Product Description
•Dominate the Draft: Crucial advice on how to assess your team's needs, develop a solid scouting plan, and discover top talent in every round–including sleeper picks! •Master the Playbook: Find out which teams have the strongest NFL playbooks, then design and test your own offensive and defensive plays to make them even better. •Expert Tips to Make You a Coaching Legend: Guide your team to a Super Bowl championship with smart tactics for skill development, contract negotiations and free agency moves that'll boost your roster without blowing your salary cap. •Trade Your Way to the Top: Learn the dos–and don'ts–when it comes to trading players and draft picks with other NFL teams. •Powerful Scouting Reports: In-depth profiles and depth charts of all 32 NFL teams as well a top-secret glimpse at the game's hottest future draft prospects!
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NFL Head Coach 09: Prima Official Game Guide (Prima Official Game Guides)
- Paperback: 160 pages (2008-08-12)
- Publisher: Prima Games; 2008-08-12
- Label: Prima Games
- Studio: Prima Games
- ISBN: 0761559582
- Average Customer Review:
based on 3 reviews
- Sales Rank in Books: #78264
Avg. Customer Review:
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: Head Coach 2008-11-09
Comment: Good book and thorough enough on each aspect of the game. A must for Madden or NCAA Football players looking to get an edge in making their own plays. Gives you more control over features the other two dont.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: Good Instruction Manual 2008-08-22
Comment: As the other review alluded to -- This makes for a great instruction manual. As far as a strategy guide, this is not. It more or less tells you how to play the game, and what different options mean. And a lot of the instructions are pretty much direct from the in game tutorial. For as in depth that this game seems to be, as well as being essentially a brand new franchise (I get Madden skimping on docs, since most owners already have played and know the controls), it needed a better manual than was provided.
And maybe that's where the pain lies. The game itself isn't that good, but that's okay as it's only $30(as found with the Madden Collector's Edition), but since you need to buy this manual to know how to play, the game is now a $50 game. And, that is more money than the game itself is worse.
Also adding to the dissapointment of this guide is the quality of the manual. The manual itself is very short at 160 pages. There are typos galore. And the paper it is printed on is about the quality that a cheap magazine comes in.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: Great guide that should have been included with the game! 2008-08-13
Comment: This is a high quality guide for NFL Head Coach 09, which is currently (August 13, 2008) only available when you buy the bundled Collectors Edition of Madden 09.
This is the guide that should have been included with the game itself. Nearly half of this guide is filled with instructions on HOW to play the game and HOW to use the Play Editor - and that's a good thing.
The lame 12 page pamphlet that EA ships with the game itself is basically useless and this guide answers most of the gameplay questions. There are so many things happening behind the scenes in this game that you would have no idea about unless you either figured it out on your own (which would take hours and hours worth of restarting Career mode to fix your mistakes), or took a look at this Prima guide.
The second half of the guide details various play strategies for each of the NFL teams. It breaks down each team's best offensive and defensive plays in easy to understand terms (strangely, it doesn't include any player names in any of the descriptions, only their jersey numbers). They've also included a pretty good primer on professional football offensive and defensive formations and strategies in general.
I would have liked to see a bit more detail about the "strategy" of the off season and free agent tendencies. Instead, this guide acts more like the (missing!) instruction manual and doesn't give you many specific things to try, like bundling draft picks with signing bonuses in order to snag elusive players.
Likewise, although the Play Editor section is descriptive and explains it's function very well, but doesn't offer you much advice regarding WHAT pieces and parts that will make for a great play. Unless you're already pretty good with football strategies, you'll learn HOW to move the X's and O's around, but you won't learn WHY. Some illustrated examples would have been great.
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