International Cricket 2010

International Cricket 2010

Xbox 360 cover, featuring England's Stuart Broad.
Developer(s) Trickstar Games
Publisher(s) Codemasters
Platform(s) PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
Release date(s)
  • EU 18 June 2010
Genre(s) Sports, Cricket
Mode(s) Single-player, Multi player, Online

International Cricket 2010 sports association cricket simulation video game developed by Trickstar Games and released by Codemasters. It was released in the United Kingdom and India on 18 June 2010 and in Australia on 21 October 2010.[2] The game is a part of the Codemasters Cricket series preceded by the Brian Lara Cricket Series and is a direct sequel to the 2009 release, Ashes Cricket 2009.

The game is licensed by the England Cricket Board and Cricket Australia, and thus will include all the official players of the Australian national cricket team and the England national cricket team.[3] The rest of the teams in the game are unlicensed and will not feature the official players of the corresponding teams.

International Cricket also includes an online mode for the consoles it was released on, and a revolutionary Action Cam which provides an on-field view of play, which allows the user to view the game from different aspects on the field, and works with both batting and bowling.

Improvements from Ashes Cricket 2009

There is a new tournaments section with four new tournaments based on the big four limited overs contests – World 20 Overs (T20), 20 Overs Super League (T20), Champions Cup (ODI) and World Trophy (ODI). Test cricket is still available, and Test tournaments can be participated in by all teams.

There is an expanded roster of 16 international teams (Including Bermuda, Canada, the Netherlands, and Scotland) and players can choose between 21 stadiums from around the world, 3 of which are new additions in Dhaka, Grenada, and Port Elizabeth.

A new Power Stick feature enables players to gain both 360-degree direction and power control.

A new "sportsmanship rating" feature will allow players to decide on a preferred online opponent, especially for avoiding players who quit matches when losing.[4] However, the online aspect of the released game has received extensive criticism due to both the poorly designed sportsmanship ratings feature and a bug which causes online games to disconnect, usually after a boundary or a six is hit by a batsman.

People can select to play in different regions around the world, and even their own tournament. Winning tournaments unlocks brand new kit items, and other awards such as bats, pads and other equipment. The AI has been improved with batsmen being able to pick the gaps, computer simulation, and responses are more realistic than before.[4]

PC and Future Consoles

The game was released for PS3 and Xbox 360 and major developer Codemasters said that they wanted to "watch the response of the game with these consoles and decide on the future improvements or other platform releases, should the game do well". The PC version was not released as the Action Cam is not supported by the PC system. Also, poor sales and piracy issues for Ashes Cricket 2009 resulted in the outcome that no future games will be released.[5]

See also

References

  1. International Cricket 2010 Release Date from CricketGaming.net, 29 April 2010, retrieved 15 June 2015
  2. http://web.archive.org/web/20110718151156/http://cricket2010.zapak.com/news/?newsno=1. Archived from the original on 18 July 2011. Retrieved 1 September 2010. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. International Cricket 2010 Bowls into Stores This Friday from PlayCricket2010.com Archived 29 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine.
  4. 1 2 Exclusive Interview with International Cricket 2010 Producer from CricketGaming.com, 17 May 2010, retrieved 15 June 2015
  5. International Cricket 2010 Hands-On from Gamespot, 11 June 2010, retrieved 15 June 2015

External links

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