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Sensible World of Soccer '96/'97 Amiga

Documentation

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Instruction Manual
en fr de it es nl
Manual

FAQ Entries

The WHDLoad version does not use a save disk. When asked to insert a save disk in DF0 before continuing, just ignore that and continue without doing anything.

In the WHDLoad version, if you enter Custom Teams -> Edited Custom Teams before you have actually saved a custom team, the game will crash with a file-not-found-error. Instead, go to Custom Teams -> Original Custom Teams and edit a team from there the first time.

Game Lists

58 game lists have this game (1 public).

LemonAmiga Top Amiga Games (FrodeSolheim)

front image
Score: 8.0
Publisher:Renegade
Year:1996
Languages:English
Developer:Sensible
Players:1 - 64 (2 simultaneous)
Missing short game description
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Undoubtedly the best game in the venerable Sensible Soccer series, Sensible World of Soccer 96/97 is the last annual update by Sensible Software. SWOS 96/97 basically upgrades the earlier version, SWOS 95/96 Euro '96 Edition, with 1997 teams from around the world. Innovations from the previous version (SWOS 95/96) includes bendy passes, looping headers, more international teams, and even bells & whistles such as crowd animation. The hallmark of the series has been spotless playability and the sheer adrenaline rush of controlling tiny players from a top-down view, and SWOS 96/97 takes the fun to new heights with smoother animations and even more coaching options such as trial players and international management, one of the best new features. International management essentially means that after at least 3 consecutive successful seasons as a club's manager, you can be offered a chance to manage your national team in international tournaments, such as the World Cup or European Championship. You can actually manage any other nation if you don't select a nationality at the start. This feature is a lot of fun, and greatly extends the game's longevity. The career mode also sees some tweaks that make the game longer and more realistic. There are also numerous little additions that make the game a lot more user-friendly, such as flashing the name of a player who has control of the ball on screen, so you can tell the little players apart. If you love soccer, this is THE soccer game to own. It may not have the realistic ball handling of Dino Dini's Goal! or complex simulation options of Championship Manager, but for sheer playability and joy of on-the-pitch action, SWOS 96/97 is the only game in town.