---- ^[[mastersystem:g|ZURÜCK ZUR KATEGORIE G]]^ ---- **AUTHOR: ** SEGA **RELEASE:** 1987 **TYP:** [[mastersystem:Sport]] **SPIELER:** 2 **LEVEL:** - **SPRACHE:** Englisch **Partnumber:** MK-5058-50 **EAN:** 4974365632588 **WERT:** 20 Euro ---- Das Endspielfieber packt Sie. Weil Sie wissen, daß die Entscheidung von Ihnen abhängt. Sie sind Verteidiger. Sie bestimmen das Spiel. Sie halten den Ball. Block. Tackle. Stoppen von Würfen. Sie können fast das Gebrüll der Zuschauer hören. Sie brauchen Können und Mut. Aber Sie können gewinnen. Touchdown! (Für 1 oder 2 Spieler) Playoff fever grips you. And no wonder. You're the driving force that can take your football team to the top in this rough and tumble contest between the leagues. The outcome of the game is in your hands. As the quarterback, you select the plays. Line up the formations. Call the signals and carry the ball. Cut down your opponent with deadly blocking. Intercept a pass. Make a flying tackle. All you need is skill. Strategy. Cunning. And nerve. For non-stop action that charges across the screen. You decide to pass. It looks good. Touchdown! ---- ^Presse^ - ^Files^ - ^Codes^ - ^Kommentare^ //Here's another perfectly awful sports game for the Master System. Great Football's bright, colorful graphics might have been appealing in 1987, but its gameplay has aged poorly. I recently played this against my old friend Eric who is also a long-time Master System fan. We had a great time - making "fun" of this, that is. I'm not sure which league Sega licensed for Great Football, but the teams include the Beavers, Bombers, Sharks, and everybody's favorite, the Dukes. The controls are remarkably unintuitive. The play selection screen forces you to sit and wait as it slowly cycles through all eight possible formations. You must hit a button when your play is highlighted, and you can engage in all sorts of theatrics to "bluff" your opponent. The passing game is pathetic, and I hate how the runningback stops dead when he reaches the goal line, as if he's saving his energy for the extra point attempt. The playing field looks pretty good, except for that goofy eagle logo on the 50-yard line. The fat players are easy to follow, and although there is some flicker, it doesn't detract from the abysmal gameplay. Great Football's audio includes static-laden digitized crowd noise, and it sounds like they're chanting "Eddie! Eddie!" Short musical tunes play throughout the game, and while you might expect them to be annoying, they're actually somewhat endearing. The one-player mode is really odd. You only play on offense, trying overcome a computer opponent that's been spotted points. When it comes to pigskin action, it doesn't get much worse than Great Football.// - Videogamecritic.com //Great Football plays as a regular professional American football game. One has the option to choose from the AFC league or the NFC league and then choose from several fabricated teams such as the Bombers, Sharks, Beavers or Bucks. During gameplay, one must choose from a number of play formations. The player can choose from running and passing plays to field goals and punting plays when the time is right. In a one-player game, the player only competes on offense. The game starts out with the CPU ahead in score and the player must try to score enough points to win. The CPU will automatically kick-off after a possession is over, there is no defense to be played. In a two-player game, there is both offense and defense to be played. One must try to do whatever possible to win, whether it be through touchdowns and field goals on offense or interceptions and safeties on defense.// - Mobygames.com ----
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