Pocket Trax is essentially your chooser for in-game music -- as with the console games, you can tab on and off the music selections for personalized playlist of the songs included in the game. With the PSP, EA is taking advantage of the storage space afforded by the 1.8GB UMD by including videos of the song for play on the Pocket Trax menu. For any of the handful of songs that feature music videos, just scroll through to find the video icon and hit a button -- hi-res video pops up on the PSP's widescreen system. And for tracks that don't have a video, EA has included a bunch of WinAmp-style visualizations to give some graphic design to the music playback. These visualizations can even interact with the tunes -- on the EA Pocket Trax tunes we tried with the PSP FIFA, team logos bumped in time to the music or flew across the screen as a screensaver. You can scroll through the different visualization modules while playing by tabbing with the D-Pad.
Pocket Trax will also act as a portable soundtrack for the game -- although the tunes will not be playable in the PSP's Music menu on the XMB dashboard, you can have the system play all the tracks in a row (there isn't a play-all button, but once you're in the Pocket Trax mode, the tunes will play through.) Standard battery saving features, depending on your personal settings, will also kick in or manually available so that you can turn the screen off and toss the system in your backpack to run the game's music as if it's on your own MP3 playlist.
We have some footage of Pocket Trax playing a music video from Glasgow's Dogs Die in Hot Cars, as well as two visualization clips for you to check out Pocket Trax in play. Be sure to put your headphones on and check them out on the links below.