Front Page Sports: Football Pro This file contains additional information about the game that became available after the manual was printed. Table of Contents I Manual Installation Instructions II MIDI-compatible Sound Cards III FPSUPDAT Utility IV Keeping a Play-by-Play Log V Notes on Gameplay Quick time out method The STOPCLOK play Situation numbers Key ratings for Kickers VI Notes on the Play, Game Plan & Coaching Profile Editors Naming conventions The Specific play type Stock plans and profiles Directory limits Modifying stock profiles VII Notes on League Play NFLPA92.LGE & NFLPA93.LGE All-Pro selections Why are some players missing? Interrupting Sim games How NFLPA ratings work FastSims and saved games VIII Remote Leagues IX Printers and Printer Support X Troubleshooting - The FBCHECK Utility XI SmartDrive & SCSI Drives with Double Buffering ------------------------------------------------------------------ I Manual Installation Instructions If you are experiencing problems with the Front Page Sports: Football Pro INSTALL program, the following instructions will allow you to manually copy the game to your hard disk drive. NOTE: The following instructions should be used if prior installation attempts have not been successful. Before using these instructions, try the following troubleshooting tips: Create a Football Boot Disk first. Start the INSTALL utility and choose the "Make bootable floppy disk" option. After creating the Boot Disk, reboot your computer and run the Football Pro INSTALL program. If the INSTALL program continues to fail, use these directions to manually copy the game to your computer's hard disk drive. 1) Check your hard disk drive to confirm that you have at least 12Mb (12288000 bytes) of disk space available 17Mb (17408000 bytes) or more if you are using a disk compression utility such as Stacker or DoubleSpace). Run the "CHKDSK" utility to verify "bytes available on disk". 2) Create a DYNAMIX directory on your hard disk's root directory and a FBPRO subdirectory in that DYNAMIX directory. To do this, follow the steps below: MD DYNAMIX CD DYNAMIX MD FBPRO CD FPPRO 3) Copy all the files from each disk into the \DYNAMIX\FBPRO subdirectory. To do this, follow the steps below: Insert Game Disk #1 into your A drive Type: COPY A:*.* C:\DYNAMIX\FBPRO Repeat the above steps for Game Disk #2, #3, and #4 NOTE: The above steps assume you are installing from your A: drive and installing to your C: drive. Please substitute the appropriate drive letters and path if needed. 4) From the \DYNAMIX\FBPRO directory, type in the following commands: MD TTM MD STOCK MD CUSTOM MD BOOKS MD LTAPES MD XTAPES 5) Now type: UNCHUNK RESOURCE.000 . NOTE: Remember to include the space and a period between 000 and [ENTER]. 6) Use UNCHUNK again on the remaining files by typing the following commands: UNCHUNK RESOURCE.001 . UNCHUNK RESOURCE.002 . UNCHUNK RESOURCE.003 . NOTE: Remember to type the space and a period between the resource extension number and . NOTE: Be sure to UNCHUNK these resource files in numerical order. If you make a mistake, or if the UNCHUNKed files are in the wrong order, you will need to erase all of the files from the \DYNAMIX\FBPRO subdirectory and follow steps 2 through 5 again. Each command will take several minutes to complete. Wait until the computer has completed each operation before typing the next line. 7) After all resource files have been UNCHUNKed, run the INSTALL program from the \DYNAMIX\FBPRO subdirectory by typing INSTALL at the FBPRO prompt. Check to confirm that the sound and music settings are correct. Choose "ACCEPT THESE CHOICES" from the options in the program. Follow all other prompts as they appear. 8) Exit the INSTALL program and start the simulation. If the game works correctly, delete all resource files (RESOURCE.000-003). Consult your DOS manual for information on how to accomplish this step if you need further assistance. If you continue to experience any problems, or if you have any questions concerning any of the above steps, our technical support team will be more than happy to assist you. See the Troubleshooting section of your manual for information on how to contact our technical support services. ------------------------------------------------------------------ II MIDI-compatible Sound Cards If you have a MIDI-compatible sound card, the INSTALL program will default to Roland support. You must change this in order to get proper sound support for your card. ------------------------------------------------------------------ III FPSUPDAT Utility To use leagues and plays from the original Front Page Sports: Football with Football Pro, you must use the FPSUPDAT utility. To do this, go to the directory to which you have installed Football Pro, and type: FPSUPDAT [Drive:][path] If no drive or path is specified, all leagues and plays in the Football Pro directory will be updated. If a drive is specified, but no path, all leagues and plays on the specified drive will be updated. NOTE: You must have a colon (:) after the drive letter. If a path is specified, all leagues and plays in the specified directory AND its subdirectories will be updated. We recommend that you update your game plans with the new 64 play format after you have updated your plays by going into the Game Plan Editor and building a new game plan from your updated plays. ------------------------------------------------------------------ IV Keeping a Play-by-Play Log An additional command line option has been added since the manual was printed. Starting the program with HIKE -L will save a log of all the play-by-play information from the most recent game you play or sim. This is simply the "before" and "after" text shown in the replays with the box scores inserted at half time and at the end of the game. This log is in a text file called