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Fifa 12 Commentary Pack All Languages

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Laureen Yokiel

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Dec 28, 2023, 12:40:33 AM12/28/23
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Remove and re-install the game, selecting the language you want as commentary. You can alter the in-game language afterwards at any time, commentary will still be in the language you chose when installing.



Fifa 12 Commentary Pack All Languages

Download Zip https://8piepaqafn.blogspot.com/?t=2wXBQt






I Play FIFA 23 on Steam and since the day I bought it, it doesn't have Commentary, when I open the Menu to change it, it is locked and grayed on ENGLISH, but I'm from Brazil and wanted the Brazilian Commentary (portuguese).

So, after a long time changing every setting, a figure it out, but is just something that I can't fix on my own. FIFA 23, atleast on Steam, allows you to only listen to the narration you downloaded the game with and mine were English. The problem is, Steam allows you to download other language by going on properties of the game and changing it on LANGUAGE SETTING, which I did, but then I realized that BRAZILIAN LANGUAGE don't start any download whatsoever. When I changed back to English, the game download an almost 2GB arquive (EVERYTIME you change the option), but the Brazilian option don't download anything and so I don't have commentary on my game. Tried different languages, such as Italian, and It downloaded normally, and have commentary on the language (english too). It seems that portuguese is the only language with a problem, and there are other players with the same issue. Any fix?


Mine is working as well! But I also found a solution for those who don't. On Documents, EA saves a file named FIFA 23, just like the one inside Steam and Origin, but it have an arquive named "fifasetup.ini", open it on a notepad and on CONFIG_APP_LOCALE you'll change the langue to whatever you want, in my case was "pt-BR", then you come back to Steam and change language to the one you want as well. It worked for me!


I have not found a solution. My is greyed out and want to switch commentary to Spanish. I changed the config file but no change. I wonder if we need to download the additional commentaries. I am using EA launcher, I wonder if that has something to do with it.


Guys I finally found a solution on getting around the greyed option for commentary (this is for PC). I kept going into my EA game launcher. Funny thing the EA Game launcher seems very limited so I went back and loaded Origin launcher which by the way, will be replaced by the EA launcher I think by year end. This is no good. Why? In Origin you can go to your game and under launch options or launcher advance options you can change the language. Once I did that through Origin I has Spanish for game commentary. I also saw quite the number of languages available. I hope this helps, I was driving me crazy...


I have the same issue, tried with origin but I got no audio in commentaries at all, had to re-install english language again. I would like to switch commentary language between matches, but I am stuck at English.


One thing which has remained largely consistent in recent years is the in-game commentary, with new comments and reactions added with each addition to the franchise to give a more in-depth and varied experience.






Rae and Dixon first appeared on FIFA 19, providing commentary for Champions League and Europa League matches on Kick-Off and Career Mode. They fulfilled the same role in FIFA 20 and have now become the regular commentators for all game modes.


FIFA 21 is playable in the following languages, with region-specific commentary options: English, French, Spanish (South America), Spanish (Spain), Portuguese, Arabic, Japanese, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Dutch, Norwegian, Polish, Swedish, Russian, Danish, Czech.


Most commentary teams are unchanged from FIFA 20 but one of the biggest changes is in the Spanish team. Nira Juanra, a presenter and reporter for Gol Television, is the first ever female commentator to feature in FIFA.


Some players have been frustrated that not all languages are available as standard. Only English, French and Spanish (South America) are available in all locations, with other languages region-locked by the location of purchase.


For example: If you purchased the game in Portugal you would have Portuguese commentary as an available option, if you purchased the game in Sweden for example you would not have Portuguese as an available option.


I am a native Japanese speaker in the US. I have played the FIFA series on PC (Steam). I enjoyed the Japanese language and commentary in FIFA 22. However, It was found out that I could not set Japanese in the FIFA 23 that I downloaded. Some online websites said that the version outside of Japan does not contain the Japanese language. I really miss the Japanese UI and commentary! I miss Fukunishi-san's voice!! Please add Japanese to the US version of FIFA 23. Or is there any chance to switch it to the version that is available in Japan? Please do not ignore the Japanese people outside of Japan!!!


