Showing posts with label video games. Show all posts
Showing posts with label video games. Show all posts

Friday, December 7, 2012

EA Sports Provides Cool, Yet Completely Unrealistic NHL Simulation


The most popular brand in sports gaming is simulating the entire 2012-2013 season. The results have been questionable to say the least.

By Tyler Piccotti



Since I was a young lad growing up in the humble town of Taylor, Pennsylvania, I’ve been playing NHL video games. It all started with Wayne Gretzky’s 3D Hockey on the Nintendo 64. This was my introduction to virtual hockey. I can remember the cartoonish graphics and the blinking rainbow-colored puck gliding across my television screen. I thought I had found hockey nirvana.
A look at NHL 99
(Photo Courtesy of Brent-Thomas.com)

EA Sports changed all of that.

Starting with NHL 99, I realized I had been missing oh so much. There were actually five skaters per team. Fights looked realistic. The puck was a normal black color. The game’s intro made one want to go lace up skates and hit someone. The soundtrack was awesome. It was the total package.

The games and gaming systems got better and better as the years wore on. AHL teams were added to the lineup. The graphics became more realistic. “Be a Pro” mode let the gamer control his or her own NHL destiny.

You get my point.

This is why I was excited when I found out that ESPN and EA were teaming up to simulate the locked out season. After all, EA had provided me with years of incredible realism. I had every reason to trust this simulation, and I was curious to see how this season would have played out (supposedly).

After nine weeks, however, I am shaking my head.

Now, I’m not saying I am the biggest expert in the world of hockey. However, I’ve watched enough of it over the years to consider myself well-educated. It is for this reason that I am declaring EA’s simulation a complete joke.

Why? Well, let’s look at the evidence.

We’ll start in the Eastern Conference. The two teams atop the East are… the Capitals and Islanders.

No, that’s not a typo. I said the Islanders.

I know John Tavares is already a stud, and the team has some underrated weapons in Matt Moulson and Kyle Okposo…but second in the conference? No way. Washington is out of place at the head of the pack as well. Ovechkin struggled to score goals last season, and the Caps barely squeaked into the playoffs. Speaking of the Islanders, the rest of their Atlantic Division foes are out of the playoffs. That’s right: no Penguins, Devils, Flyers, or Rangers in the top eight.

Meanwhile, the Western Conference looks a little screwed up as well. Both the Stars and Blue Jackets would be playoff bound as of now. Even more egregious is the fact that the Red Wings sit in last place… LAST PLACE! I could never have conceived such a notion, yet I’m supposed to believe this simulation? I don’t think so.

The individual stats are also pretty shocking. Patrick Marleau is on pace to score over 60 goals. His former teammate, Evgeni Nabokov, already has seven shutouts for New York. Meanwhile, the league’s GAA leader is… AHL/NHL yo-yo Braden Holtby.

I’m going to stop there.

Of course, one could argue it’s easy to look at simulated virtual hockey and complain about it. It’s not real after all. Well, I don’t care. This is THE #1 name in sports gaming. The experts at EA should have the formula for ranking teams and players down to a science. Seeing the results of this simulation makes me believe I’ve been duped all these years.

I’m hoping this is just a fluke. Otherwise, the love I have had for hockey games may end up in pieces. Much like the lockout, that would be a downright tragedy.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

NBA Elite Delayed


Monday night, EA Sports announced that they will need to delay the release of their NBA franchise to work out some of the kinks. The game, which usually comes out in October, will be suspended until the holiday season.

(An early screen shot of NBA Elite 11, featuring cover athlete Kevin Durant.)

Peter Moore, the president of EA Sports, says on his blog that the game is taking longer because it is so revolutionary.

"We are going to keep working until we’re certain we can deliver a breakthrough basketball experience," Moore said Monday on his blog.

EA Sports will release a roster update for NBA Live 2010 to cool the franchise faithful until the release of '11.

(The NBA 2K franchise regular outsales EA Sports' franchise.)

This decision is certainly a gamble for the video game company. True, they are overhauling the franchise this year, but their competition - NBA 2K11 - hits stores next Tuesday. The game will also feature Michael Jordan this year, which is sure to increase sales even further.

EA Sports is already running with a silver medal and now they want to start the race later than the gold winner? Dangerous.

- Jeff Laboon

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

No More NCAABB


Let's see, EA Sports Active 2, EA Sports MMA, FIFA 11, Madden NFL 11, NBA Elite 11, NBA Jam, NCAA Football 11, NHL 11, NHL Slapshot, and Tiger Woods PGA Tour 11...

Wait, where is NCAA March Madness 2011? Oh, it's suspended.

That's right, last February, EA Sports announced that their college basketball franchise would be benched for at least 2011 while the company reviews the future of the franchise.


(I wish I had tickets to this game.)

The lack of a 2011 title is especially shocking after EA Sports went to great efforts to make the most authentic video game presentation in recent memory - tapping Dick Vitale, Brad Nessler, Erin Andrews, Gus Johnson, and Bill Raferty for commentary and using authentic ESPN and CBS presentation.

This suspension leaves virtual hoop fans without a college title to play considering that Take Two Interactive discontinued its College Hoops 2k franchise in 2008.

But EA Sports should have learned from Take Two's mistakes. In 2008, Take Two chose first overall pick Greg Oden to grace what was the franchise's last cover. In 2010, EA looked to first overall pick Blake Griffin for its cover athlete.


( EA Sports/the Clippers could not have predicted the future, but the jury is still out on Griffin.)

Both were stud big men coming out of college and both missed most of their rookie season due to injury. Now, they might be the last athletes to grace the cover of competing video game franchises.


- Jeff Laboon