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ESPN And Electronic Arts Sign 15-Year Deal

acxr is wasted writes "Electronic Arts has dealt another blow to rival Sega by signing a 15-year agreement with ESPN, giving the publisher exclusive video game rights to ESPN branded material. EA has recently faced pressure from popular ESPN-branded Sega titles released at discount prices, prompting their recent deal with the NFL, and failed bid for the NBA."

332 comments

  1. 15 years?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This sort of thing shouldn't be legal.

    1. Re:15 years?!? by timmyf2371 · · Score: 1

      A 15-year contract should be illegal? Shame that would outlaw most mortgages.

      --

      Backup not found: (A)bort (R)etry (P)anic
    2. Re:15 years?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This sort of thing shouldn't be legal.

      One question: Why not?

    3. Re:15 years?!? by extra+the+woos · · Score: 1

      Hate to use the stupid "apples to oranges" cliche but flawed analogy. Plus you can always re-finance your loan through someone else for a better deal!!! /anyway (but yeah, it shouldn't be illegal, but the whole exclusive licensing of something that if you think about it, should REALLY be public domain for that kind of thing)

      I mean you shouldn't be able to use their "logo" and say it's official but you should be able to include the names and stats of the NFL teams and whatnot.

      --
      replacing it with NEW Folger's Crystals! (lets see if they notice the difference)
    4. Re:15 years?!? by tuxter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And Marriages.... Actually, maybe he's right.....

    5. Re:15 years?!? by ArsSineArtificio · · Score: 1
      but you should be able to include the names and stats of the NFL teams and whatnot.

      The names of the NFL teams are valuable registered trademarks. Part of the revenue stream for an NFL franchise is the right to sell merchandise with the name of the team on it (i.e. hats, jerseys, video games, etc.).

      --
      All employees must wash hands before seeking equitable relief.
    6. Re:15 years?!? by MBraynard · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Don't bother explaining. Typical slashdot user - I suppose it's easy to dismiss claims of trademarks and IP when you produce nothing.

      Hell yeah - straight to -1 flame bait for me baby!

    7. Re:15 years?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anonymous' Law of Moderation:

      Any Slashdot post containing "go ahead, mod me down!" will be modded up.

    8. Re:15 years?!? by swv3752 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And these teams have strong armed local, state and federal goverment into funding thier stadiums and enforcing thier trademarks. There is definately an argument that the public should get something back.

      --
      Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
    9. Re:15 years?!? by MyLongNickName · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, the public should tell the NFL where to go. If people are stupid enoug to vote for tax subsidies for billionaires, then they are stupid enough to vote for tax breaks for billionaires without any compensation for themselves.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    10. Re:15 years?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, Marx. The great thing about having a relatively free economy is that we don't need the government to regulate every little thing for us. We have an extremely powerful voice -- our wallets.

    11. Re:15 years?!? by gl4ss · · Score: 2, Insightful

      heheh.. well. the REAL problem here is that will the contract be in effect if ea goes bankrupt or into a hiatus?

      besides.. it doesn't really affect the games quality if it's branded something or not.

      15 year deal is just STUUUUUUPID for espn.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    12. Re:15 years?!? by jrockway · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And this is the problem with America's legal system. EA bought the rights to the players' names. What? You can buy and sell NAMES now? Is the phone book committing trademark infringement by daring to list NFL players?

      Rights to the stadiums? Can I take a picture of a football field and make money, or is that illegal now? No more pictures of skylines... we will have to blur out all non-public property. (Like they do on TV. Every time I watch TV now I feel like I need new glasses because everything recognizable is blurred out. Apparently taking a picture of an object is illegal now...)

      Anyway, this is illegal on the part of the NFL. Just because they have a lot of money doesn't make it right.

      Joe Montana. Bret Farve. Whoever the fuck else plays football.

      Hah. I'm a criminal.

      --
      My other car is first.
    13. Re:15 years?!? by ArsSineArtificio · · Score: 1

      What? You can buy and sell NAMES now?

      Of course you can. Somebody can buy the rights to make "Sid Meier's Civilization". Somebody can buy the rights to manufacture "Nike Air Jordans". Somebody can buy the rights to "NFL Football '06 Featuring Brett Favre".

      Anyway, this is illegal on the part of the NFL.

      Perhaps you could state your basis for this assertion.

      --
      All employees must wash hands before seeking equitable relief.
    14. Re:15 years?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because it gives EA a near monopoly over a large part of the sports genre game industry. Last time I checked monopolies were illegal in the U.S.

    15. Re:15 years?!? by blew_fantom · · Score: 1

      erm, i think its the context that matters. more often than not, the rightful owners of the names are the players themselves. much like how 'madden' is owned by john madden himself but EA uses the name and his 'likeness' to sell their games and john madden gets paid for said usage of his name and likeness.

      as for your criminal wanton behavior, i do believe since joe montana hasn't played football in ages, the statute of limitations has passed, and brett farve is spelt with two T's, not one, so you're not really infringing on the name ;)

    16. Re:15 years?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ---> Spelling Nazi Interlude:

      Its spelled "Vicodin", not "Farve".

    17. Re:15 years?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well it WAS modded to 2 when I posted that. :/

    18. Re:15 years?!? by superpulpsicle · · Score: 1

      OMG this is fucking crazy. Is like Microsoft finally losing to linux. And then Bill Gates paid Linus himself 6 billion dollars to rename Windows to Linux.

      So is EA Madden football now ESPN 2k6? WTF is going on. I say again, WTF is going on with the gaming industry. Someone start another petition! Please, this is monopoly to the extreme getting way out of hand.

    19. Re:15 years?!? by n0nsensical · · Score: 1

      No, monopolies aren't illegal in the U.S. Some monopolies engage in behavior which is illegal.

    20. Re:15 years?!? by MBraynard · · Score: 1
      Guess it didn't work. So three people had to knock it down cause I start with +2 for my valuable opinions.

      The rule is: when you attack /. readers and you are incorrect in your criticism, you are ignored. If you are correct in your criticism, you go to -2 heretic.

      And I do appreciate the mods here validating my pov.

    21. Re:15 years?!? by Soporific · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yes, my name is NFL Football '07-infinity *

      Actually my name is just *

      Pay me...

      ~S

    22. Re:15 years?!? by the-banker · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually that situation is easy to resolve. If EA ever went bankrupt, their rights to use ESPN, NFL etc... would be sold once approved by the bankruptcy court. Rights contracts are an asset just like computers and inventory in this way.

      Honestly, I don't see the issue here - someone can't make a product that says it officially endorsed by me without my permission. If I choose to only give that to one entity, then that is my decision.

