Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2013 Xbox 360
Av. User Rating
The world's number one selling golf video game franchise returns with an array of exciting new features, an opportunity to experience Tiger's golf legacy, online and social featur… See more
Av. User Rating
Released on 30-Mar-2012
Product Description
The world's number one selling golf video game franchise returns with an array of exciting new features, including Kinect for Xbox 360 integration, an opportunity to experience Tiger's golf legacy, online and social features, providing an even more immersive Masters Tournament experience. With expanded features surrounding the Masters Tournament, the most extensive swing mechanic revamp in over a decade, enhanced online capabilities and full Kinect for Xbox 360, you'll feel as if you're a player on the PGA TOUR.
Features
- Masters Collector's Edition Exclusives – Extend your Masters Tournament experience! Take home the exclusive Masters Collector's Edition and play Augusta National's famous Par 3 Course, walk the hallowed grounds like never before and explore the world-class Tournament Practice Range. In addition, the Collector's Edition will feature five additional courses than the standard edition. Check the Tiger Woods PGA TOUR13website on March 6 to learn about more features exclusive to the Masters Collector's Edition!
- Kinect for Xbox 360 Integration – Included in the Masters Collector's Edition, Tiger Woods PGA TOUR13 will be the first-ever sports simulation for the Kinect for Xbox 360, tracking full body movements to create the most advanced virtual golf swing to date. Controller-free and voice-enabled controls provides for a unique, never-before-seen sports gaming experience.
- Total Swing Control – Taking its most significant leap forward in swing mechanics in over a decade, Tiger Woods PGA TOUR 13 revolutionizes the virtual golf swing. Golfers will take full control over their swing with all-new tempo, swing plane and shot power controls along with an adjustable shot setup, allowing players to address the ball in a number of ways creating tens of millions possible shots with just one club.
- Experience Tiger's Legacy – Relive first-hand Tiger Woods' most memorable golf accomplishments as he rises from a child prodigy to golfing legend.
- Online Country Clubs – Entry into your own exclusive country club is now at your fingertips. Invite friends to your club, team up to gain quicker access to exclusive golf courses or compete against other club members for the coveted Club Championship.
- 22 Licensed Professional Golfers - Take to the links with any one of 22 PGA TOUR golfers in Tiger Woods PGA TOUR 13, including Tiger Woods, 2011 US Open Champion Rory McIlroy, 2010 PGA TOUR Rookie of the Year Rickie Fowler and Tiger Woods PGA TOUR 13 US cover art finalist Bubba Watson.
-
EA Sports has announced that Tiger Woods PGA Tour 13 will offer support for Kinect for Xbox 360.
The new golf simulation, which will launched in March 2012, will utilise the revolutionary motion-tracking camera to enable controller-free golfing, as well as voice controls and other options.
Previous editions of the Tiger Woods series have supported motion controls on Wii and PlayStation 3, but this will be the first time the option will be made available to Xbox 360 owners.
The developer also confirmed that the Masters golf tournament, which made its debut in this year's Tiger Woods PGA Tour 12: The Masters, will make a return in next year's instalment.
A collector's edition version of the game has been announced that will include additional courses, such as Augusta National's world-class tournament practice facility.
EA Sports will be hoping the new game can match the success of Tiger Woods PGA Tour 12, which racked up record-breaking first-week sales when it launched earlier this year.
Published: 07/10/2011
-
Olympic fever has gripped the planet, and we're only just over halfway through a year that has already been defined by amazing sporting action. From regular favourites like Wimbledon and the UEFA European Championship, to the glitz of the Olympics and surprise wins in the Tour De France, sport has never hogged so many UK headlines. As always, where there's an audience, there are video games looking to capitalise on the popularity - and a famous face certainly helps to catch our attention (although Mario and Sonic don't really count...). Here's our look back over the history of sporting heroes in games.
You can almost go back to the dawn of gaming and find examples of famous athletes promoting games. Daley Thompson's Decathlon was one of the enduring classics of the 8-bit home computer era, a keyboard-bashing run through ten track and field events overseen by the ghostly white pixellated face of digital Daley.
It was inevitable that a footy-loving nation such as ours would attract a flood of cheesy football endorsements as well, with everyone from squeaky scouser Emlyn Hughes to telly pundits Saint and Greavsie, to top flight players like Gazza and Beckham, putting their name to digitised kickabouts. We even had the bizarre sight of a Peter Shilton goalkeeping game, cheekily renamed Handball Maradona after the infamous "hand of god" incident at the 1986 World Cup. And while there's no name on the box, there's no ignoring the key players endorsing both FIFA and Pro Evolution Soccer even today.

