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Real Football 2009 scores N-Gage release

12 stadiums, six leagues and 200 teams crammed into your Nokia

Real Football 2009 scores N-Gage release

Gameloft's Real Football 2009 has been going down a storm, landing the mobile version a Silver Award here on Pocket Gamer (read our Real Football 2009 review).

So N-Gage fans can rejoice as the publisher/developer announced at the Dubai World Game Expo that its premier soccer title is now also coming to the Nokia platform.

"We are delighted to be announcing the release of Real Football 2009 on N-Gage at this year's Dubai World Game Expo. With 360-degree player manoeuvrability this title brings an innovative approach to mobile football games we know the N-Gage community will find extremely entertaining," says Ludovic Blondel, OEM director at Gameloft. "Most of all we are really excited to see the fusion of the established Real Football and N-Gage communities that this title will create for the first time."

The 2009 edition enables players to choose from 12 stadiums and six leagues featuring 200 teams, as well as five gaming modes ranging from the Leagues and Cups to exhibition, penalty kicks and training.

The game also features a dynamic replay system to give players control how they view the action. New to Real Football 2009 is realistic player behaviour and the aforementioned 360-degree gaming experience utilising high-quality 3D graphics and realistic sound effects.

"It's great to see Real Football '09 launched on the N-Gage platform," explains Gregg Sauter, director of third-party publishing at Nokia. "As a sport, football is the world's most popular, and as a game, Real Football will be tough to beat. With great gameplay and superb quality graphics, we expect this game to bring a new level of sports excellence and realism to the platform."

Put one in the back of the 'Track It!' net for more N-Gage Real Football 2009 news as we get it.

Spanner Spencer
Spanner Spencer
Yes. Spanner's his real name, and he's already heard that joke you just thought of. Although Spanner's not very good, he's quite fast, and that seems to be enough to keep him in a regular supply of free games and away from the depressing world of real work.