      If people don't like it, they should buy other games. It doesn't prevent someone from making another football game - it just prevents them from using trademarked property of the NFL/ESPN.

      Look at it this way - should Microsoft be able to take IE7 and call it FireFox?

    23. Re:15 years?!? by Backdraft32 · · Score: 1

      And its also spelled F A V R E not F A R V E, so you really not infringing there...

    24. Re:15 years?!? by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      it would not be easy to resolve, the rights would probably end up being owned someone not giving a rats ass about it - or what's more usual, the rights would end up somewhere where nobody even knows who owns them.

      you see, computer game licenses/rights have regularly ended up in a limbo like that.

      of course it never REALLY matters in the end, fallout paid homage to wastelands - but not in official name. there's lots of similar examples.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    25. Re:15 years?!? by TheGavster · · Score: 1

      What irritates me is when the *public* property requires a licensing fee. In Shrek 2, there is a credit to the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce because there is a computer generated shot of a hill with giant white block letters on it (spelling Far Far Away, not even like a spoof on 'Hollywood').

      --
      "Because Science" is one step from "Because old book". Try "Because of my experiment testing my falsifiable assertion".
    26. Re:15 years?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Look at it this way - should Microsoft be able to take IE7 and call it FireFox?

      No, but technically Microsoft could take FireFox and call it IE7.

    27. Re:15 years?!? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      This sort of thing shouldn't be legal

      ESPN and EA... too companies and their investors, doing what they want with their own companies. What I hear when I hear someone complain about that is: "Why can't I produce anything valuable enough that someone wants to pay me to do it for the next 15 years?"

      Jelousy. It's even uglier on a nerd.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    28. Re:15 years?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Come on man, its not an issue of jealousy, if your a football fan, you can agree ESPN 2k5 was the best football game you have ever played. The fact that EA is eliminating its competition by stealing contracts and making exclusive deals is something that should be looked at as a problem. If this was Microsoft everyone in the world would have their panties in a bunch! The fact is EA is being a real big fag on this one, anyone who celebrates the freedom of choice and has played both companies titles can tell you how upsetting news this is! Sega provided us with such good sports games, in terms of presentation and gameplay, EA gets reviewed based on their gift baskets to reviewers. I havent played a good EA sports game in years....

    29. Re:15 years?!? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Well, then, if you're right, the output will suck, and they won't sell bupkiss. That will surely all sorts of performance clauses in the contract to kick in, and kick them out. Don't sweat it.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  2. EA and Microsoft? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Seems like a match made in heaven to me. Nothing like some good ol' fashioned monopolising.

    1. Re:EA and Microsoft? by DrLZRDMN · · Score: 1

      that would be douplising.

    2. Re:EA and Microsoft? by PoprocksCk · · Score: 1

      Damnit, another company to steal my consumer surplus.

      I like consumer surplus and I want my share. So stop hogging, Microsoft and Electronic Arts and all you other monopolists out there! Jeez!

    3. Re:EA and Microsoft? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      grandparent douplized! (see two posts down)

    4. Re:EA and Microsoft? by DrLZRDMN · · Score: 1

      sorry it would actualy be do-op-olizing. Heh, that dosen't actualy sound too bad.

  3. what's next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Release a smallpox infected Madden 2006 and call it manifest destiny?

  4. Microsoft by jnguy · · Score: 0, Redundant

    *sigh* It looks like we have another big bully that is more interested with making money, instead of delivering good products to consumers and competing with other companies. I smell antitrust.

    1. Re:Microsoft by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

      ...

      Just don't buy EA sports games? Does a game [say football or hockey] strictly need real "pro teams" to make it fun?

      Of course like windows most consumers are serfs that buy whatever commercials tell them to so they will buy into EA games...

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
    2. Re:Microsoft by mindstrm · · Score: 1

      For the majority of players, yes.

      A lot of sports fans like sports games, because they already know the strategies, the teams, and the players. Being able to use real team names, logos, and data is a HUGE sales boost.

    3. Re:Microsoft by EvilSS · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Don't blame EA for this. They are looking after their own interestes (as any company should do in a matter like this). Blame ESPN and the NFL for agreeing to these deals.

      --
      I browse on +1 so AC's need not respond, I won't see it.
    4. Re:Microsoft by hal2814 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I thought that Madden 64 did a good job without NFL logos or player names. I'm pretty sure that most people buying an American fooball game know that Red, Back, and White team called "Atlanta" is the Atlanta Falcons. They also have a pretty good idea that the "7" guy lined up at quarterback is Michael Vick. You can keep the strategies, teams and players without the logos.

    5. Re:Microsoft by Jozone · · Score: 1

      I agree, at the end of the day EA only proposed these deals, ESPN and EA were the ones who signed on to them, and as always money talk$.

    6. Re:Microsoft by jnguy · · Score: 1

      The same way Microsoft simply proposes to computer vendors that they not sell anything else... or else...?

    7. Re:Microsoft by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Does a game need real teams? No, not necessarily. But there is a certain something to playing your favorite teams, as your favorite player. A game can be successful without a license, but it won't be the same.

    8. Re:Microsoft by necrognome · · Score: 1

      In this case, EA's interests conflict with gamers' (we want choice). So yes, it is well and good that we f'ing blame them.

      --


      Let's get drunk and delete production data!
    9. Re:Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hell yeah. Let's rise up and buy a bunch of games that they release. You know, like we did last time EA did something that pissed us off. That showed 'em.

    10. Re:Microsoft by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

      "... but it won't be the same."

      Yeah they'll be original... oops...

      Lots of video games aren't based in reality. That's usually a good thing since they're a diversion. Sure "real teams" is a nice touch but I personally wouldn't care.

      To me it's about the reflexes and/or strategy.

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
    11. Re:Microsoft by BlueCup · · Score: 1

      Yes, we want choice... but why should they try and help us out? They exist for one reason. To make money. Companies that try and exist for any other reason collapse before we know their names. I'm a huge fan of Sega's sports games, and think that they're better. That being said, I don't blame EA for their decision... to quote Ray Kroc (Founder of McDonalds) on how he dealt with competitors -

      If they were drowning to death, I would put a hose in their mouth.

      Is it a good thing? No. Is their a better way right now? No. Hate them all you want... but as far as business goes, they made a very profitable decision, and I doubt they care what you think.

      --
      WANNAWIKI Wannawiki WannaWiki WANNAWIKI!
    12. Re:Microsoft by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

      How do EA's interests conflict with gamers'?

      - Gamers want good games.
      - EA wants to make good games because thats what gamers want and then EA will make money. If EA succeeds, people buy their games, and everyone's happy. If EA fails, people don't buy their games and EAs unhappy and out of business, but gamers will turn elsewhere to whoever succeeded in place of EA.