PLAY.LOG which you can view with any ASCII text editor. The program will create this log when playing an Exhibition game, or when playing or simulating a League game (although not when Fast Siming a League game.). In a full 15 minute quarter game, this file may grow to up to 80K or more so be sure you have enough hard disk room before you use this option. If you save a game in progress, then resume the game later the log will be continued, IF you again start the program with the -L option. This log file can contain only one game at a time. Each time you start a new game, the log is overwritten. To save multiple logs, simply rename the PLAY.LOG file to another name before you start your next game with the -L option. ------------------------------------------------------------------ V Notes on Gameplay You may also call a time out on the playcalling screen by pressing and holding button B then pressing button A. This is a quick way to call a time out instead of clicking on the TIME OUT button. The Coaching Profile situation number is listed both in the play-by- play text that follows each play, and by the team name on the scoreboard of the playcalling screen. This allows you to follow along on a print out of your profile, for example, to see how your coaching skills are working. The STOPCLOK play has been added to each group of special teams plays to make it easier to find. In addition to Strength (ST), Discipline (DI) is a very important rating for Kickers and Punters. It affects their accuracy. ------------------------------------------------------------------ VI Notes on the Play, Game Plan, and Coaching Profile Editors Over 1,000 (one thousand!) stock plays are included in Football Pro. In general, the names of the plays give you clues to what kind of play it is as follows: Some plays have names that use the following convention: FxxyyTTT: F indicates that the formation has been "flipped"; xx is a two-letter code for the starting formation. (See the formation list below.); yy is the formation that the play shifts into. Not all plays shift into a new formation. If an F appears in front a play that shifts like this, BOTH formations are flipped; TTT is a two or three letter code to indicate the play type. For example, a Pass Short Right play would appear as PSR while a Run Middle would be RM. Example: FIF3WPSM is a Pass Short Middle play that starts in a flipped I-formation and shifts to a flipped triple wing. Other plays use this convention: FxxxxTTT#S: F indicates the formation has been flipped; xxxx is a code of up to four letters to indicate the formation. If there is a shift, this is the formation the play shifts to; TTT is the same as above; # is the number of the play. There may be as many as five or six plays of the same formation and type; S indicates a shift. Example: FPSPLL2S is the second Pass Long Left play that shifts into a flipped pro-set formation. Formation codes: IF I-formation ST Standup IS I-slot OP, OPP NE Near Opposite SG Shotgun NB Near blue PS Pro-set 3W Triple wing SP Spread DW Double wing 3WRI 3 WR, I-formation There are six types of stock Game Plans and Coaching Profiles. The first three characters of a Plan or Profile name indicate offense (OFF) or defense (DEF). The next two letters tell the type of Plan or Profile: PA Pass Aggressive RA Run Aggressive PB Pass Balanced RB Run Balanced PC Pass Conservative RC Run Conservative The last character is a number. For Game Plans, the number simply indicates which Plan it is - there are six plans of each type, numbered 1 to 6. For example, the OFFRC5 is the Offensive Run Conservative #5 Plan. For Profiles, it indicates for which half the Profile was designed. For example: the Profile OFFPA2 is an offensive Pass Aggressive Profile for the second half. There is one Profile of each type for each half. If you are looking at the STOCK directory from DOS, .PLN files are Plans and .PRF files are Profiles. Should you decide that you do not like one of the stock Profiles (which are used by the computer teams), you may change it by creating a new one, then copying that new Profile to the STOCK directory and renaming it with the name of the Profile you wish to replace. You should preserve the original stock profile to something like OFFPA1.OLD, then name your replacement profile OFFPA1.PRF. Your replacement MUST use the same name, and MUST be in the STOCK directory or the game may not work properly. When saving plays, the play type is determined by the radio button on the Save Play dialog box. The play type determines how the play will be used by the Coaching Profile during a game. Sometimes you may want to include a play in a Game Plan that you only want the profile to use in a very specific situation. In this case, save the play using the Specific play type (which is not available to the Coaching Profile), then add the play to situations in which it should be used. For example: You design a play in which two receivers run routes right down the sidelines, and go out of bounds when they catch the ball. You only want to use this play in a "hurry-up" offense type of situation, but NOT during "regular" time: down by 4-7 points late in the half. If you saved the play as a regular Pass type, it might be called at any point in the game. Save it as a Specific play, then create a Profile that calls this play when you want to use it, such as only in the last 2 minutes on 3rd downs and 2-5 yards to go when behind by 4-7. Directories in Football Pro can only display up to 512 files. Any additional files in a directory will not be visible in any Load dialog box, although the files will still be there. If are going to create more than 512 plays in the Play Editor you may wish to create subdirectories for the plays and spread your plays out there, such as \PASSLONG or \RUNLEFT, etc.. ------------------------------------------------------------------ VII Notes on League Play We have included two single-season leagues with players who are members of the NFL Players Association (NFLPA).These leagues are NFLPA92 and NFLPA93. These are single season leagues only, which means that once you have played through a full season with either of these leagues, the personnel on the teams may have changed as the teams made trades and signed free agents during the season. You may restore these leagues to their original default status by copying all the league files from Disk #1, which contains them in an uncompressed format. For example, after playing through the entire season of the NFLPA93 league, you want to try it again. First, delete the NFLPA93.