“In its 12th year the Madden franchise is back and looking to continue its dominance on all platforms. Each platform boasts new features such as faster gameplay new modes and new graphics that will please Nintendo GameCube fans. All new player face and body technology so player faces and body shapes will look even more like the real life counterpart. Coach animations feature new face and body technology. Is still the only game where actual coaches can roam the sideline.
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New modes include Two-Minute Drill where points can be earned on offense or defense in a quick-hitting fast-paced game within the game; Create-a Team featuring customized uniforms helmets and stadiums; and Coachs Corner where you can learn about the Xs and Os of football from John Madden while perfecting in-game skills. Play and draft with the newest NFL franchise the Houston Texans. Take them to the Super Bowl® in Franchise Mode.New Madden Cards with new players new designs and cheerleaders.
Get the current value of Madden NFL 2002 for the Nintendo 64. Vintage Nintendo 64 N64 NFL Madden 2002 Football Game EA Sports Black.
Hundreds of new animations have been added while a new focus on player emotion and high drama has been added with cool replays featuring camera angles a TV broadcast cant capture such as inside the huddle. With Widescreen TV support you can now see all of your receivers run their patterns. Madden NFL 2002 incorporates strategy from real NFL coaches and John Madden himself improvements to blocking and pass coverage lead the list of changes for 2002.“.
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American sports. Loathe them or hate them, we can't understand them. Football, as they ludicrously insist on calling it, might seem reasonably simple. Heavily padded brick shithouses attempt to propel an egg-shaped ball from one end of a field to the other. However, closer inspection reveals a bewildering world of incomprehensible formations and tactics. Thankfully, veteran coach John Madden is on hand to provide a few pointers.With the ball at your disposal, and faced with an array of elaborate configurations, the only real option is to 'ask Madden,' whereby your players will line up according to his selection. The rest is up to you.
Depending on how many yards you have to go, you can either bum-rush the line, or use your quarterback to try and hit one of your wide receivers.When it comes to defence, however, it's a whole different ball game. No help is offered, and given that you can only control one player at a time, there's not really a great deal you can actually do. In fact, for all the difference it makes, at this point you might as well do something useful like flick through Teletext or put the kettle on.
In fact, defending is so tedious that you're almost tempted to let the other team score simply so you can have the ball back.The bottom line is that American Football doesn't make for a particularly great game. And while Madden is undeniably a technically accomplished representation of the sport, it's also one that we are never going to play again.
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