Pele, Sergio Aguero's head and Football Manager: National Football Museum looks at gaming
This article originally appeared on Culture24.
Artworks and curious exhibits allow the public to explore the close links between football and gaming in the National Football Museum's new show in Manchester
© National Football Museum This model of Manchester City striker Sergio Aguero’s head was made from scans created for EA SPORTS’ FIFA game. The best-selling sports franchise video game in the world, FIFA has sold hundreds of millions of copies globally.
© National Football Museum Mia Hamm, who became one of the greatest female footballers of all time during 17 years leading the US attack, endorses the Soccer Teresa doll.
© National Football Museum This rejection letter was sent by developers EA Sports to Paul and
Oliver Collyer, the inventors of the Football Manager games, in 1991.
Despite being warned that their simulation’s lack of live action might
hinder them, the pair went on to enjoy huge success with the game –
although EA Sports were unimpressed with the apparent inclusion of a
virus on the disk.
© National Football Museum Intellivision Soccer, from 1979, is the first playable football title featured in the exhibition.
© Courtesy Mirrorpix for National Football Museum Brazilian football star Pele in London to introduce his Atari Home Video Championship Soccer Cartridge May 1981
© National Football Museum Pele’s Soccer on the Atari 2600, 1981. Pele’s association with video games continues to this day.
© National Football Museum A new interactive artwork by Leo Schatzl, Hit-it, allows visitors to put
themselves ‘inside the game’. A ‘header selfie’ is triggered when a
ball is headed, creating a short film of facial expressions taken at a
crucial, unguarded moment.
© National Football Museum Then-Queens Park Rangers defender Rio Ferdinand tore his Ultimate Team
shield from FIFA 15 in two pieces after being unhappy with the ratings
EA SPORTS gave him. Two bespoke motion capture suits, worn by Lionel
Messi and Sergio Aguero for FIFA 16, are also in the exhibition.
© National Football Museum AFC Bournemouth player Marc Pugh is scanned for FIFA 16.
© National Football Museum The shirt worn by Pele during friendly game vs Austria in 1971, when he scored his final international goal.
© National Football Museum AV Offsides! by Tobias Hartmann and Remmy Canedo.
© National Football Museum The Soccer Teresa doll was produced by the makers of Barbie after the 1998 World Cup.
- Pitch to Pixel: The World of Football Game is at the National Football Museum, Manchester until June 5 2016.
What do you think? Leave a comment below.Three museums to see sport and gaming history inCentre for Life, NewcastleExplore the vibrant history, culture and future of gaming entertainment and technology through more than 100 playable games in the current exhibition, Game On 2.0. Until January 3 2016.
National Videogame Arcade, NottinghamThree floors of playable exhibitions about videogames.
The National Museum of Computing, BletchleyThis museum enables visitors to follow the development of computing from
the ultra-secret pioneering efforts of the 1940s through the large
systems and mainframes of the 1950s, 60s and 70s, and the rise of
personal computing in the 1980s and beyond.
Source: http://www.culture24.org.uk/history-and-heritage/art540638-pitch-to-pixel-national-football-museum-aguero-pele