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THE BEAUTIFUL
GAME PENNED FOR 2006
Copyright 2005 www.tombraiderchronicles.com
[ November 10th 2005 ]
Eidos
Interactive, one of the world's leading publishers
and developers of entertainment software, today
announces that Championship Manager 2006 will
be released in the UK in Spring 2006 on PC.
Developed
by London-based Beautiful Game Studios (BGS),
the all-new 2006 version offers a wide range of
innovative new features and is the most realistic
version to date, offering the player a true taste
of football management.
Championship
Manager 2006 boasts a brand new GameplanTM 3D
match engine, where players can watch their match
unfold in the same way they watch the match on
TV – but with the ability to adjust tactics, player
positions or formations – or simply use the Highlight
Filter to select the moments they want to watch.
Interact
with your squad as you speak with your players
for the first time: make promises to individual
players to improve their mood or form. But as
in real life, if promises are broken, trust is
lost and there are consequences – with the new
player status screen, monitor the mood and form
of every player.
Championship
Manager 2006 now offers the ability to scout in
depth with its new 'Simulate world' option. For
the first time, users will be able to view authentic
player's performance stats outside the nation
managed, all with no noticeable speed reduction!
Scouting will never be the same again.
Implemented
in Championship Manager 2006 are accurate fitness
regimes devised by Mervyn Day, first team coach
at Charlton Athletic. Study your opposition's
current form through parallel match processing.
Watch their previous matches through the GameplanTM
3D engine, before you face them whilst the game
progresses.
Or choose
a wealthy Club Benefactor for an instant cash
injection, but with more money comes more demands
and a greater need for immediate success. Championship
Manager 2006 allows you to manage your club to
glory, dealing with everything from tactics and
training to transfers - everything you would expect
a real-life football manager to do without owning
a sheepskin coat.
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