Great friend of the show and founder of the sports video game podcast Adrian Todd Zuniga joins Rich Grisham this week! He discusses his new book Collision Theory which is available April 17 and can be pre-ordered now, his role helping craft Madden’s Longshot mode last year and looking ahead on potential future options for it, his current relationship with sports video games, and more. From 1UP to The Sports Game Guy’s Sports Anomaly, 4th String to Literary Death Match, Mr. Zuniga is well-known for his diverse, entertaining efforts.
Check out the podcast through iTunes for iOS, on Android with the Stitcher app, or with Pocket Casts on iOS, Android, and Windows. The show can also now be found on the recently launched Google Play Music for podcasts. Subscribe and review to help support the show! You can also listen with the streaming player below.
It’s no secret that sports video games have struggled to gain any traction in esports. Competing against and being compared to the real world sports they attempt to simulate, and video game tactics taking precedence over real strategy and coaching decisions, have resulted in general apathy and broadcasts with low viewership numbers. Millions of dollars are being poured into esports initiatives for games like Madden which draw only a few thousand viewers while games like Fortnite have organically found over a million people tuning into individual streams.
The NBA 2K League hopes to change that. Tipping off next month, the league has the backing of the NBA with 17 teams participating in its inaugural season. Also critical to its appeal is that the competition which runs through August is team-based rather than individual. For those reasons it has the best chance to build an engaged audience but it probably isn’t going to happen overnight. For more on where the NBA 2K League is at now and the challenges it faces check out the piece today on Sporting News.
Being first party has its benefits, including faster turnaround time on patches, and that’s been seen already with MLB The Show 18 which has now released two of them within its first two weeks. Changes made in the latest which went out today are fairly minor but it is also believed that issues with the dynamic crowd attendance have been addressed in the update. Read more
The Line Drive is a weekly collection of news, links, deal alerts, and updates that didn’t necessarily warrant their own postings.
♦The Los Angeles Rams are the big winners for Madden NFL 19 due to offseason moves.
♦MLB The Show 18 Review: Gameplay unable to compensate for this year’s drawbacks.
♦Results were wiped out completely from the first Event in MLB The Show 18.
♦USgamer with a piece on the new collection aspect of Diamond Dynasty in The Show.
♦Issues with dynamic attendance in MLB 18 will be addressed in an upcoming patch.
♦MLB Manager 2018 is out now for both iOS and Android with mixed reviews.
♦RBI Baseball 18 has released for iOS devices to some poor early reviews.
♦Details on the first patch since the release of Out of the Park Baseball 19.
♦The NBA 2K League draft is scheduled to take place Wednesday afternoon at 1ET.
♦Details on the latest gameplay patch that went out for EA Sports UFC 3.
♦Details on the gameplay tuner that followed the patch for EA Sports UFC 3.
♦New developer video goes over the swing mechanics for upcoming Golf Club 2019.
♦Still no update on what was supposed to be a brief delay for Casey Powell Lacrosse 18.
♦Details on the latest patch that’s gone live on all platforms for FIFA 18.
♦Details on the new Easter Scramble program in Madden NFL 18 Ultimate Team.
♦Pre-registration has opened for attending this year’s EA Play which runs June 9-11.
♦Microsoft is holding a digital spring sale that runs through April 9.
♦Get your votes in: the Final Four round of the Favorite Game Since 2010 Tournament.
MLB The Show 18 has released and we’ve assembled a small panel to talk all about the game on this episode of the Press Row Podcast. Everything from Diamond Dynasty, Road to the Show, Franchise, gameplay, the removal of modes, predictable trouble with the servers and more is discussed at length.
Check out the podcast through iTunes for iOS, on Android with the Stitcher app, or with Pocket Casts on iOS, Android, and Windows. The show can also now be found on the recently launched Google Play Music for podcasts. Subscribe and review to help support the show! You can also listen with the streaming player below.
Outside of the predictable problems with servers, MLB The Show 18 has had a fairly clean release with only some early mild concerns over trouble fielding balls off the ground, pitch speed seemingly too low for fastballs, and PCI coverage not reaching the edges of the plate. The first patch for the game released today and actually addresses all those things and more.
♦Slight increase to pitching speeds across all gameplay modes.
♦Fielding animation adjustments to catch more balls just outside the marker.
♦Fix to an inaccurate ground rule double call, specific to the bullpen areas of Yankee Stadium.
♦Road to the Show training attribute adjustments to assure pitchers are gaining training points and distributing correctly to secondary pitch types.
♦Fixes to several in-game soft locks online, caused by both users pausing or entering quick menus at the same moment.
♦Fix to an in-game crash involving the button accuracy throw meter online.
♦Visibility improvements to the map in Conquest Mode.
♦Stabilization of select online and offline UI menus, where users were soft locking following certain timing-specific menu navigations.
♦Various other minor bug fixes and adjustments throughout the game.
There hasn’t been much movement over the last six months towards the potential for a return of college video games. For that to happen a new system will have to be put into place that allows collegiate athletes to be paid for their likenesses while retaining eligibility. The Supreme Court’s decision on O’Bannon vs NCAA kept things in limbo, leaving the action brought by attorney Jeffrey Kessler as the next best hope for change.
That case had a major development today as Judge Claudia Wilken – who was also involved in the O’Bannon proceedings – scheduled a trial to begin on December 3. In the earlier case Wilken ruled in favor of O’Bannon having determined the NCAA violated antitrust laws. In doing so she proposed a system that would have allowed athletes to collect money in a trust to be paid out after they had left the school. That part of the ruling, which may have presented an opening to the likes of EA Sports, was overturned by the Supreme Court.
The plaintiffs in the Kessler case (fronted by former football players Martin Jenkins and Shawne Alston) are seeking to prevent the NCAA from being able to restrict athlete benefits to only scholarships, instead allowing them to make money off their names and likenesses. A clear win would not only likely bring EA Sports, conferences and universities back to the table for a college football game but it would have major ramifications on amateur athletics as a whole. Even in that scenario however we’re still looking at being years away from a final resolution considering appeals, plus the development of any game would tack a few more years onto that.
This year sees the return of tennis games to consoles after having gone missing since 2012. Tennis World Tour has looked promising since being first announced almost a year ago despite some fairly rough early footage. Now an official release date has been set of May 22 and a few new feature related details have been revealed. Read more