The World Cup features 32 teams, from 32 different countries that speak roughly 18-20 different languages. How do international associations pull this off? What are the common obstacles we encounter?


It was established by seven national associations to foster friendly relations and to organize matches at all levels. This being said, four official languages were chosen: English, Spanish, French, and German.


In this edition, training has been provided for Arabic and English speakers. No prior experience was needed. The Hamad bin Khalifa University (HBKU), the Translation and Interpreting Institute (TII), and CAFE (Center for Access to Football in Europe) have been delivering a commentary training program. Audio-descriptive commentary will also be provided to support partially sighted and blind people.


FIFA is a discontinued football video game franchise developed by EA Vancouver and EA Romania and published by EA Sports. As of 2011, the FIFA franchise has been localized into 18 languages and available in 51 countries. Listed in Guinness World Records as the best-selling sports video game franchise in the world, the FIFA series has sold over 325 million copies as of 2021.[5] On 10 May 2022, it was announced that EA and FIFA's partnership of 30 years would come to an end upon the termination of their licensing agreement, making FIFA 23 the last entry to the franchise under the FIFA name. As a successor to the FIFA series, EA launched the EA Sports FC franchise, with EA Sports FC 24 being the first installment under the new name.[6]


John Motson was the first commentator for the FIFA series, and has worked alongside Ally McCoist, Andy Gray, Des Lynam, Mark Lawrenson and Chris Waddle. Motson first joined the franchise for FIFA 96; he and McCoist were replaced by Gray and Clive Tyldesley for FIFA 06 but later returned for FIFA Manager 08. Martin Tyler was the default commentator for the FIFA series from 2006 to 2020, alongside Andy Gray between 2006 and 2010 and Alan Smith from 2011 to 2020.[11] Derek Rae and Lee Dixon appear in FIFA 19 as commentators for UEFA competitions, and alternate with Tyler and Smith in all competitions in FIFA 20. Rae and Dixon became the sole English-language commentators in FIFA 21, replacing Tyler and Smith. In FIFA 22 and FIFA 23, Stewart Robson serves as Derek Rae's co-commentator, replacing Dixon. Guy Mowbray and Sue Smith were introduced as a new commentary duo in EA Sports FC 24, alternating with Derek Rae and Stewart Robson.


The biggest change in FIFA '97 was the inclusion of 6-a-side indoor soccer mode and polygonal players, with motion capture provided by David Ginola. The game features a much higher number of playable leagues from England, Spain, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Germany and Malaysia. These versions also feature commentary by John Motson, partnered by Andy Gray, with Des Lynam introducing the matches.


FIFA Football 2005 was released much earlier than the usual late October date to obtain a head start over Pro Evolution Soccer 4 and avoid clashing with EA Sports' own FIFA Street. The game features the return of the create-a-player mode, as well as an improved Career mode. The biggest difference compared to previous titles in the series is the inclusion of first-touch gameplay which provides gamers with the ability to perform real-life tricks and passes. It is also the first version to feature the full Mexican League. The game has no opening video, but its soundtrack is headlined by British DJ Paul Oakenfold, who composed the FIFA Theme especially for the game, using some sounds from the game such as artificial crowd noise and commentary. This was the last title released for the original PlayStation in the US. The game also features authentic crowd chants edited by producer Dan Motut.


FIFA's developers made a complete overhaul of the game engine for this installment of FIFA, claiming a dramatic increase in the control of play, having rewritten more than half the game's code. In addition to a renovation of the engine, which discards the "off the ball" system, the developers boasted a significantly more involved Career mode and the introduction of "team chemistry" which determines how well team members play together. This installment breaks with the long tradition of commentary from Match of the Day's John Motson and (more recently) Ally McCoist, who are replaced by ITV's Clive Tyldesley and former Sky Sports pundit Andy Gray, who had already worked in the series as guest commentator.

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