    13. Re:Microsoft by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

      Why "blame" anyone??

      ESPN and NFL made deals which clearly they benefit from, or they wouldn't have made them...

    14. Re:Microsoft by katamerry_damatree · · Score: 1

      No, I do blame EA. Since Madden outpaced Joe Montana Football on the Genesis, this battle was waged on the electronic field, not through exclusivity clauses.

      Unlike some, I'm not going to say they haven't made a good game in the past 4 years- Tiger Woods 2002 was loaded with innovation beneath its EA Sports trendiness- and that's ignoring SSX or the original Def Jam. But what happened to the EA that blew Sega's Mario Lemieux Hockey off the ice with the premiere of NHL Hockey? Back then it was the other companies (except for Tecmo's original efforts) that emphasized style over substance- remember Nintendo's Mode-7 NFL Football?

      Now EA's more concerned about movie endorsements and selling a $59 "collector's pack" with linebackers that start wheezing if you shift them. Sega jumps back on the field for a post-Dreamcast showdown and EA flees to their contracts.

      When Namco's Tekken 4 was running on inertia from Tag and otherwise sucking quite well, Sega released VF 4 Evo, tuned to the hilt, at $19. Namco learned, put some effort into 5, and will be bundling a polished version of Tekken 1 with the PS2 version. If EA wanted to release a fighting game they'd sign a 20 year exclusive contract on breasts and throw their day care kids into crunch time.

      Neither ESPN nor the NFL care. Horrid games have been released under both licenses. And despite what others are saying, this isn't going to cause an influx of originality with more Mutant Leage Footballs or Outlaw Golfs. The first was made *by* EA in addition to their Madden games; the latter is hardly a competitor to ... well, anything. They're irrelevant. The point is that there's a huge market in actual Earth sports rather than returning to the 2600 era of The Generic Platonic Concept of Football Made Playable Electronically!, EA knows it, and they don't plan on winning it through making a better game.

      When people say they don't like corporations, This Is Why.

      (well, and long hours/low pay ... but we all know where EA stands on that issue!)

    15. Re:Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "Atlanta" is the Atlanta Falcons. They also have a pretty good idea that the "7" guy lined up at quarterback is Michael Vick.
      What's an Atlanta Falcon, who's Michael Vick and what the hell is the job of a quarterback? Overpaid urchins, that's what they are.

      :)

      I haven't played a sports game since Winter Games on the C64 (it broke my joystick, it did), and I have no intention of ever doing so again.

    16. Re:Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But NFL are only looking into their best interest (read management income). Isnt it fun that sports economics are more about trademark licensing than actual events. If you dont like this, use your money and voice to change the system, if you want that, but you dont becuase youre a consumer whore.

    17. Re:Microsoft by ifwm · · Score: 1

      You're clearly not a dedicated sports fan. You may claim to be, but you're not. Your comments verify this.

      Actually PLAYING as your team is entertaining in a way that more "original" (how original can a 100 year old sport be?) games can't capture.

      "Sure "real teams" is a nice touch but I personally wouldn't care."
      "To me it's about the reflexes and/or strategy"

      Ok, might as well get this over with. You're not the norm. What the game is about to you is meaningless, because the vast majority of gamers who play sports titles don't have your opinion, but instead want the extra realism. They want a game that is good to play, but ALSO has the license. Anything less is just Dr. Chek.

    18. Re:Microsoft by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

      They want whatever the commercial tells them they want. As I recall correctly they did sell pong machines in the 70s/80s.

      That's why they're serfs. Let's see 20$ realistic football game with made up team names or the EA NFL 2k5 ultra-gourmet-quality-licensed 40$ title...

      Well EA has three times as many commercials. Therefore I want the EA game. Even though it costs twice as much and has the SAME GAME PLAY.

      Look at excitbike/atv/waverace games. They introduce some brand names here and there but largely the make up the tracks, people, etc.

      Do people care? Answer: not yet.

      Until they license an ATV leagues competitors likeness to EA then "ATV 2k6 super-road" comes out.

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
    19. Re:Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet another post from someone who feels pious and above all because he hates sports. You are all taking the geek thing a little too far, my friends. No one gives a rip that you haven't played a sports game, and you never will, or that you have no knowledge of sports whatsoever. Sorry to burst your ego bubble.

  5. Did EA also buy Slashdot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because they sure seem to get a lot of coverage here. Is this really front page material?

    1. Re:Did EA also buy Slashdot? by spac3manspiff · · Score: 2, Funny

      Our Overlords are just making sure we know:
      EA==M$
      M$==The Devil

  6. eh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't this some kind of anti-competitive practice?
    i.e., when does this become illegal?

  7. Ehh by damicatz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Sounds like they are using Microsoft-esque tatics now. How long will it be before the DOJ gets on their case? Oh well, this doesn't change my stance on EA. They haven't produced a decent game in over 5 years.

    1. Re:Ehh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      EA will tell you that's because for the last five years they haven't risked doing any innovative games -- more money to be made with clones, rehashes, and sequels.

      At least, that's what they told me.

    2. Re:Ehh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Burnout 3 is teh r0x0rz

    3. Re:Ehh by prockcore · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Oh well, this doesn't change my stance on EA. They haven't produced a decent game in over 5 years.

      If you mean published a decent game, you're wrong. In fact, I'm playing Burnout 3 right now, and loving it.

      If you mean developed a decent game.. well that's another story.

    4. Re:Ehh by ATN · · Score: 0

      Yeah ticks me off that they bought Free Radical. If you buy tallent you'll produce something decent. Perfect example microsoft and bungie. But after the first game, the products go downhill. Perfect example microsoft and bungie :)

    5. Re:Ehh by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I just hate them for buying out Westwood. I wanted a sequel to NOX, dammit.

      --
      ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
    6. Re:Ehh by aztektum · · Score: 1
      How long will it be before the DOJ gets on their case?

      Based upon how the MS thing went, could be 2009 before that happens. Of course it depends on who puts up enough cash for the elections in 2008.

      --
      :: aztek ::
      No sig for you!!
    7. Re:Ehh by jr87 · · Score: 1

      how about just a decent Command and Conquer game?
      EA really tanked that series for me..

    8. Re:Ehh by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

      1) So what's "Microsoft-esque tactics"? Making smart business decisions that are mutually beneficial financially between two private corporations? Sorry, but that happen THOUSANDS of times a day.

      And not just in the games industry, LOTS of others too...from the food products industries, shipping industries, car manufacturers, phone companies, media networks, dairies, book retailers both online and off...etc.etc.etc.

      Doing such is typically just plain smart business practice, where hopefully both parties will benefit (that's the idea, or neither one would agree to the deal!).