* files from your Football Pro directory on your hard drive. Then to copy the 1993 league to your hard drive, change to your Football Pro directory, insert Disk #1 in drive A: and type COPY A:NLFPA93.* [Enter] You may also create a Career league, of course, and choose to fill it with the teams from one of the NFLPA leagues. If you compare the rosters of teams in the NFLPA93 league with those of teams in your favorite real-world professional league, you may notice some of the names of players have been changed in Football Pro., or that others are missing. This is because some players are not available to license through the NFLPA and have their own special arrangements with the league. Other players, such as unsigned rookie draftees are also not covered by the licensing agreement. Our agreement does not permit us to use the names of players who are not NFLPA members. Feel free to edit the names of any players.you wish. Football Pro was sent into production shortly before the final rosters for the teams was set, so there may be slight variations in the real world league and Pro. For the most parts, the rosters are as accurate as we could keep track of during the busy summer of free agency and trading. How the NFLPA Ratings work in Football Pro: We have assigned the players a subjective rating in each of the 8 skill ratings. We determined these ratings to approximate the performance of the real players with the way they should realistically act in Football Pro. You could, for example, make the fastest man in the NFL a 99 on his SP rating, but it wouldn't be very realistic in Football Pro. He might actually be rated around a 91 or 92, which works best for the simulation. You can, of course, edit him to be a 99 to see what happens...that is half the fun of the game! Some ratings are relative, and some are absolute. In general, you should use the ratings to compare players at the same position. For example, a QB with an ST rating of 84 is not necessarily stronger than a DL rating of a 65. QB's use their ST rating for passing, while DL's use their's for rushing and tackling. The ratings we assigned will approximate the players' performances during the 1992 year. So, you will see Sterling Sharpe, Andre Rison, etc. as having some of the best HA and SP ratings in the league, Steve Young and Dan Marino as the best ST, IN, and DI, etc. Keep in mind that Football is a team sport, though, and just because a QB has some of the best individual ratings, he may not be the league leader in many categories if his offensive linemen don't block well. Also, since Football Pro gives you tremendous range in the coaching profile and game plans you call, you may not, of course, acheive exactly the same results as the players acheived in real life. For example, some players who excel in the run and shoot offense may not get the same results in run-oriented offense. As the coach, that is up to you to do! Try to match the plays and profiles of your favorite team and coach, and see what kind of results you get with the players. You can also try scenarios like "how many sacks would a team with Pat Swilling, Sam Mills, Junior Seau and Cortez Kennedy get..." or "Could Troy Aikman lead another team to the championship? One without Emmitt Smith on it perhaps...?". And, of course, you may edit the player ratings. So if you don't agree with what is there, adjust them however you wish. Ratings are the key to how the players perform, so experiment with them and see what results you get. All-Pro Game The All-Pro Game may be played at any time during the season (or even several times during the season). It is an Exhibition game, which means that stats generated during an All-Pro game do not get added to the player's totals, and injuries in the game are not recorded. The program selects players for each team in an All-Pro game on the basis of ratings and performance as reflected in the League Leaders list. You may print the rosters out before the game. If you are playing in a league with normal sims (as opposed to fast sims), you may quit (and save) a simulation in progress with the key, just as if you were playing the game. FastSims and saved games In fast sim leagues only, if you play part of a game, save it, then choose to simulate the rest of it the game will be restarted and fast-simmed as if the game had never been started. After that game is resolved, you will need to go to the league schedule and press simulate to do the remaining games for that week. ------------------------------------------------------------------ VIII Remote Leagues Remote leagues are very popular on some of the online information services, such as Prodigy, America OnLine, CompuServe, and GEnie. In a remote league, one user is the Commissioner, and other users play their games on their own machines all across the country. We have added two command line options for use in remote leagues. If you are the Commissioner, start the program with the command HIKE - XC. This adds a button labelled "Commissioner" to the League Schedule screen. Pressing this button generates a file called