![]() ![]() It looks at the command, picking out two or three words it knows, ignoring the order, and tries to guess what is meant. The parser can interpret more than a thousand words to control movement or actions. Retrieved 3 October 2017.The games use a text parser for entering commands at the "What now?" prompt. "If Not This Year, Women's Soccer Will Be In Video Games Soon, Says FIFA Producer". ^ Mayfield, Kendra (18 December 2000)."Mia Hamm's birthday, N64 and the dream women's league". "FIFA 16 is slowly discovering the existence of women's soccer". "Fifteen Years Before Women Appeared On FIFA '16, There Was Mia Hamm Soccer 64". ^ a b c Pierce, Liam Daniel (24 September 2015)."20 Nintendo 64 Games You Might Have Missed – Feature". Like the Nintendo 64 game, the North American release of the Game Boy Color tie-in had a Mia Hamm reskin developed titled Mia Hamm Soccer Shootout, it was released by SouthPeak Interactive on 27 October 2000. Different gamemodes, such as Practice and World Cup, where the player can play on a team, with or against Hamm, in a World Cup tournament, were also included. Women's League, 32 national teams, and Mia Hamm's All-Star Team. Gameplay features 18 football teams in the hypothetical U.S. In the United States, Mia Hamm Soccer 64 sold a "relatively high" 42,886 copies. In a 2012 interview, psychologist Fernanda Schabarum retrospectively noted that the game was a "good example of the wrong timing and the wrong approach" in the matter of women in sports-oriented video games, and David Rutter, producer for the game, stated that the game being a reskin "made it appear more of cynical marketing tactic than a game really interested in women's sports". In a December 2000 interview, Patti Miller of Children Now stated that the game was one of the "positive examples of games for girls". Mia Hamm Soccer 64 was one of the first sports games to star female athletes, with Wendy Gebauer serving as commentator. The athletes in the Hamm version were hand-animated, while Michael Owen's WLS 2000 used motion capture. This version was developed within twelve weeks by DC Studios, to take advantage of the high profile of Hamm and the United States women's national soccer team, who had just won the 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup, and be released in time for the upcoming Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) and the 2000 Sydney Olympics. ![]() The North American release of Michael Owen's WLS 2000 was reskinned to feature American soccer star Mia Hamm, and published by SouthPeak Interactive as Mia Hamm Soccer 64, on 9 November 2000. It was reported that Owen received £300,000 to perform motion-capture and lend his image for the title. However, it was put on hold as Eidos Interactive did not find itself suitable for the Nintendo 64 market, until it was announced, in August 1999, that THQ had picked up the game for further production. Michael Owen's WLS 2000 was originally announced by Eidos Interactive in September 1998, as a Nintendo 64 conversion of Silicon Dreams Studio's previous World League Soccer game, Michael Owen's World League Soccer '99. Michael Owen's WLS 2000 has received reskinned versions for releases outside the United Kingdom, primarily Mia Hamm Soccer 64, which stars Mia Hamm and was released in North America by SouthPeak Interactive. Released on 10 November 2000, the game stars English footballer Michael Owen. ![]() ![]() Michael Owen's WLS 2000 is an association football video game developed by Silicon Dreams Studio and published by THQ for the Nintendo 64. ![]()
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