The added power of the new consoles has also enabled the developers to add longer and more detailed animations, which should improve the fluidity of gameplay. These will, you imagine, quickly begin to grate when you go 4-0 down in a crucial online game. There are new contextual celebrations for those big game goals where emotion overrides sense – think Jose Mourinho sprinting down the touchline at Old Trafford after knocking them out of the Champions League with Porto, Alex Ferguson dancing out of the dugout after Steve Bruce’s league-winning header or Emmanuel Adebayor sprinting the length of the pitch to taunt the opposing fans (more current references are also available). The developers have added some pre-game cutscenes – poignant in these Covid times – showing slightly robotic looking fans passing through the turnstiles before the game, but no footage of them being price-gouged for weak beer and rubbery hot dogs. There’s a new lighting system that takes advantage of next-gen processing power, plus a unique camera angle inspired by real-world TV broadcasts: the camera moves back and forth more fluidly, as if being controlled by a human. Much of that detail will be lost during the more zoomed out moments of actual gameplay, particularly for players who don’t have a 4K television, but there are changes to the overall presentation that will drastically change the look and feel of the game.
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