      2) Haven't produced a decent game?? They haven't? Sorry, beg to differ. They've published most of the best selling games over the past years. Ever hear of Battlefield 1942? Ever hear of Madden 200x, FIFA 200x, NHL 200x? The LotR games... The Sims games...Burnout and Need for Speed...The Medal of Honor games...the SSX games...the DefJam games...

      Look on metacritic, how many of EA's games are "in the green"...that comment is just a joke. There's a reason why they sell the most games.

    9. Re:Ehh by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

      Just 3 examples from the last 5 years:
      SSX
      Battlefield 1942
      The Sims

      Still think that?

    10. Re:Ehh by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

      DOJ would be going after Nintendo or Sony long before they go after EA. A vertical monopoly is a lot different than a lateral monopoly.

    11. Re:Ehh by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

      What makes you think EA buying Westwood is the reason a sequel to Nox wasn't made? Perhaps it was Westwood's decision?

    12. Re:Ehh by unclethursday · · Score: 1
      NHL 200x?

      Arcadey crap. Increase the difficulty means: 1. Your players skate slower, the computer controlled team skates faster. 2. Your goalie gets dumber (lets through the easiest of shots ALL the time). 3. If the CPU team touches you when you have the puck, you lose the puck; you have to send them off their skates to get it off of their players.

      Sorry, if I want arcade hocky, then I'll go to EA. If I want a more realistic game, I'll stick with Sega's NHL games. I haven't looked back since NHL 2K3.

      Look on metacritic, how many of EA's games are "in the green"...that comment is just a joke. There's a reason why they sell the most games.

      There's a reason, yes, but it isn't because they make the best games. It's blind brand loyalty. Madden could be exactly the same for a few years in a row, with just roster changes, and it will still sell like mad. Why? Because people are used to buying Madden. They'll buy it every year just because it's Madden. Even if they don't conciously think they're buying it because of brand loyalty, they'll still run out and buy it every year like the sheeple they are.

      It wouldn't matter if tons of reviewers panned Madden and said to go out and buy GameCompanyX's NFL game because it was so much better... Madden would still rule the roost because it is Madden.

      The only game series you mentioned that they put out that was even good was Def Jam Vendetta and Fight for NY. Well, I never tried The Sims or Battlefeild 1942, but of the others (which I have played), the only good series is the Def Jam series, and that has more to do with AKI developing it than EA publishing it.

    13. Re:Ehh by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

      Usually companies are acquired by larger ones when they start to slip slide down...

    14. Re:Ehh by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

      How did "tank" the series and not Westwood?

      BTW, smaller companies are bought by larger usually when they start to slip or slide...

    15. Re:Ehh by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

      Ok, so 1) you don't like a game that many others did...

      Then, 2) You say it's all brand loyalty...Trust me, it's not. Look at the reviews on Metacritic.com . They're from like 30 different reviewers, this is not just 1 or 2 people saying something, this is a large general consensus on somethings quality (comparable to other games). In any case, players might select games out of brand loyalty, but not reviewers almost at all.

      3) You say you haven't even played The Sims (the best selling PC game of all time) or BF1942 (one of the biggest selling and most award winning games of the year), and yet you turn around and say that EA's published all crap. Hmmm...right.

    16. Re:Ehh by unclethursday · · Score: 1
      1. Yes, I also loathed Fable, as well. And despite what Meta-can't-even-have-reviews-for-Madden-2005-yet-c ritic says, reviewers (and I am a game reviewer) also did not like NHL 2005 as much this year. If you think a 77% (75% on Metacritic) is a game that is "critically acclaimed," you're insane. Critically acclaimed would end up in the top 10%-15% (max) of scoring as an average.

      You say it's all brand loyalty...Trust me, it's not. Look at the reviews on Metacritic.com .

      FUCK METACRITIC. Metacritic doesn't even have a freaking score for Madden 2005 yet. GameRankings has an average based on 31 reviews. Fuck Metacritic.com about game review scores. GR is where it is at, it has reviews for a game that's been out for MONTHS that Metacritic doesn't, and has reviews for hundreds upon hundreds of games from hundreds of review sources.

      3) You say you haven't even played The Sims (the best selling PC game of all time) or BF1942 (one of the biggest selling and most award winning games of the year), and yet you turn around and say that EA's published all crap. Hmmm...right.

      Sorry, I'll go out and upgrade my PC just so I can play 2 games I'm not all that interested in playing, just for you and your trusting in a site that can't even find reviews for Madden 2005 ass. I doubt my little 8 MB video card can handle these games. My iBook probably could, with it's 32 MB Radeon 9200 Mobility, but I use my iBook for more productive things than the Sims or Battlefield 1942.

      It is quite possible that I don't really review PC games, isn't it? In fact, I've only ever reviewed 1 PC/Mac game, and that was Unreal Tournament 2004 for the Mac... but I had to uninstall it to free up room for more productive things on me iBook. And my console game reviews take up a lot of my gaming time, so I don't have the opportunity to go out and buy the Sims for the consoles, even if I was interested in playing it.

      That's the nice thing about what I review... I get to pick and choose what I want to review, unless I get the games for free from the publishers, then I damn well need to review them in case they have games I want in the future. So, unless EA decides the site I work for is worthy of their notice, I don't forsee myself getting The Sims or The Sims Online, or The Sims 2 anytime soon. In the meantime, I'll review the EA games I feel like buying and reviewing, and the last one was Def Jam Fight for NY. The rest of their crap I'll try, but I'm not buying it unless it is good enough by my standards.

      And 99% of EA's games are simply not good enough for my standards.

    17. Re:Ehh by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

      LOL...this is a joke, right? You've got to be kidding and just trolling now, right?

      1) Show me where I used the words "critically acclaimed". Go ahead. I'll wait. Take your time.

      2) You're whining about one game reviews site over another??? THAT'S your major complaint? If so you COMPLETELY missed the point that was attempted to make. This site, that site, screw it, any site with 20+ reviews from professional reviewers, I don't give a damn, because it's completely and utterly beside the point.

      3) And then you go off on some rant about how you don't like computer games, etc., that just makes you look, well, I'm sorry, silly. You admittedly are alienated from a vast portion of the computer and video games market, missing some of the best titles year after year, and then you start going off on some rant based on your knowledge games?

      Too funny, my man.

    18. Re:Ehh by Photon+Ghoul · · Score: 1

      The publisher calls the shots on what is produced or not. They have all of the power when it comes to those decisions. It's not necessarily wrong, either. Since the publisher is putting up all of the money, they should have that right, correct?

