to do: put pressure on the opponent. Moments into Pro Evo 5 you'll realize that this 'holding X' mentality needs to be thrown out the window, in favor of a more restrained defensive approach. Pressing from behind will almost always result in a free-kick, so it's vital that you time your challenges and try and take the ball from in front of the opposing player. Even though the ref is more likely to blow than in previous games, he also plays advantage in a far more realistic way. It's still not perfect, not by any means, but on the whole the attacking player will get the chance to continue if there is no reason to stop play. Offside decisions still seem a little too strict, with the referee's assistants using their hawk-like vision to spot a leg mere inches ahead of the last defender.
You'll often be allowed to go on and score, only to realize it doesn't count moments later, but the strictness of decisions is definitely something that could be worked on. On the attacking front there's a new first-touch system (not quite as elaborate as FIFA's) and more realistic dribbling abilities.
The first touch system allows you to take the ball with more control than in previous games, and now only the very best players can get past defenders. Pro Evo 4 allowed attackers to dribble past defenders far too frequently, and this change makes the game all the better. The side-step has also been moved solely to the d-pad, and no longer needs to be used in conjunction with a shoulder button. To revert back to traditional control when on the ball you have to hold the R2 button (or controller equivalent). This, along with numerous other small changes, takes some getting used to.
Svischeva tamara yakovlevna knigi chitatj. Shooting also feels improved over last year, with a more significant gap between skill levels and more control to the human player. Skilled players now have a 'Middle shoot' stat that allows them to rifle in bullets from just outside the penalty box, and a new 'placed' shot lets you direct your efforts with a little more accuracy. There's a definite advantage to getting skilled players on the ball in attacking positions, and this leads to more measured and planned attacks. Minor changes have also been made to set-pieces. Throw-ins are now as they were in Pro Evo 3, which gives you more options, and free-kicks now let you play a measured short ball, using a power meter, as well as the standard lofted delivery. Scoring from crosses and corners also seems tougher than before, but seeing as may people built their entire attack around this in Pro Evo 4, the change is no bad thing.