GAMExxyy.IN for each game in the current week's schedule. "xx" is a two-digit number for the current week. (For example, the first week would be 01.) "yy" is a two-digit number for the game. The top game listed on the League Schedule screen is 01. The last game listed (in a 18- team league, for example, with nine games each week is 09. A GAMExxyy.IN file should be sent to one of the users in each game. (In our office league, we send it to the user who is the HOME team.) For example, if Philadelphia is visiting Green Bay in week number 2, send the GAME0207.IN file to the owner of Green Bay. Send the other owner's their corresponding GAMExxyy.IN files, depending on who will actually play the game on their machine. The remote user should copy that file to the directory to which Football Pro has been installed, then start the program with the HIKE -XP command. After the game has been completed, the program will create a GAMExxyy.OUT file, which should be sent back to the Commissioner. With the powerful Coaching Profile Editor, the Game Plan Editor, and the Play Editor, the visiting team can send a very good representation to the user hosting the game. When the Commissioner receives the GAMExxyy.OUT file, he must copy it into his Football Pro directory, then he can integrate it into the league data files with the command UPSTATS -XC. A few notes about running remote leagues: We recommend that each remote user create a new league and modify one team in it for use in the remote league. (You may also use a team from any existing league.) When you have finished, send the league files to the Commissioner. To copy the league files for a league named MYLEAGUE to a floppy disk, go to the directory where the files are located and type: COPY MYLEAGUE.* A: When the Commissioner receives all of the leagues from the remote users, he should create the remote league by selecting the appropriate teams from each of these leagues. When the remote league is created, he should send these league files out to all remote users. All remote users must keep the league files in the same directory on their hard drive as the Commissioner has it on his machine. For example, if the Commissioner saves MYLEAGUE to a directory called \REMOTELG, all remote users must copy the files to \REMOTELG on their machines. The Commissioner should keep the ownership for all teams owned by remote users as Human, with Computer Manager turned off. The Commissioner will be entering all roster moves submitted by remote users. If you are playing a game as a remote user, and your opponent (another remote user), sends you a Profile, Game Plan, or plays for his team to use in the game, these data files must be installed to the same directory on your hard drive as they are on his, or the program may not be able to find them. You are playing a game, and quit (and save) in progress. When you start the program to resume playing the game, you must use the command line option -XP to generate the GAMExxyy.OUT file. When you (as the Commissioner) are using UPSTATS -XC to update the league, you must have a GAMExxyy.IN file for each GAMExxyy.OUT file you are using. For help with this option, log on to your favorite BBS service and find a league to join. Many of our beta testers are "locals" on the large networks and can direct you to a league to join, as well as giving you helpful hints about the game. ------------------------------------------------------------------ IX Printers and Printer Support When printing graphics characters in the Play Editor (when printing out your plays, for example), specific graphic drivers must be used by the computer. Since almost every brand of printer uses its own driver, it is not possible for us to support all the different printers. We have tested on several different models of printers and some have worked, while others have not. All the Epson and HP Laserjet printers we tried function correctly, as well as a variety of other 9-pin and 24-pin dot matrix printers. We did not test on Postscript printers, and had reports from beta testers that some ink jet printers had difficulty. Even if you can't get graphics printing, though, you should still be able to print out most of the statistics and menu screens, either directly to your printer, or to the "print.out" file using the "-f" option, since these are still just ASCII text files. ------------------------------------------------------------------ X Troubleshooting: The FBCHECK Utility When you install Football Pro, a utility called FBCHECK is also put in the directory you installed to. If you suspect the game did not install completely, or you may have some missing files, go the directory you installed to and type "FBCHECK". If you get a message that says some files are missing or the wrong size, try to re- install the game and then run FBCHECK again. If you are still having problems, please see the manual for other troubleshooting tips, or contact Customer Support for help. ------------------------------------------------------------------ XI SmartDrive, and SCSI Drives with Double Buffering Some incompatibility problems may occur when using some versions of SmartDrive with SCSI Drives and double buffering. This may be the problem if you are seeing graphic "garbage" on the screen and the program is running very slowly. We recommend that you create a boot disk which does not use SmartDrive. (See pages 83-86 of the manual for instructions on making boot disks.) There are numerous versions of SmartDrive and other disk caching software available. You may experience some loading problems with certain earlier versions of SmartDrive. If you experience problems related to loading and saving, or extremely slow disk access during gameplay, try a later version of SmartDrive. ------------------------------------------------------------------