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・ Emma Coles
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Emlyn Hughes International Soccer
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・ Emlyn Watkins
・ Emlyn Williams
・ Emlyn Williams (disambiguation)
・ Emlyn Williams (footballer, born 1903)
・ Emlyn Williams (footballer, born 1912)
・ EMLYON Business School


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Emlyn Hughes International Soccer : ウィキペディア英語版
Emlyn Hughes International Soccer

''Emlyn Hughes International Soccer'' (EHIS) is a soccer computer game first released in 1988 by Audiogenic Software Ltd.. The game is named after the popular English footballer Emlyn Hughes. It initially appeared on the Commodore 64, with other versions produced for the Amstrad CPC, ZX Spectrum, Atari ST and Amiga.
The game was programmed by Graham Blighe with additional coding by Michael McLean. Gameplay included arcade-style action and the management aspect of the sport. Critical response to the game was generally positive with accolades and high ratings from the industry magazines.
== History ==
It debuted on Commodore 64, but versions were also developed for Amstrad, ZX Spectrum, Atari ST and Amiga as part of Audiogenic's general cross-platform strategy. Upon its release it was hailed by some as the most realistic football simulation ever made, and gathered enthusiastic reviews, in particular from ''ZZAP!64''.
The program was in the UK computer games charts for over three years following its release, and was still enjoying a small but enthusiastic cult following almost 20 years after its release.〔(EHIS Community site comment )〕
Every version of the game was programmed by Graham Blighe and produced by Peter Calver, with graphics created by Andrew Calver, and playtesting by Jeremy Wellard (who later founded HB Studios); the strategy section was coded by Michael McLean (in later versions Terry Wiley). The music for the Commodore 64 version was written by Barry Leitch.
The inspiration for the game came from International Soccer, a highly successful cartridge game for the Commodore 64 that had been released by Commodore themselves in the early 1980s. Indeed, ''EHIS'' offered an optional mode in which the controls were deliberately limited, to simulate the restricted options available in the earlier game. This both provided an easy introduction and helped to emphasise the extent to which the controls had been enhanced.
At the time of its release ''EHIS'' faced heavy competition from titles such as ''Match Day II'' (1987), ''Kick Off'' (1989) and ''Microprose Soccer''. However, what made ''EHIS'' different from the other games of its time was the fine balance between playability and simulation - it was not as slow as ''Match Day II'', nor as reflex-driven as ''Kick Off'' and ''Sensible Soccer''. As a result, the appeal of EHIS was strongest among those who preferred skillful, tactical football to frantic arcade action. Despite limited graphics, and a side view of the action (whereas ''Kick Off'' had recently introduced the bird's-eye perspective), ''EHIS'' held its own because of a powerful control system that gave the players unprecedented control over the game.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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