[PC] | FIFA 2001 | REAL MADRID | PROFESSIONAL | LONGPLAY | ECC - CHAMPIONS LEAGUE

Like, comment, subscribe! FIFA 2001 – LONGPLAY – ECC– REAL MADRID – PROFESSIONAL DIFFICULTY – 2 MIN HALF TIME LENGTH Well, after we got blasted by FIFA 2000, we immediately wanted more back then. So, when FIFA 2001 first came out, we were hyped. The demo was a blast, as graphics were updated quite a notch and some major licensing was going on. However, whilst playing the game it didn’t feel nearly as polished as FIFA 2000. Defending was a nightmare at higher difficulty, with slides being the only effective thing. Interestingly, as you’ll see in this video, the gameplay was way to simplified and overhead kicks were severely overpowered. So, basically it was about who was luckier to score more undefendable goals. A disappointment really, if you ask me. Follow me on: Instagram:   / noblepx672   Twitter:   / noblepx672   [Source:
] FIFA 2001 (known as FIFA 2001: Major League Soccer in North America and FIFA 2001: World Championship in Japan) is a 2001 FIFA video game and the sequel to FIFA 2000 and was succeeded by FIFA Football 2002. It features Paul Scholes in the UK cover and Ben Olsen in the North American cover. It was released on October 30, 2000 for Microsoft Windows, November 8, 2000 for PlayStation, and November 24, 2000 for PlayStation 2 (a launch title in Europe). A Game Boy Color version was planned, but it was cancelled. The game was given positive reviews. The game received positive reviews, GameRankings holds an score of 85.50% for PlayStation, 84.60% for PC, and 82.57% for PlayStation 2, Metacritic utilizes an 85 for the PlayStation & PC, and an 83 for the PlayStation 2. IGN gave FIFA 2001 a 9.2/10 for PlayStation, 9/10 for PS2, and 8.8/10 for PC. GameSpot gave it a 9/10, but PlayStation 8.3/10.[citation needed] FIFA 2001's PlayStation 2 version was a runner-up for GameSpot's annual "Best Sports Game (Traditional)" prize among console games, which went to NFL 2K1.[16] The PlayStation version received "Gold" by from the Entertainment and Leisure Software Publishers Association (ELSPA),[17] with at least 200,000 copies in the United Kingdom.

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