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It could also remember key moments of the match (including set-pieces) so you could rewind, play and practice them again, perfecting moves, tweaking tactics, giving you the chance to benefit from real match situations - something the current training mode is sorely lacking in. It would stop after key situations, and talk you through what would have happened if you had used different Team Style settings. The solution? Many are discussed, but one of the more interesting suggestions is a kind of 'interactive training' or 'tutorial exhibition' mode, which would essentially be played like a real match, only one with 'playing assists'. But the fact remains that there's always the sense that you could be doing so much better if the game could only find a way of educating you about it.
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During the media competition the previous night, I come to the game cold, never having had a warm-up match, and manage to win four out of six matches just playing through muscle memory of what's always worked in football games - football. For my money, PES 2010 is the most fluid, instinctive and enjoyable PES probably since PES5. If he doesn't even touch a single setting, he will still enjoy PES 2010." "It is really up to the user, if he wants to change the settings, to customise their playing style and tactics, that's all up to the user and we do not blame the user.