Giant Killers (video game)

Giant Killers
Developer(s)IO Productions
Smoking Gun Productions
Publisher(s)AAA Game Ltd
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows
Dreamcast
ReleaseMicrosoft Windows
Dreamcast
  • EU: May 11, 2001
Genre(s)Soccer Management Simulation
Mode(s)Single-player

Giant Killers is a football-management simulation video game developed by IO Productions and Smoking Gun Productions and published by AAA Game for Microsoft Windows in 2000.[1] A Dreamcast-port, also developed by IO Productions and Smoking Gun Productions, was published the following year.[2] It is the only football management simulation game to be released on the Dreamcast.[3][4]

Gameplay

Players are able to manage one of 112 teams from the English Premier League, the Football League, or the Conference, with squads from the 1999–2000 season.[5] The game offers three difficulty levels, Easy to Hard, which dictate the transfer funds players start the season with and the complexity of the gameplay.[2]

A separate PC-only release, Giant Killers Euro Manager 2000, gives players the opportunity to manage the England team through the European Championships.[1]

A third version, which was to feature "three dimensional graphics" was announced by On-line Sports for release in February 2002, but did not make it to market.[6]

Development

The PC release was developed by On-Line Sports and Smoking Gun Productions, with a team of seven across IO Productions and Smoking Gun Productions porting the game to the Dreamcast. For the port the core management engine was retained from the PC version, but the screen layout, navigation system and user interface were redesigned to work with the Dreamcast controller. To determine the attributes of the over 3,000 players in the game's database the developers contacted club fanzines and supporters, as well as drawing on the Rothmans Football Yearbook.[5]

Reception

Writing in Official Dreamcast Magazine Steve Key gave Giant Killers a score of 7/10, describing it as a "good, solid management game" that "does exceptionally well at providing those with little or no experience of this type of title with an instantly accessible and enjoyable experience". However, the review also criticised the lack of up to date squads and the simple, repetitive nature of the gameplay.[2] BBC Sport's David Gibbon gave the title a score of 78/100, noting that "While the graphics are nothing to write home about, Giant Killers is still a very playable management game that gives players lots of control over tactics and strategy."[4] Dreamcast Magazine's Russell Murray awarded the game 70/100, writing that while "it may not be in quite the same league as Championship Manager on PC...this is still a highly entertaining management game with plenty of tactical options".[3] Writing in The Guardian Greg Howson gave the game 3/5 stars, noting its position as the only management sim on the console, but lamenting "a niggling feeling of genre-incompatibility, with hard drives and monitors seemingly more conducive to sheepskin wearing glory".[7]

Reviewing the PC release, William Brown of The Daily Telegraph wrote that "younger gamers will like Giant Killers relative simplicity, as will fanatical Davids aiming to topple Premier Goliaths", noting "nice tactical touches" and "uninspiring" match commentary.[8] The PC release received a score of 2/5 in The Guardian, with it described as "not a Championship Manager 3 killer", but rather a "simplified game" that "not even 11 year olds will find absorbing for long".[9] Lee Skittrell's review of the Euro Manager 2000 release on PC in CVG gave the title 3/5 stars, describing it as "great for management newbies...but will ultimately prove too simplistic for hardcore players".[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Skittrell, Lee (July 2000). "Reviews: Giant Killers Euro Manager". Computer and Video Games (224). Future Publishing: 108.
  2. ^ a b c d Key, Steve (April 2001). "Giant Killers Review". Official Dreamcast Magazine (18). Dennis Publishing: 62–65.
  3. ^ a b c Murray, Russell (22 March 2001). "Giant Killers Review". Dreamcast Magazine (20). Paragon Publishing: 64–65.
  4. ^ a b c Gibbon, David (26 May 2001). "Let's Play...Giant Killers". BBC Sport. Retrieved 2022-08-07.
  5. ^ a b dela Fuente, Derek (March 2000). "Feature: Giant Killers". Dreamcast Monthly (6). Quay Magazine Publishing: 60–65.
  6. ^ Ringshaw, Grant (25 March 2001). "On-Line devolves games company". The Sunday Telegraph. p. 65.
  7. ^ Howson, Greg (17 May 2001). "Footy game is no match for Alex Ferguson". The Guardian. p. 66.
  8. ^ Brown, William (27 January 2000). "Review: Giant Killers". The Daily Telegraph. p. 86.
  9. ^ Schofield, Jack (24 February 2000). "It just kills a little time". The Guardian. p. 68.