    19. Re:Ehh by unclethursday · · Score: 1
      1.You saying "critically acclaimed". Deny it, please.

      2. No, they also do "weighted scoring." They give more credence to some reviewers/publications over others. GR gives an average based on the scores alone. Not every site/publication is counted towards the main score, until those sites/publication meet the requirements of GR. But no site is given more "weight" than any other, because there's 2 averages listed for games, the total average (every site listed), and the main average (those counted towards a game's main average score). As more sites/magazines meet the minimum requirements, they get put into the main average category.

      On Metacritics, it seems if they like a reviewer or publication, then that person's/publication's reviews are given a bigger standing in their ratings. Hardly a good way to make decisions about purchases of anything when the meta-review site might take reviews by a person or publication that you don't like and bumps up their importance to make you think that the product is better or worse for you than it may be.

      3. No, I'm not admitedly alienated from anything. I'm admitedly not rolling in enough disposible income to upgrade my PC every 6 months to play the latest and greatest games with all their whiz-bang effects. I have no desire to spend $400 on a video card every 6 months to a year, nor the extra flow to do so willy nilly. I have no desire to upgrade my computer when the majority of the programs I use won't really take advantage of the upgrades; and when I do decide to upgrade, I do it with what I need to do in mind, not being able to play PC games. I needed portability, I got a 14" iBook, not the more expensive 17" PowerBook I could have gone for and just not had any money for an extra few weeks. When I got my last PC I got it with enough RAM and CPU speed and HDD space to get me through for what I needed it to do for a few years. And, whattaya know? A few years later it is still working for what I need it to do.

      PC games and their getting more outrageous by the day minimum specs are not something I care to look at, because I simply refuse to spend my money on upgrades to my PC just for the games. If I upgrade my PC, it's because I need it upgraded for other things. My consoles can support me for my gaming for years at a time, whereas a PC I might buy now will need something new in it in as short as a few months after purchase if I want to play Half-Doom-26 at 1600x1200 with 24x anti-aliasing and 12.9 surround sound implanted in my head.

      Would I look into them more if I had more disposible income? Yes. But, I don't have it to work with right now, so I'm not going to be phased if I happen to miss out on Doom 3 or Half-Life 2 or World of WarCraft. Eventually I'll get a PC that can run them, and by that time, the games will be in the bargian bin.

    20. Re:Ehh by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

      To an extent, sure. But the way you're sort've making it sound is all wrong. It's not like the publisher down from Olympus says, "Yee shall make this now, damnit!" and the studio goes "Oh yes, my gods"...

      No, it's much more folks from both sides sit down and say "What would be good to do next? Another Nox game?...eh, I suppose we could, but the last one _______ (insert reason here)...well we could make another C&C game....yeah, that'd probably be better"...

      etc.

    21. Re:Ehh by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 0, Troll

      1) Want me to?...Sure I will. I deny it. Wanna know why? WRONG THREAD. See, in language, there's this little thing call context, which you seem not to grasp.

      But hey, I'll give you some lee-way and say that: EVEN IF you were correct, do you know what "critically acclaimed" means? Check www.m-w.com and look up both words. It's a meaningless term in most semantic uses.

      So you're mistaken times two.

      2) Not worth replying to...You are debating about making the first cut of the cake vertically or horizontally, as the best way to wind up with equal squares for everyone.

      3) Pretty much the same. You say how bad and terrible computer games are and how everyone who plays them must be rich and so no, you are not going to know about this that and the other thing, then you turn around and say you are not isolated from a larger percent of the games market.

      I don't even know how to begin to discuss that, it's so preposterous.

    22. Re:Ehh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dont see how the context is different. He's calling you out on saying EA games are critically acclaimed, and you're saying you didn't, even though you did. But you're saying you didn't, even when the quote is essentially "EA games are critically acclaimed"

      Sorry, you lose.

    23. Re:Ehh by notbob · · Score: 0

      F'scking trolls....

      You sounded intelligent to start but wow you went to moron status quick. Time to add you to the lame filter, thanks for playing, but buh bye...

    24. Re:Ehh by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      And Microsoft made Halo, eh?

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    25. Re:Ehh by Renaissance+2K · · Score: 1

      As sad as it sounds, I don't think the DOJ would care about a video game trust suit, since the gaming industry gets about as much respect as Anna Nicole Smith at a cookie factory.

    26. Re:Ehh by damicatz · · Score: 1

      Ok I'll admit that Battlefield was a good series. Sims 2 however was not. Sure it had better graphics but they purposly left out features so they could fill them in with expansion packs. Not to mention EA's SafeDisc feature now refuses to run the game if you happen to have CloneCD installed. I'm sorry but I'll run what I want to on my computer.

  8. Huh? by DrKyle · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Okay, I'm not a sports fan, but why can't they just make games that don't have actual player names or teams and just make a "fantasy league" and bypass any need for licencing? Is it really that much better of a game when it has the ESPN name on it?

    1. Re:Huh? by demosthenes247 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      sports fans usually have favorite players and teams, and love the fact that they are able to play as their own specific team/player. the espn games aren't simply branded as ESPN. they have the look and feel of ESPN telecasts as well as ESPN announcers and commentators. this just adds to the overall experience of the game which is supposed to be a recreation of the NBA or NHL or whatever. the fantasy league game would be utterly boring.

    2. Re:Huh? by odano · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The only response to this I have is: It just isn't the same. If I am playing an NFL game, I want the actual players are teams.

      I understand it really seems stupid, but it makes the game more fun if you know the players and the teams, and who to give the ball to; to run the actual plays the team runs. It adds an extra level of excitement to playing the game.

      I did like Sega branded ESPN Sports games, but I must admit, I doubt I am going to buy a football game that doesn't use the NFL player names and team names.

      What worries me most is the fact that sans competition EA sports games aren't going to get any better, which sucks for the consumer.

    3. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nah. Well, let me rephrase: it may be boring if you actually like sports like football, watch it on television, and can think of n teams more than the 49ers and the Patriots, and can name a single football celebrity. However, I can't, and have little interest in buying ESPN sporting games. On the other hand, when I was a teenager there was a Sega Genesis game by the name of _Mutant League Football_ which I enjoyed considerably because while football didn't interest me, cartoon hyperviolence filled with aliens, the undead, and much humor was quite entertaining. The probability of me purchasing another title like Mutant League Football is 1, whereas the probability of me ever buying an ESPN title is 0.

      So whatever small market I fall into would like a "fantasy league game" where that means something probably slightly different than the original poster had in mind.

    4. Re:Huh? by Brian+Brian · · Score: 1

      Well then this is the perfect op for Sega to come out with a fantasy football game.

    5. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. It's the same as with games based on movies and similar. The characters are in there, and that fact alone makes the game playable even if the gameplay is bad.

