Jump to content

Italy 1990 (video game): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
given source not useful
Line 19: Line 19:
}}
}}


'''''Italy 1990''''' (also known as '''''World Class Soccer''''' in the United States and '''''Italia 1990''''' in most of Europe) is a [[association football|soccer]] [[video game]] published by [[U.S. Gold]] and programmed by [[Tiertex Design Studios]] in 1990. It features the [[1990 FIFA World Cup]] held in [[Italy]]<ref>[http://www.gamespot.com/italy-1990/ Game entry] at [[GameSpot]]</ref> but is not part of the official [[FIFA World Cup video games|''FIFA World Cup'' series]]. For the American market it was branded as ''World Class Soccer''. In Europe (except the U.K.) it was released as ''Italia 1990'' by U.S. Gold in association with Erbe Software. It was released for [[Amiga]], [[Amstrad CPC]], [[Atari ST]], [[Commodore 64]], [[ZX Spectrum]] and [[DOS]].
'''''Italy 1990''''' (also known as '''''World Class Soccer''''' in the United States and '''''Italia 1990''''' in most of Europe) is a [[association football|soccer]] [[video game]] published by [[U.S. Gold]] and programmed by [[Tiertex Design Studios]] in 1990. It features the [[1990 FIFA World Cup]] held in [[Italy]] but is not part of the official [[FIFA World Cup video games|''FIFA World Cup'' series]]. For the American market it was branded as ''World Class Soccer''. In Europe (except the U.K.) it was released as ''Italia 1990'' by U.S. Gold in association with Erbe Software. It was released for [[Amiga]], [[Amstrad CPC]], [[Atari ST]], [[Commodore 64]], [[ZX Spectrum]] and [[DOS]].


U.S. Gold had released the official game of the previous World Cup in 1986 (''[[World Cup Carnival]]'') which was extremely badly received, and would go on to release ''[[World Cup USA '94]]'' as the official game of the 1994 World Cup. The official 1990 World Cup licence was acquired by [[Virgin Mastertronic]] who produced two titles, ''[[World Cup Soccer: Italia '90]]'' for home computers and ''[[World Cup Italia '90]]'' for [[Sega]] consoles.
U.S. Gold had released the official game of the previous World Cup in 1986 (''[[World Cup Carnival]]'') which was extremely badly received, and would go on to release ''[[World Cup USA '94]]'' as the official game of the 1994 World Cup. The official 1990 World Cup licence was acquired by [[Virgin Mastertronic]] who produced two titles, ''[[World Cup Soccer: Italia '90]]'' for home computers and ''[[World Cup Italia '90]]'' for [[Sega]] consoles.

Revision as of 10:19, 20 September 2022

Italy 1990
Developer(s)Tiertex Design Studios
Publisher(s)U.S. Gold
Platform(s)Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Commodore 64, DOS, ZX Spectrum
Release1990
Genre(s)Sports

Italy 1990 (also known as World Class Soccer in the United States and Italia 1990 in most of Europe) is a soccer video game published by U.S. Gold and programmed by Tiertex Design Studios in 1990. It features the 1990 FIFA World Cup held in Italy but is not part of the official FIFA World Cup series. For the American market it was branded as World Class Soccer. In Europe (except the U.K.) it was released as Italia 1990 by U.S. Gold in association with Erbe Software. It was released for Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum and DOS.

U.S. Gold had released the official game of the previous World Cup in 1986 (World Cup Carnival) which was extremely badly received, and would go on to release World Cup USA '94 as the official game of the 1994 World Cup. The official 1990 World Cup licence was acquired by Virgin Mastertronic who produced two titles, World Cup Soccer: Italia '90 for home computers and World Cup Italia '90 for Sega consoles.

Reception

Computer Gaming World criticised the game for only displaying about 10% of the field at a time without a "radar" screen to show the rest, but liked the animation. The magazine concluded that "World Class Soccer should prove an informative and reasonably entertaining way to prepare for the event".[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ Greenberg, Allen L. (September 1991). "Never Give a "Soccer" an Open Break". Computer Gaming World. No. 86. pp. 74–75. Retrieved 18 November 2013.