First of all, it's
a solid tactics game.
Not exact matches
The TV pundits did suggest that the
tactics of staying
solid and compact and playing on the counter-attack without committing too many men forward was something we should have been doing in all the big away
games in recent years.
We can blame Wenger for poor
tactics and not having a
solid game plan to win matches but when it comes to transfers I place the blame solely at the feet of the Arsenal board.
I wouldn't say we have turned a corner but we're certainly going in the right direction both mentally and tactically... Really Le Prof is going vintage lately putting the right
tactics and players on the field making the right subs too (after the subs he made WHU were tired and Giroud who was at heart of every dangerous attack killed the
game off)... Ramsey performance was great, Özil (missed some great opportunities in final 3rd) and Coquelin missed a couple of passes but
solid play from both... I think people don't understand how Özil passes is important for the fluidity of our
game....
While it's not the perfect
game, this is a
solid stealth -
tactics game and the developer clearly had a lot of fun skewering corporate culture.
I would love to spend my PSN funds on this sale (even though I already have the Metal Gear
Solid Legacy Collection on PS3 and the PS4 version of Metal Gear
Solid V Ground Zeroes from PS Plus), but considering that I am not supporting Konami because of their stupid business
tactics (although I can forgive them if they make a new Bomberman
game), I'm not buying into it.
However, a few
games, such as Square's Vagrant Story, Final Fantasy VII (which used the X button as cancel) and Final Fantasy
Tactics, Namco's Ridge Racer Type 4, and Konami's Metal Gear
Solid, use the Japanese button layout worldwide.
That shouldn't sway you from checking Brass
Tactics out as the
game is still a very
solid title.
That a
solid online and some new fight
tactics like being able to counter-throw or turn while your charging up a side smash attack and the
game will be perfect imo.
Those PS2
games are Suikoden
Tactics, Zone of the Enders: The 2nd Runner, Metal Gear
Solid 2: Substance and Metal Gear
Solid 3: Snake Eater.
This was released shortly after the 2005 Tokyo
Game Show and unlike the title suggests, the game wasn't overly «tactics» driven but rather a straightlaced third person shooter with a surprisingly solid multipla
Game Show and unlike the title suggests, the
game wasn't overly «tactics» driven but rather a straightlaced third person shooter with a surprisingly solid multipla
game wasn't overly «
tactics» driven but rather a straightlaced third person shooter with a surprisingly
solid multiplayer.