      It's funny, in a way...

    6. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Im a HUGE sports fan and I gotta say that it isn't the same for NBA and NFL games. But on the Playstation 1 the best baseball game I ever played was a Japanese import called "World Stadium EX" I didn't understand what they were saying but it was fun!

      EA Sports...
      Well they seems to have their ups and down and right now they are down. I purchased Madden 2005 and NBA Live 2005 at full price on the release date. What a disappointment!

      I purchased ESPN NBA 2005 shortly afterwards and then ESPN NFL 2005 after EA dropped their price to match ESPN (Plus most reviews favored ESPN)

      Out of protest, I will purchase anything but EA titles even if NFL teams are not on it.

    7. Re:Huh? by josh3736 · · Score: 3, Funny
      You're talking about the kids who buy Abercrombie & Fitch when you can get better quality from K-Mart and buy Starbucks when you could get it for $5.50 less from the gas station. The same kids who will listen to the latest shit put out by $RIAA_CASH_COW but scoff at anything independent, no matter how much better it is.

      Of course it matters what name is on the front.

    8. Re:Huh? by randallpowell · · Score: 1
      ESPN NFL 2k5 is the best football game I played. Madden 2003 is the other one.

      Anyways, as a recent convert to football (thanks to gf), a football with fantasy teams would be nice. Imagine American Founding Fathers vs Russian Soviets. Nobel Peace vs Nobel Chemistry (Gandi gets unessary roughness). Best yet, Linux Programmers vs Microsoft Drones.

      A fantasy football game wouldn't do well unless it had a gimmick that could be worked into a niche like historical fans, LOTR, RPG-football mix for example. It depends on what people would want and how well it was made. I still want a football game with elves, dwarves and goblins.

    9. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      haha you buy your clothes at k-mart

    10. Re:Huh? by talsit · · Score: 0

      So basically, you're saying that sports fans like to play with dolls in a recreated virtual doll house? Cute.

      --
      // talsit.org
    11. Re:Huh? by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      Well, let me rephrase: it may be boring if you actually like sports like football, watch it on television, and can think of n teams more than the 49ers and the Patriots, and can name a single football celebrity. However, I can't, and have little interest in buying ESPN sporting games.

      And this is exactly why they don't make fantasy games if they can avoid it - the market for the licensed product is higher than the market for the "brandless" game. They aren't trying to sell these football games to you; they're trying to sell them to Joe Sixpack who has 10 buddies over for the Super Bowl, and a few cases of beer to go with them. He wants Manning, Brady, and Vick. He wants the Patriots, the Chargers, or (god help him) the Lions. It does make a difference for the fan of the game.

      It probably doesn't hurt that the licensed games tend to be better *football* games, whereas most of the more "fantastic" games I've played (NFL Blitz, anyone?) may be fun, but do a very poor job of being a football game. If I want an arcade game, I'll buy an arcade game; if I buy a football game, I damn well want to call my Cover 2s and off-tackle blasts.

      "Fantasy" tends to refer to a pretty specific hobby, wherein you make up a team by drafting your favorite players and their real-life stats are combined to produce a team performance, which competes against your friends teams. I'd maybe use "fantastic" or "arcade" for the type of game you're talking about, as opposed to "simulation" which is more of what the ESPN/EA games aim for.

      (Side note: I am a fan of football, and do like ESPN's NCAA football games.)

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    12. Re:Huh? by nelsonal · · Score: 1

      I drink plenty of coffee (now made by me in a wonderful french press) and Starbucks was never the best cup of coffee that you could get, but they were consistent. Which is nice if your at a place and you don't want to risk getting crappy (or devine) coffee from an independant. Also they seem to hire the hottest baristas (certainly hotter than our gas station employees, but YMMV) which is a factor in many folk's coffee stamd choices.
      In the spirit of full disclosure I have one A&F shirt that was a gift. When I get to a town large enough to have a mall, I don't even like going in the stores, I think the sales people can tell I'm not in their target market.

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
    13. Re:Huh? by Acid-Duck · · Score: 1

      yes it is.

      Erik

    14. Re:Huh? by krist0 · · Score: 1

      dude, from monty python with the philosophers playing soccer

      I would pay mucho denero to play that.

      "And Aristotle realises that truth is life and passes the ball to Plato...SCORE!"

      --
      all you are, is all you are, i'm so sorry for you.
    15. Re:Huh? by servognome · · Score: 1

      You're talking about the kids who buy Abercrombie & Fitch when you can get better quality from K-Mart and buy Starbucks when you could get it for $5.50 less from the gas station.
      K-Mart clothes and gas station coffee aren't exactly what I call quality products.

      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
    16. Re:Huh? by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

      You're basically asking "What's the point of branding?"...

      For your answer, go talk to Kleenex or Band-Aid... ;)

    17. Re:Huh? by The-Bus · · Score: 1

      Well, here's to hoping Sega comes out with a really good college football game. To some extent, they could compete.

      --

      Small potatoes make the steak look bigger.

    18. Re:Huh? by notbob · · Score: 0

      but a little ceasers pizza for $5 in K-Mart is good qualtiy :)

      And for some odd reason they don't take credit card but they'll take a check... only check I ever wrote for pizza.

  9. Doesn't really matter. by Sheetrock · · Score: 3, Insightful
    These sports games are getting really stale anyway. These deals actually free Sega up to do something creative with the genre, ala Mutant League Football/Hockey.

    RPGs are the most important thing on any console anyway.

    --

    Try not. Do or do not, there is no try.
    -- Dr. Spock, stardate 2822-3.




    1. Re:Doesn't really matter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would love to see a return of Mutant League Hockey. It was the only hockey game I ever enjoyed. Hopefully it would get a bit more attention than Sega's other titles got. Since the fall of the Dreamcast, Sega just hasn't been getting much attention anymore it seems.

    2. Re:Doesn't really matter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whoah... More MLH fans! I only know one guy who like sit apart from me!

      *sigh*

      It'd be awesome with more polished gameplay and better graphics...

    3. Re:Doesn't really matter. by nacturation · · Score: 4, Funny

      RPGs are the most important thing on any console anyway.

      Hm... a hockey game where you can use Rocket Propelled Grenades... I think you've got a great idea there!

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    4. Re:Doesn't really matter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These deals actually free Sega up to do something creative with the genre, ala Mutant League Football/Hockey.

      If that happened, I'm sure everyone would respect Sega's creativity, but when it came time to hand the hard-earned money over to the cashier, I predict most fans would toe the official (ESPN or other license) line because sports fan(atic) devotion is fundamentally about celebrity worship and Big Name(tm) team franchise loyalty.

