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Ice Hockey? But I wanted ice-cream...
By Martin
Kingsley
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"Shhhh!
You smell that?"
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Ice hockey isn't one of
those BIG sports out here in the land of sun, surf and prawns.
Certainly, we have ice rinks, but we generally use them for more
socially fulfilling purposes than watching big boofy blokes hammer
each other against an arena wall while whacking a black puck around
a sheet of ice in search of a four foot wide net - like Disney on
Ice, for instance.
It's an American sport, really.
However, for those with cable (*mutters* lucky sods), watching
the game of hockey can become quite addictive, and some just itch
to jump into a padded-up plastic body suit and punch Wayne Gretsky
in the teeth
or not.
Anyway you cut it, for the serious hockey fan, NHL2K3 is the perennial
peak of puck-beating prowess you've been waiting for.
I'm not, I must admit, a serious hockey fan. Certainly, when depressed,
I enjoy a burst of testosterone soaked violence as much as the next
guy, but otherwise I've never really seen the appeal. Yet even I,
jaded as I am, found NHL2K3 to be quite a fun little package.
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Note
the reflection on the ice -- yummy!
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I'd like to say that NHL2K3 is also a real looker, but it's not.
By the standards of certain other games that shall remain nameless
(Space Channel 5: Part 2 cough-cough), it's good-looking, but compared
to EA's NHL 2003 and Midway's NHL Hitz 20-03, it seems a bit dull,
although not horrific by any stretch of the imagination.
Also, while I'm still hovering around the topic of visual presentation,
I'm forced to say that NHL2K3 has the worst menus and overall presentation
of any of the 2K3 series.
And one factor that contributes significantly is that NHL2K3 doesn't
have any ESPN sponsorship, so no special menus or commentators for
you, no.
Compared to its two competitors, NHL 2K3 is the most realistic
of the trio, although there are many settings that can be set to
suit your own style-of-play, and those looking for straightforward
biffo on the ice will be well pleased with the Amateur difficulty
setting.
Inversely, anyone with a hankering to get right down to a total
all out, true-to-life hockey match can have it.
Another thing that NHL2K3 has over its competitors is the artificial
intelligence.
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The referee
gets a bit of a scare
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EA's NHL 2003 has a tendency to get its CPU players into some really
dumb predicaments, a tendency that NHL2K3 has neatly circumvented.
Again, if smart hockey players aren't exactly to your taste, then
that too can be altered from the menu, making them as mentally switched
on as a sack of plastic-covered bricks.
Observations made by the commentators, while not quite up to the
standard of NFL2K3, are still pretty good, although you can sometimes
sense the re-use of sound-bytes.
Sometimes, NHL2K3 feels more like an update than a sequel, more
evolution than revolution, improving on the faults of its predecessor,
NHL2K2.
Despite that, it's still a damn fine play, and unlike the rest
of the "Insert-Sports-Acronym-here-and-add-2K3" range
of Visual Concepts games, NHL2K3 can be for the pick-up-and-play
gamer, or can be adapted to the puck-crazy fanatic.
You can read the manual and understand all or just flick through
the controls list and let experience teach you the facts.
Not bad, not bad at all.
Game: NHL 2K3
System: PS2
Players: 1-4
Memory Card: Yes
Developer: Sega
Sports (Visual Concepts)
Distributor: GameNation
Rating: 85%

(Ratings
Key/Explantion)
NHL 2K3 is on the shelves now.



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