Ever-obsessed with sports and strategy, it didn't take long for American software companies to follow suit. John Madden had already retired as both player and coach when his name first adorned the Madden NFL American Football simulation in 1988, but it kicked off a series which endures to this day and is widely considered to be the benchmark of gridiron gaming. Madden was part of the EA Sports stable, a label that knows the value of the right endorsement. In 1999 the company's popular PGA golf series became Tiger Woods PGA Tour, and the fairway superman has been the face of golf games ever since. Indeed, the close tie between game and name may soon become a problem, as the digital Tiger performs better than his struggling real-life counterpart. Will the series revert to plain old PGA Tour when Tiger's star fades, or will EA find a new golfing hero to carry the torch?
That's the gamble when signing a player at the peak of their game. Sometimes, a games company will sign an up and coming athlete in the hopes of backing a long term winner. That worked for Nintendo, when it paid a young Mike Tyson $50,000 to use his likeness in the NES Punch Out boxing game. Within months, Tyson was on his way to being the world heavyweight champ, and the retitled Mike Tyson's Punch Out benefited from his success in the USA.

In the UK, meanwhile, Punch Out was ported to home computers with our very own Frank Bruno as the main character. Punch Out returned to Wii minus its star, while Tyson makes a surprise return to games this year in WWE '13, re-living the brief sting he spent using his name to boost the wrestling company's ratings.
Often, a sport will bubble up to the top of the popular consciousness thanks to the eye-catching feats of a particular sports-person. In the late 1990s, it was Codemasters that perked up long-running, but fairly obscure rugby and cricket sims, by shrewdly putting hot new stars like Jonah Lomu and Brian Lara above the title. Likewise, it was only when legendary racer Colin McRae put his name to the publisher's rally games that they became the owners of a blockbuster franchise, and while the DiRT series has continued to thrive without him, it was his name that got the customers through the proverbial door to begin with. Such moves weren't restricted to cult UK sports either. In 1999, Japanese firm Namco quickly rebranded the latest entry in its fledgling tennis series as Anna Kournikova Smash Court Tennis in order to attract European gamers.
It's perhaps notable that the area where celebrity endorsement paid off most spectacularly was in the rise of extreme sports, where off-beat personalities are more openly celebrated and the players are more likely to be gamers. Tony Hawk pioneered this with his skateboarding games, lending not just his credibility but also his insight and expertise to ensure maximum authenticity. Snowboarder Shaun White and BMX rider Dave Mirra quickly followed Hawk's example. Hawk's back this year, too, in an HD re-jigging of some of his classic titles for Xbox LIVE; he's gone from extreme rebel to a traditional figure, but we still love him!
Whenever sport becomes national obsession, you can bet an enterprising games developer will seize the opportunity. Gold medal-winning swimming star Michael Phelps has got a head start on his Olympic peers this year, with his Push The Limit game for Kinect already on shelves. Will we see Bradley Wiggins grace the cover of next year's Tour De France game? Will Jess Ennis and Mo Farah be running alongside us in the next Kinect Sports? Whoever is next on the podium, it's a good bet that gamers will be the winners.
-
Kinect support coming for Tiger Woods… (07/10/2011)
EA Sports has announced that Tiger Woods PGA Tour 13 will offer support for Kinect for Xbox 360. The new golf simulation, which will launched in March 2012, will utilise the revolutionary motion-track…
-
From the Olympics to the Tour de France, sport has never hogged so many UK headlines. As always, where there's an audience, there are video games looking to capitalise on the popularity - and a famous…
- 1
- 1
As a valued customer we now offer you the facility to sign up to email price alerts. Please enter the price you want to be, or below, and if drops to that level we will let you know...
-
-
New
In stock - Only £17.99
-
Free UK Delivery
-
-
-
Preowned
In stock - Only £12.99
-
Free UK Delivery
-
-
Earn 144 reward points
Please note: prices in GAME Stores may differ.
You have chosen to add this product to your Wish List, but which version would you prefer to add?






















































