Pro Evolution Soccer 2010

baru aja beli Pes 2009 eh pes yang 2010 katanya bentar lagi mau rilis sekitar akhir bulan juni ini ,..wew udah ga k kebayang mo maeninnya,….tapi VGA ku katrok :(( harus nabung dolo nih dari sekarang!

nih beritanya juragan :

Konami Digital Entertainment GmbH has announced that its forthcoming PES 2010 title will benefit from the most exhaustive raft of new features in the series’ history, with every aspect of the game benefiting from key improvements. Major gameplay additions will make PES 2010 the most realistic football simulation available.

PES 2010 is scheduled for release on PLAYSTATION®3, Xbox 360, PC-DVD, PSP® (PLAYSTATION®Portable), PlayStation®2 and mobile phones in the Autumn, and follows months of analysis and feedback monitoring to enhance the game in every area. PES Productions, Konami’s Tokyo-based development team, has collated feedback on the series’ strengths and weaknesses via fan forums, both ardent and casual PES players and press comment, and has incorporated a wide range of requests in the new game. The result will be the most challenging, realistic and satisfying PES to date.

Konami has spent the last year expanding the development team’s numbers, and created a number of dedicated departments, each striving to further improving their respective parts of the game both in the short and long terms. Key additions for PES 2010 include: Improved Visuals,All-new animation and moves,Match-Day Atmosphere, more realistic.


240,033 Replies to “Pro Evolution Soccer 2010”

  1. An invitation to lunch at Caviar Kaspia was, once upon a time, an offer you simply didn’t refuse.

    Providing, of course, that the bill was on someone else.

    Because caviar, smeared on blinis or piled high on baked potatoes, sure didn’t come
    cheap. There may have been other things on the menu, but no one paid them much heed.
    This was all about lashings of the black stuff.

    Caviar Kaspia’s signature baked potato and caviar: ‘there are few better dishes on earth…only the price, at just under £150, is ridiculous’

    Caviar Kaspia popped her final tin about two decades back.

    And that site, hidden down a smart Mayfair mews,
    was taken over by Gavin Rankin (who used to be the boss), and
    transformed into the brilliant Bellamy’s. It prospers to this day.
    Kaspia, on the other hand, went quiet. Until last year, when she reopened as a members’ club
    in another Mayfair backstreet. But a £2,000 a year membership fee proved hard to swallow, meaning the doors were
    opened to the great unwashed.

    Which is how we find ourselves sitting in a rather handsome –
    albeit near empty – dining room, lusciously lavish, under the stern gaze of a
    stern painting of a very stern man. The soft, crepuscular gloom
    is broken up by the glare of table lamps, indecorously bright, while a loud soundtrack of indolent, indeterminate beats throbs in the background.
    The whole place is scented with gilded ennui.

    Our fellow diners are two young South Korean women of pale,
    luminescent beauty, clad in diaphanous couture.
    They don’t speak, rather communicate entirely via camera phone.
    Pose, click, check, filter, post. Immaculate waiters hover in the shadows.

    We sip ice-cold vodka, and eat a £77 caviar and smoked-salmon Kaspia croque monsieur that tastes far better than it ought to.
    Next door, a large table fills with a glut of the noisily, glossily confident.

    We’re looked after by a wonderful French lady
    of such effervescent charm and charisma that had she burst into an impromptu
    performance of ‘Willkommen’, we would have barely
    blinked. Baked potatoes, skin as crisp as parchment, insides whipped savagely hard with butter and sour cream, are a study in tuber art.
    A cool jet-black splodge of oscietra caviar, gently saline, raises them to
    the sublime. Only the price, at just under £150 each, is
    ridiculous. But there are few better dishes on earth. I’d eat this every day if I could.
    But I can’t. Obviously. That’s the problem with caviar.
    One taste is never enough.

    About £200 per head. Caviar Kaspia, 1a Chesterfield Street, London W1; caviarkaspialondon.com

    ★★★★✩

     

    My favourite luxury dishes
    Tom’s pick of the best places to splash the culinary
    cash in LondonTom’s pick of the best places to splash the
    culinary cash in London

    The Ritz

    Beef wellington sliced and sauced at the table (£150) and crêpes suzette flambéed with aplomb (£62):
    Arts de la Table is edible theatre at its most delectable.

    theritzlondon.com

    Otto’s

    Come to this classic French restaurant for the canard or
    homard à la presse (£150-£220 per person); stay for beef tartare (£42), foie
    gras (£22) and poulet de bresse rôti (£190, two
    courses).

    ottos-restaurant.com

    Sushi Kanesaka

    Piscine perfection comes at an eye-watering £420 per person,
    sans booze. But this 13-seat sushi bar shows
    omakase dining at its very finest.

    dorchestercollection.com

    Min Jiang

    The dim sum is some of the best in town. But don’t miss the wood-fired Beijing duck (£98) – crisp skin first, then two servings of the meat.
    Superb.

    minjiang.co.uk

  2. Hi, i believe that i noticed you visited my site thus i came to return the favor?.I am attempting to to find issues to improve my web site!I suppose its
    ok to make use of some of your ideas!!

  3. I know this if off topic but I’m looking into
    starting my own weblog and was wondering what all is needed to get set up?
    I’m assuming having a blog like yours would cost a pretty penny?
    I’m not very web smart so I’m not 100% sure.
    Any tips or advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks

  4. Do Greens and crossbenchers who claim that transparency and
    integrity is at the heart of their reason for entering Parliament in the first place hear themselves?

