NCAA Football 10 Tournaments: The Stats
By the banter on the boards, the trembling anticipation, and the cryptic comments about mysterious features yet to be announced, you'd think July 14th, 2009 was going to be a day of life-altering significance. Well, for fans of the college football video game battle, it is.
On July 14th, the NCAA Football 10 challenge, the latest in the NCAA Football video game franchise, will be available to the public…and gamers who have spent much of 2009 griping about glitches in Super Sim and problems with patchability may finally have their prayers answered. For members of BringIt, it's just one more tool with which to challenge, play, and earn…real money.
Like its predecessor NCAA Football 09, the NCAA Football 10 video game competition will be compatible with Play Station 2, Playstation 3, Xbox360, and PSP. Cover athletes have yet to be announced, but as with everything else related to the release of NCAA Football10, there's no shortage of early analysis. According to the popular online blog NCAAStrategies.com (where you can read bios of potential candidates and vote for your choice of NCAA Football10 cover star), possible poster-boys fall into two categories, “leaders” and “dark horses”; leading NCAA Football 10 cover-candidates include Michael Crabtree, Texas Tech; Chase Daniel, Missouri; Graham Harrell, Texas Tech; Percy Harvin, Florida; Rey Maualuga, USC; Jeremy Maclin, Missouri; Knowshon Moreno, Georgia; Mark Sanchez, USC; Matthew Stafford, Georgia; and Chris 'Beanie' Wells, Ohio State, while the dark horse category consists of Donald Brown, Connecticut; Glen Coffee, Alabama; Shonn Greene, Iowa; PJ Hill, Wisconsin; Brian Johnson, Utah; James Laurinaitis, Ohio State; LeSean McCoy, Pittsburgh; Andre Smith, Alabama; Hakeem Nicks, North Carolina; and Pat White, West Virginia.
Online NCAA Football 10 Tournaments: Features & Upgrades
While it's all still speculation-highly charged and near-hysterical speculation-NCAA Football 2010 publisher EA Sports has leaked some details regarding enhancements and additions. Some of the most game changing are described as follows:
- Season Showdown mode—the most massive of the NCAA Football 10 challenges' enhancements-lets college football video game fans pledge loyalty to their favorite school, earning ongoing credits by competing continuously on behalf of their chosen college
- More authentic graphics—heighten the experience of online NCAA Football 10 battles, with new field-goal nets, enhanced colors, cheerleaders resembling their real-life counterparts, and flashbulbs popping during pivotal plays
- Pocket Protection—adds a more realistic feel between offensive and defensive linesmen during quarterback pass protection
- Improved Player Pursuit Angles—mean NCAA Football 2010 defenders take better angles to prevent touchdowns, decreasing the extra yards gained by sideline running; also, using the Pursuit Rating (PUR) feature, collegiate players are given a rating based on skill, which leads to a more realistic average of bad pursuits, especially by less experienced athletes
- Player Lock—grants gamers exciting new perspectives by enabling them to lock on a single athlete for the entire play
- Defensive Assist—does precisely what it says, assists players in NCAA Football 2010 competitions defensively by allowing them to move their man back to his correct position…at the simple press of a button
The NCAA Football 10 Tournament on BringIt
In keeping with our pledge to offer the newest, most innovative video game challenges, BringIt will offer NCAA Football 10 tournaments and two player matches as soon as the game hits the hands of fans. Until then, sign up for your free BringIt membership and feed your fix by battling it out in NCAA Football 09…and then try to get on with your life. Join now and start competing for cash today!







