

Speaking frankly, few football sims can boast quite as many (often comical) defects as Gameloft's latest. Real Football 2012 appears on the App Store like a work in progress rather than the finished article. It's an issue not helped by the fact that the keeper often seems to lean back as shots fly towards the goal, only attempting to save them when they've already flown past his body. You know the kind of wonder goal that makes headlines the world over once during a World Cup? They're routine in Real Football 2012, popping up several times a match and undermining any sense of skill or strategy you or your opponent hope to experience.

Indeed, it's not hard to imagine Gameloft putting together a stunning trailer or two using this method - you simply won't believe the kinds of shots that manage to land in the back of the net. So slow is the pace of the game that passing is a painful and fruitless tactic: the key to success in Real Football 2012 is to find a bit of space on the pitch before holding down the 'shoot' button and watching the ball fly effortlessly past the keeper. Running with the ball in this manner is, in fact, the only way to play. As such, the only way to inject any excitement into play is to whack up the difficulty.Įven then, if you're smart enough to alter your direction slightly as your opponent approaches you'll still manage to score a goal or 20. The game's big problem is that it assumes those playing on an easy setting want those on the rival team to simply stand around. That's both in terms of the opposition's attempts to defend and the way the game determines which player you control when it's your turn to hunt down the ball. One of the most notable is the game's slack AI. Matches play out like a half-baked engine tests, with the number of faults, glitches, and bugs that hamper your efforts almost too great to list. While its success on that score is arguable, the actual gameplay the freemium model is hanging on is about as poor as you're ever likely to see on iPhone.
#Game real football 2012 free#
With talk of backhanders and bribes now commonplace at football's governing body, you might have expected Real Football 2012 – with its ability to buy your way through matches in one way or another – to have acquired the official FIFA licence this time around.Īs with FIFA, all the focus in the run up to the launch of Gameloft's latest run on the pitch has been just how far a bit of cash will get you: free to download, Real Football 2012 follows Konami's PES 2011 in taking the beautiful game down the freemium route.
