Everybody deserves their own football team

Hattrick is the original online football manager game, and it's free to play. Here you get to create your own club, build the team of your dreams, and compete against hundreds of thousands of real people from all over the globe.

Get your own team - we are always looking for new talent!

Hattrick is a strategic football game - outwit your opponents on the field today, or build a winning long-term strategy. Hattrick is a persistent multiplayer game world and has been online since 1997! It's easy to get started in Hattrick, no downloads are required and you won't need to be constantly online to succeed.The community is a huge part of Hattrick. Check out our lively forums and make friends from around the world.

Selasa, 08 Juni 2010

Stars

1. Stars? Are they important?
Not primarily. Stars tell you something about the individual performance of a player and they allow you to draw comparisons between players playing on the same position. They don't allow you to compare a central midfielder with a defensive forward for example.
Skills matter much more important for your players.

2. I lost my last match, but my team's total number of stars was higher. What happened?
The match ratings are important. You can find them at the bottom of a match report. The number of stars isn't used for the calculation of the matches.
It's not always the best team that will win a match. That would be boring, wouldn't it?
Hattrick has no ambition to reproduce real life football 1:1. You should be aware that some things in Hattrick are completely different from what you happen to know from real life. A 28 year old player might be at the top in real life, but this can be seen as old in Hattrick. A player of that age won't learn much anymore from training.

3. What about stars in the old engine?
The old match engine (abolished since global season 34 for official matches, since global season 35 for all matches) only knew yellow stars. They were an indication for the players' performance at the end of a match (or at the moment of his substitution).

4. How do they work nowadays?
The yellow stars still give you an indication about the player's performance at the end of the match. However, stamina has a higher value these days (for positions on the pitch). This is reflected by the brown stars. Yellow and brown stars give you the average value of the player's performance (for the total time he stood on the pitch).

5. What exactly are stars telling about a player's exhaustion?
Excellent stamina isn't enough to play a match without losing performance.
A linear loss of performance starts at a certain moment, the exact moment is determined through the player's stamina level.

6. Can players recover during a match?
It happens during halftime and right before overtime (which can happen in cup matches and friendlies with cup rules). However, they recover just a tiny little bit. The effect of the rest is therefore soon consumed.

7. Why are there sometimes red and not brown stars?
In some really rare occasions a player's performance at the end of the match is better than his average performance through the match. A positive weather special event can help him compensate his fatigue. You will see red stars in such cases. The average performance is just the amount of yellow stars (unlike the normal case!), whilst the sum of yellow and red stars is the performance at the end of the match.

There is a short overview on the stars' functioning here: (http://digilander.libero.it/arosati76/stars.gif).

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