    In the past few days they have mounted self-serving arguments against proposed electoral
    reforms that the major parties look set to come
    together to support.

    The reforms include caps for how much money wealthy individuals can donate, caps on the
    amount candidates can spend in individual
    electorates to prevent the equivalent of an arms race, and a $90million limit on what
    any party can spend at an election – actually less than the major parties
    currently spend.

    The proposed new laws also include lower
    disclosure thresholds for donations, thus increasing the transparency of who makes
    political donations in the first place.

    So the wealthy wont be able to hide behind anonymity while using their cash to influence election outcomes – and the extent to which they can use their wealth at all will be
    limited.

    The bill will further improve transparency by also increasing
    the speed and frequency that disclosures of donations need to be made.

    At present we have the absurd situation in which donations
    get made – but you only find out the details of who has
    given what to whom many months later, well after elections are won and lost.

    In other words, what is broadly being proposed will result
    in much greater transparency and far less big money
    being injected into campaigning by the wealthy.

    Teal Kylea Tink claimed the major parties were ‘running scared’ with the policy
    and warned the reform would ‘not stop the rot’ 

    Greens senate leader Larissa Waters (left) fired a warning shot – saying if it serves only the major parties ‘it’s a rort,
    not reform’. Teal independent ACT senator David Pocock (right) said:
    ‘What seems to be happening is a major-party stitch-up’

    Anyone donating more than $1,000 to a political party, as opposed
    to $16,000 under the current rules, will need to
    disclose having done so. And how much they can donate will be capped.

    Yet the Greens and Teals have quickly condemned the proposed
    new laws, labeling them a ‘stitch-up’, ‘outrageous’ and
    ‘a rort, not a reform’. 

    They have lost their collective minds after finding out that Labor’s proposal just might secure the support of the opposition.

    I had to double check who was criticising what exactly before even starting to write this column.

    Because I had assumed – incorrectly – that these important transparency
    measures stamping out the influence of the wealthy must have been proposed by the
    virtue-signalling Greens or the corruption-fighting Teals, in a united crossbench effort
    to drag the major parties closer to accountability.

    More fool me.

    The bill, designed to clean up a rotten system, is being put forward by Labor and is opposed by a
    growing cabal of crossbenchers.

    It makes you wonder what they have to hide. Put simply,
    the Greens and Teals doth protest too much on this issue.

    Labor is thought to be trying to muscle out major political donors such as
    Clive Palmer

    Another potential target of the laws is businessman and Teal funder Simon Holmes à Court

    The Greens have taken massive donations in the past, contrary to their
    irregular calls to tighten donations rules (Greens leader Adam Bandt and Senator Mehreen Faruqi are pictured)

    The major parties have long complained about the influence the likes of Simon Holmes à Court wields behind the
    scenes amongst the Teals. 

    And we know the Greens have taken massive donations from the wealthy in the past, contrary
    to their irregular calls to tighten donations rules.

    Now that tangible change has been proposed, these bastions of virtue are running
    a mile from reforms that will curtail dark art of political donations.

    The Labor government isn’t even seeking for these
    transparency rules to take effect immediately, by the way.

    It won’t be some sort of quick-paced power play before the next election designed to catch the crossbench out.

    They are aiming for implementation by 2026, giving everyone enough time to absorb and understand the changes before
    preparing for them.

    Don’t get me wrong, no deal has yet been done between Labor and
    the Coalition. I imagine the opposition want to go over the laws with a fine tooth comb.

    As they should – because it certainly isn’t beyond Labor
    to include hidden one-party advantages in the proposed design which
    would create loopholes only the unions are capable of taking advantage of,
    therefore disadvantaging the Coalition electorally in the
    years to come.

    But short of such baked-in trickiness scuttling a deal to get these proposed laws implemented, the crossbench should offer their support, not cynical opposition, to what is being advocated for.

    They might even be able to offer something worthwhile that could be incorporated in the package.

    To not do so exposes their utter hypocrisy and blowhard
    false commentary about being in politics to ‘clean things
    up’.

  5. Greetings! Very useful advice within this article!
    It’s the little changes that make the most important changes.
    Many thanks for sharing!

  6. Hi would you mind letting me know which webhost you’re utilizing?
    I’ve loaded your blog in 3 completely different internet browsers and I
    must say this blog loads a lot faster then most.
    Can you recommend a good hosting provider at a reasonable price?
    Thanks, I appreciate it!

  7. 比特派下载(Bitpie)是一款全球领先的多链数字钱包,专为支持多种区块链资产而设计,如比特币(BTC)、以太坊(ETH)、波场(TRX)、泰达币(USDT)等主流加密货币。通过使用比特派,用户不仅能够轻松便捷地管理和转移数字资产,还可以享受去中心化应用(DApp)等多种区块链服务

  8. Ищете подработку или постоянную работу в Алматы? Регистрация пешим курьером в Яндекс Еда — это отличная возможность начать зарабатывать прямо сейчас! Без опыта и сложных требований.

    Прямое подключение к Яндекс Еда через официальный сервис. Всё просто: заполняете анкету на сайте, проходите регистрацию, и вы в деле!

    Для регистрации и получения подробной информации перейдите по ссылке: https://yandex-pro.kz/rabota/for-courier/almaty

    Оставьте заявку и начинайте зарабатывать уже сегодня!

  9. Hello there! This post could not be written any better! Reading through this
    post reminds me of my previous roommate! He always kept talking about this.
    I most certainly will send this post to him. Pretty sure he’ll have a good read.
    I appreciate you for sharing!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *