Ultimate Beach Soccer

Ultimate Beach Soccer, released as Pro Beach Soccer in Europe, is a beach football video game developed by PAM Development and published by DreamCatcher Interactive (in North America) and Wanadoo (in Europe) in 2003 for the Game Boy Advance, PlayStation 2, Xbox and Windows.[4]

Ultimate Beach Soccer
European Xbox cover art
Developer(s)PAM Development
Magic Pockets (GBA)
Publisher(s)DreamCatcher Interactive (NA)
Wanadoo (EU)
Platform(s)Game Boy Advance
PlayStation 2
Xbox
Windows
ReleaseGame Boy Advance
Windows, PlayStation 2, Xbox
  • EU: August 29, 2003
  • NA: November 14, 2003 (PC, Xbox)[3]
Genre(s)Sports
Mode(s)Single-player, Multi-player

Gameplay

As per the standardised rules of beach football matches take place on a smaller field of play, with five players per side and unlimited substitutions allowed.[5] Players have the choice of four stadia, located in Bangkok, Rio de Janeiro, Marseille or Venice Beach, with dusk and night time settings at each.[6] 32 teams are included for selection, with real life players such as Eric Cantona, Julio Salinas and Daniele Massaro playable.[7] Up to four players are supported on the Xbox and PS2 versions, with two players on the Game Boy Advance (via link cable) and PC.[8][9]

Development

The game was PAM Development's second football title, following on from 2000's Ronaldo V-Football. Development was undertaken with the cooperation of the Beach Soccer Worldwide organisation and Spanish beach footballers Ramiro Amarelle and Robert Valero Mato performed motion capture for the title.[5] The working title for the North American release was X-Treme Beach Soccer.[10]

Reception

Writing in The Guardian Steve Boxer awarded the title 3/5, describing it as "laughably simple and lacking in subtlety when compared with full-blown football games such as Pro Evolution Soccer" but with potential appeal to those "seek[ing] instant entertainment in bite-size chunks".[11] Russell Garbutt of Xbox Nation magazine was less positive, criticising the game animations as "stiff, jerky, and simply not compelling" and the controls as "clumsy and barely responsive", giving a score of 3/10.[12]

References