
#TIGER WOODS PGA TOUR 06 CHEATS PRO#
And as an added bonus, the very first time you do this glitch you get a difficult to obtain No Focus pin and the Tournament Pro Achievement/Trophy. By doing this you will receive the XP payout for playing the tournament on Tournament difficulty even though you played 16 holes of the tournament on Amateur. Discover game help, ask questions, find answers and connect with other players of Tiger Woods PGA Tour 06. On hole 18, Save and Exit again, return to the Options screen and switch the difficulty back to Tournament and resume the tournament by hitting the X button and play hole 18. Find all our Tiger Woods PGA Tour 06 cheats, tips and strategy for PC, Xbox, PlayStation 2, Xbox 360, PSP. Then change the difficultly from Tournament to Amateur then proceed to resume the tournament by hitting the X button to resume and play holes 2 thru 17 on Amateur. When the second hole loads up, SAVE and EXIT from the tournament and go back to your options screen. Before you start the round, set the difficulty at Tournament and play ONLY the first hole. This glitch works for all of the tournaments but is the most effective when used on the four star tournaments and the major championships. The same goes for animations – both celebratory and standard striking – which are identical to what I've seen before.This glitch only works for the Road to the Masters mode. We haven't seen the game progress in this manner since it landed on Xbox 360 years ago. Little things like water and lighting in certain situations look improved over last year's game, but I was really hoping to see greater detail in the character models. While you're hacking away at that dastardly little white ball you'll notice that Tiger has undergone some slight visual changes, though nothing that is as important as I would have liked. Basically, every solid shot you make will add to a GameBreaker meter located at the top of the screen. Instead, all of that is determined by your play on the course. Amazingly, Tiger Woods PGA Tour 06 now features a 'GameBreaker' system, similar to the one found in games like NBA Street Vol. You no longer assign points to improve in certain areas. Progression in Tiger Woods 10 feels much better than it has in the past. You'll also have the opportunity to practice shots that your coach recommends after a round is completed. Attribute progression is organic as you'll advance in certain areas or regress in others depending on your performance. You design his or her look just as you have in the past (or with Photo GameFace) and then toss him onto the course. Most of your time on the course will be spent developing your created character. It's a well-crafted putting mechanic and emulates real-life golf better than it has in the past. You pick a spot on the green and the putter adjusts to show you how far you need to bring it back before releasing it forward. Instead of carrying multiple putters in your bag as you've been forced to do in the past, you now have one putter for all distances. The most substantive change to the core gameplay mechanic is the new Precision Putting. One tiny addition that I really did appreciate is the new ability to A or X your way through the annoying camera angles that occasionally constrict your view of where the ball is going. I understand that I just hit a golf ball very hard, I don't need to see a cartoon representation. If you crank up the power enough you'll still see the over-exaggerated "power shot" montage, but this year the ball has a cheesy looking cartoon vapor trail streaming out of the back. You can still swing with either the analog stick or the three-click mechanic. On the course Tiger Woods PGA Tour 10 is almost exactly as you remember. I'd like to see fairways stay sopping wet with puddles splashing even after the weather returns to normal. During a downpour you'll see things like gusting wind that knocks the ball down and fairways that soften up for decreased roll distance, but as soon as the deluge stops, I found that conditions returned to normal too quickly.

The feature is supposed to add real weather updates to the course you're playing on, and while the visual representations of these acts of nature comes through just fine, the changes to gameplay aren't quite there. Live Weather is another small addition to Tiger Woods that has actually been seen in other EA Sports games like NCAA Football the last few years.

Like all of the new features, it's nothing spectacular or overly imaginative, but it's a fun and welcome addition nonetheless. Likewise, the new Tournament Challenge uses GamerNet technology and forces you to hit exactly the same shots as some of golf's biggest names. If Phil "Lefty" Mickelson drains a put on 16 to pull one-ahead of you on the leaderboard, you'll see that reflected in-game. It allows you to play side-by-side against the leaderboards from any real golf tournament. My favorite is easily the Play the Pros option within the Live Tournaments. The game modes themselves, however, are well designed and fun to play.