    5. Re:Doesn't really matter. by lukewarmfusion · · Score: 1

      As a sports fan myself, I can attest to the once-great sports genre that has become terribly stale. Why is it that folks complain about 3D First-Person Shooters being generic, but don't bat an eye when it comes to Yet Another Generic Football video game?

      Other than updated players and some minor improvements in the engine from year to year, are there any justifications for spending another $50?

      I still enjoy Sega Genesis Tecmo Bowl and the early NCAA games for the PS2.

    6. Re:Doesn't really matter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure most of the human race prefers to sit apart from you.

    7. Re:Doesn't really matter. by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      Bah. Even with shoulder-fired weapons no other hockey video game can hold a candle to Nintendo's Ice Hockey!

      OK, maybe Konami's Blades of Steel... maybe...

    8. Re:Doesn't really matter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These sports games are getting really stale anyway. These deals actually free Sega up to do something creative with the genre, ala Mutant League Football/Hockey.

      Actually, the Mutant League games were even EA as well if I remember right.

    9. Re:Doesn't really matter. by Allison+Geode · · Score: 1

      except everyone seems to forget: Mutant League Football was published by EA, not sega. it was only released on the genesis, but still an EA game.

    10. Re:Doesn't really matter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Something EA could do too if they wanted to.. seeing as they made and own the Mutant League games.

    11. Re:Doesn't really matter. by sicking · · Score: 1

      Hm... a hockey game where you can use Rocket Propelled Grenades... I think you've got a great idea there!

      Ever played speedball 2 on the Amiga? (Might have been released on other platforms as well)

      --
      Failing to learn from history dooms you to repeat it.
    12. Re:Doesn't really matter. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      were you aware that those were both published by EA or is that just an awesome coincidence?

    13. Re:Doesn't really matter. by notbob · · Score: 0

      Mutant League football rocked!!!!!

      My favorite game of all time from the Sega Genesis... ahh those were the days

      The hocky one sucked in comparison, football worked better. Some how I always won by killing the other team :)

    14. Re:Doesn't really matter. by Trixter · · Score: 1

      These sports games are getting really stale anyway.

      Tell that to the rest of the industry. EA took in 3.3 billion from sports games ALONE last year.

      For the record, I'm not a console sports fan either. But they sure do bring in da bux!

  10. Idiot by kaedemichi255 · · Score: 3, Funny

    "We don't anticipating changing anything significantly from what we are currently doing," Larry Probst, chairman and chief executive of EA, said in an interview.

    Not only is EA's CEO an evil monopolist, he's not very good at grammar either...

  11. Great for the industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I personally feel that this will only help consumers and the industry. Now we won't have to worry about which title will be the better, because there will only be one. Also, the programmers at EA won't have to work extra long hours any more, because they won't have to make any changes to the games other than adding new seasonal data. Everyone's a winner!

    1. Re:Great for the industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except for the entire programming, AI, UI, Art, Design, QA and Play Test divisions of Tiburon...

      After all, the create-a-player feature already allows you to make any existing NFL player, so why pay all of those people when they can get minimum wage data-entry people in India?

    2. Re:Great for the industry by eclectro · · Score: 4, Funny

      Also, the programmers at EA won't have to work extra long hours any more

      Actually this deal will insure that coders go 15 years without a lunchbreak

      It sux to be them.

      --
      Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
  12. Mixed Feelings by pHatidic · · Score: 5, Funny

    On one hand the evil alliance is getting more powerful by the day. On the other hand, ESPN pretty much only covers boring invented-for-tv/radio sports. I guess since I don't play sports games or EA games this doesn't really bother me, although the day they try to buy out the Nethack dev team I'll be outside corporate headquarters with my torch and pitchfork.

    1. Re:Mixed Feelings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nethack? Are you serious? I don't think there are millions to be made with "Nethack" (just like there aren't millions to be made with choose your own adventure books).

      Let go of the 1980's gaming and welcome a polygon into your life. Your opinion isn't even close to the majority and is probably so small I wouldn't even want to insult the minority and call it the "minority" opinion.

    2. Re:Mixed Feelings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are a few polygons in NetHack. I assume you took Geometry and learned what a polygon is.

      But really I suspect that the original poster was a troll. I mean, would someone really consider NetHack as a marketable game? Unless it was Slashbot elitism --"I'm too cool for mainstream games!"--it has to be a troll, right?

    3. Re:Mixed Feelings by phriedom · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I agree. By itself this isn't a big deal. The ESPN name adds a little bit of credibility, and the ESPN announcer voices add a bit of professionalism to the image, but there is no real substance lost. However, the NFL's decision to sell exclusive rights is a much bigger deal, and when you combine that with ESPN's decision, its a pretty nasty one-two punch to Sega.

      It might be the right decision for ESPN, but I really think it was a bad move by the NFL. Yes, it is money in the bank now for the NFL, but I think in the long term it works against them. A vibrant, competitive video game market for NFL licensed games is a HUGE promotion/marketing tool for the NFL. People playing the games get a lot more involved in the players and teams that people who just watch it on TV sometimes. I'll admit I never watched any football until I played Madden on the playstation and learned about the teams and the players and how the play calling influenced the game. I think that video games and fantasy leagues provide the kind of interaction that makes watching football exciting in a way that NO amount of regular advertising and promotion can do at any price. Plus, video games reach teens when they are impressionable and can make them NFL fans for life. Putting all their eggs in the EA basket might be a decision they come to regret.

      I guess some of that applies to ESPN too. By taking the deal from EA they are cutting them selves off from Sega and other companies that might be willing to pay for the priviledge of promoting ESPN.

      --
      Don't moderate flamebait as Troll. Know the difference or you will be Meta-moderated.
    4. Re:Mixed Feelings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry... Football, basketball, baseball, and definitely hockey, were NOT invented for TV. They were all "invented" over 100 years ago.

    5. Re:Mixed Feelings by HarvardAce · · Score: 1
      And after seeing professional bowling on ESPN2 an hour ago at a bar, I can safely add bowling to the list of sports ESPN covers that are definitely not invented for TV (in this case, not only because it was around before TV, but also because it absolutely sucks on TV).

      Aside from the X-Games sports, can anyone think of sports on ESPN that didn't exist before either ESPN (25 years ago) or TV itself?

      --
      Note to self: Stop putting jokes in my insightful comments so I can get something other than +1 Funny!
    6. Re:Mixed Feelings by Scott7477 · · Score: 1

      FYI: on ESPN at various times they have coverage of surfing, rock climbing, bass fishing, lumberjacking(seriously, it's on pretty late but it's there), world's strongest man(they throw 50kg barrels over walls), and others that I can't think of now. I am surprised ESPN hasn't done a bass fishing console game before; there are seriously a lot of bass fishermen out there that would buy it.

