Movie TV documentary on hold, Instrumental, RnB, Quiet StormīALLAD OF HIP HOP - (by Patrick Best ) Year: 2013 Perfect for background music at trendy jazz nightclub in LA, New York, or relaxing romance. This track features tenor sax, trumpet, and the fender rhodes. SMOOTH JAZZER - (by Linwood Bell ) Year: 2013 Another poignant love story, Female Vocals, RnB, Quiet Storm Soulful, smooth-as-silk lead female singer with elegant backup harmonies and strings. Female Vocals, RnB, Quiet StormĪ beautiful, heartfelt song about two people very much in love but live so far away from each other, they think about each other a lot, and now find themselves longing to see each other. Ideal for holiday scenes, vacation ads, mountain road scene. Cruising or 'getting away from it all' type scenes. Easy listening ultra cool laid-back smooth jazz latino reggae vibe. GROOVING ANYWHERE WILL DO - (by Stephen Alpert ) Year: 2016 Feel her tears in the weeping guitar break. Passionate silky smooth female vocal for the girl who wants the world to know she really does love her man and wants him back. I WANT THE WORLD TO KNOW - (by Stephen Alpert ) Year: 2016 Urban late night club, limo cruising, fashion, lingerie. Music for couples in love, late night romance, making love, candlelight. Instrumental, RnB, Quiet StormĪMAZINGLY AMAZING (FEATURING NAJEE ) - (by Paul “Sequence” Ferguson ) Year: 2014Ī dreamy, magical collaboration with Najee's sensual Jazzy Flute and Ray Spence on Drums. Features wah wah guitar, strings, deep and dirty baritone sax, electric piano, bass and drums. Smooth, sexy, sleazy, 70s Slow Jam perfect for cheap seduction scenes in blaxploitation films. SHAFT GETS JIGGY - (by Jive Ass Sleepers ) Year: 2011
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This manual describes how to use the HP Scanjet 8270 Document Flatbed Scanner and its accessories, resolve installation problems, and reach customer support. Shop online for Point of digital photography, Windows. HP Deskjet Ink Advantage 4645, a compact and 5. Random Selection Mode returns from Pro Evo 6 with a few twists to shake things up wonderfully. Luckily, PES has an amazing new way to play. The same can't be said of M圜lub, which tries its best to distinguish itself from FUT with different features like Scout cards, but continues to appear as a knock-off Ultimate Team-which, to an extent, it is. It still has some annoying drawbacks-low transfer budgets and youth players being littered with unknown, gibberish names continue to grate-but it does a decent job of rivaling FIFA 18's Career Mode. PES' Master League sees some neat enhancements: the new menu layout makes the mode easier to navigate, release clauses improve transfer negotiations, and the new Challenge Mode keeps things interesting with unexpected scenarios like players wanting to leave for greener pastures. They don't really change much, but they're at least more exciting than seeing the same offer letter template in your Career Mode inbox for the hundredth time. They now offer the ability to set up sell-on percentages and release clauses to players' contracts, and are conducted through interactive cutscenes, similar to those seen in The Journey. Squad Battles offer another way of earning rewards, as do the new Daily Objectives, and together they flesh out the single-player side of a mode that's traditionally offered little for those not willing to play online.Ĭareer Mode is pretty much unchanged save for revamped transfer negotiations. This year sees the addition of Squad Battles, where you play a number of matches against other Ultimate Team clubs controlled by AI, before being ranked against other real-world players for the amount of wins you manage. It's not perfect-the ham-fisted appearances from real-world stars like Cristiano Ronaldo and Rio Ferdinand are not exactly Oscar-winning-but it's an interesting and unique way of playing soccer.Įlsewhere, FUT continues to expand and is now almost a game in itself. Alex Hunter returns in a second season of The Journey, FIFA's story-driven mode that's something unique to EA's series. FIFA has traditionally edged PES in this respect, and this year sees another strong showing from EA's contestant. Off the pitch, one of the main battlegrounds for soccer games is in their breadth and depth of modes. Different teams and players also don't feel distinct enough, and lower league players feel disproportionately poor compared to world stars.įIFA 18 is on the up, but PES 2018 remains the king on the pitch. Dribbling-despite the improvements-still feels clunky and passing feels limp and unresponsive compared to PES. Like FIFA 17 though, it still has problems. Crucially, it's much easier to score from crosses and long shots now, leading to some wonderful goals. Crosses are the most improved aspect of FIFA 18's gameplay, now whipping into the box with plenty of pace-and two new modifiers allow you to either loop crosses higher or drill them along the ground when necessary. Goalkeepers are still weirdly awkward and defending can be fiddly, but overall we think PES 2018 is the most satisfying football game ever made.įIFA has definitely improved since last year, with more satisfying shooting and slightly more responsive dribbling. Passing feels slick, dribbling responsive, and shots gratifying. Everyone has their own opinion on which feels better to play, though our PES 2018 review awarded the game an 8/10 primarily for how fluid it feels when you get into a match. When it comes to how FIFA and PES perform on the pitch, it's a little more tricky. It's safe to say FIFA 18 wins this round. Menus have not changed in years, crowds still sound lackluster, and I'm still stuck playing as Man Red rather than Manchester United. Character models continue to improve (especially in the lower leagues, where some player faces are surprisingly accurate), but as a whole PES looks flat compared to FIFA's flashy exterior. |
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