Popular games for collection EA sports cricket

14.11.2006

Cricket 07 is a cricket game from EA Sports and developed by HB Studios.It features a number of game types, including limited overs matches (50, 20, 10 or 5 overs), 4-day first-class matches and full-length test matches.You may select different pitches and different weather conditions in different venues.

01.07.2005

The game was released in three different region-based covers. Adam Gilchrist appeared on the Australian cover, Daniel Vettori on the New Zealand cover and Andrew Flintoff on the English cover. It was the last game to have all real player names.

31.12.1999

Cricket World Cup '99 is a Sports game, published by EA Sports, which was released in Europe in 1999.

31.12.2000

12.03.2004

Cricket 2004 is based on the sport of Cricket, developed by HB Studios for the EA Sports catalog. It features full day-night matches, all new weather effects and pitch types. The game contains the licenses of all the international teams registered to the International Cricket Council for the year 2003, with the official Cricket 2003 World Cup fully playable along with many more tournaments. Domestic Teams for England and Australian leagues are fully licensed.

31.12.2002

31.12.1996

One of the first realistic cricket games in the market, Cricket 96 wowed people with its options, commentary and video options. You can play either test or one-day matches with a choice of 8 teams, and you can set your field, bowlers and batsmen. It has a good control system and decent graphics for its time.

31.12.1997

Cricket 97 is a cricket game for PCs that was released in 1997. The sequel to Cricket 96, it was developed by Melbourne House (as Beam Software) and published by EA Sports. It was the final cricket game in the series to be developed by Melbourne House. Compared to the previous game, the improvement in graphics continued with three-dimensional stadiums (though players remained rendered as sprites). Cricketing legends Ritchie Benaud and Ian Botham for the first time provided commentary and also featured in full motion video interludes. The game did not feature real player names as with previous games in the series (with real Australian and English sides appearing for the first time in the game's successor, Ashes Tour Edition).