      --
      "Lack of technical competence coupled with the arrogance of power, as usual, leads to no good end."
    7. Re:Mixed Feelings by ATN · · Score: 0

      I'm mad that they bought free radical. Nethack dev team can't be too far behind :) why don't you get a head start.

    8. Re:Mixed Feelings by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      On one hand the evil alliance is getting more powerful by the day

      EA is "evil" how?

    9. Re:Mixed Feelings by KiloByte · · Score: 1

      I don't play any shitty sport-themed games.

      I do play NetHack a lot.

      'nuff said.

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
    10. Re:Mixed Feelings by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

      This got modded as FLAMEBAIT?...lol...I was honestly asking a question. I genuinely want to know why people have such animosity towards EA. What their reasons are...

      Ahwell...

  13. My thoughts by John Madden. by BitwiseX · · Score: 5, Funny

    If you look ahead 15 years, this deal is going to expire. This deal is going to last 5475 days, and we all know that is a long time. This could be a very good deal for EA, but if it turns out to be a bad move, then it's not going to be good for EA.

    1. Re:My thoughts by John Madden. by tuxter · · Score: 1

      So what you are saying is if it's good, it's good, but if it turns out bad, it is going to turn out bad? ummmm, Rock on dude! Any other interesting and blatantly obvious observations.

    2. Re:My thoughts by John Madden. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You fool, it's a joke. ... BY JOHN MADDEN. Have you ever listened to the guy?

    3. Re:My thoughts by John Madden. by stratjakt · · Score: 5, Funny

      My favorite Madden quote (forget about who): "Here's a guy, who - when he runs - he goes faster!"

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    4. Re:My thoughts by John Madden. by tuxter · · Score: 3, Funny

      Ahhhh, I see, I apologise for my lunacy. Not being american I have only heard of John Madden, not actually heard him. I seem to remember an announcer at the sydney olympics saying about a tennis player...."And before every match, his wife kisses his balls for good luck."

    5. Re:My thoughts by John Madden. by tuxter · · Score: 5, Funny

      Here ya go, apologies

      Here are the top nine comments made by NBC sports commentators so far during the Summer Olympics that they would like to take back:

      1. Weightlifting commentator: "This is Gregoriava from Bulgaria. I saw her snatch this morning during her warm up and it was amazing."
      2. Dressage commentator: "This is really a lovely horse and I speak from personal experience since I once mounted her mother."
      3. Paul Hamm, Gymnast: "I owe a lot to my parents, especially my mother and father."
      4. Boxing Analyst: "Sure there have been injuries, and even some deaths in boxing, but none of them really that serious.
      5. Softball announcer: "If history repeats itself, I should think we can expect the same thing again."
      6. Basketball analyst: "He dribbles a lot and the opposition doesn't like it. In fact you can see it all over their faces."
      7. At the rowing medal ceremony: "Ah, isn't that nice, the wife of the IOC president is hugging the cox of the British crew."
      8. Soccer commentator: "Julian Dicks is everywhere. It's like they've got eleven Dicks on the field."
      9. Tennis commentator: "One of the reasons Andy is playing so well is that, before the final round, his wife takes out his balls and kisses them...

    6. Re:My thoughts by John Madden. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thats funny! What's wrong with people around here?

    7. Re:My thoughts by John Madden. by chris_eineke · · Score: 1
      This deal is going to last 5475 days
      Which is, just accidently, the half-life of slashdot jokes :D
      --
      "All you have to do is be fragile and grateful. So stay the underdog." Chuck Palahniuk, Choke
    8. Re:My thoughts by John Madden. by Tsian · · Score: 1

      Geeze, half-life was released, so that jokes totally done for!

    9. Re:My thoughts by John Madden. by lightspawn · · Score: 1

      This deal is going to last 5475 days

      Hello? Have you ever heard of leap years?

      Some geek you are.

    10. Re:My thoughts by John Madden. by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      "From the waist down, Earl Campbell has the biggest legs I have ever seen on a running back."
      John Madden

      Not to be confused with the great Yogi Berra:

      "Baseball is 90% mental. The other half is physical."

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    11. Re:My thoughts by John Madden. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      http://www.snopes.com/humor/lists/olympics.asp

    12. Re:My thoughts by John Madden. by Celestial+Avenger · · Score: 0

      9. Tennis commentator: "One of the reasons Andy is playing so well is that, before the final round, his wife takes out his balls and kisses them... I bet that got his raquet going.

    13. Re:My thoughts by John Madden. by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

      In every deal like this there is always plenty of language written in for "this deal will become voided if party A does any other this list of 100 things or if party B does any other this other list".

      For example, remember when Activision sued Viacom?

    14. Re:My thoughts by John Madden. by beowulfcluster · · Score: 1

      Julian Dicks never played in the olympics. The quote is real but it wasn't said in that context, someone made that list up methinks.

    15. Re:My thoughts by John Madden. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NONE of these were said at this years Olympics.

    16. Re:My thoughts by John Madden. by BitwiseX · · Score: 0

      I'm a lazy geek ;)

    17. Re:My thoughts by John Madden. by Tom+Courtenay · · Score: 1

      Karma be damned, that's the funniest /. comment I've read in years.

      That comment there is like pouring the milk on your cereal, but the milk is sour!

      --
      If you could be anything you want, I'll bet you'd be disappointed.
    18. Re:My thoughts by John Madden. by trosenbl · · Score: 1

      bitwise, you just won.

      that totally deserves a 6+ funny

  14. Well this is a big poke in the eye... by yuriismaster · · Score: 4, Interesting

    FTA: "'We don't anticipating changing anything significantly from what we are currently doing'... they will potentially include ESPN data, graphics and sportscasters" [Emphasis mine]

    Now cmon, if you plan to contract one of the largest names in sports news, then at least integrate it into the game. The only reason EA is buying the ESPN license apparently to use "ESPN properties as potential video games, including the "X Games" extreme athletics competitions, poker and even bass fishing."

    Wow, cause I want to spend 50 dollars on ESPN World Poker Tour $year.

    1. Re:Well this is a big poke in the eye... by Bagels · · Score: 1

      You might not, but poker is the latest fad - they might get a year or two of good sales out of making an officially licensed game.

      --
      --- Bwah?
    2. Re:Well this is a big poke in the eye... by Warskull · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't think EA actually bought the ESPN license for the "X Games" this time. I think the real reason they bough the ESPN license is because they haven't secured exclusive deals the the NBA and NHL. So if you can't prevent your competition from making games, steal their license and name. Sega was releasing ESPN hockey, football, and basketball games that were easily 3 times better than EA game for half the price (at release.) EA knows their business model can't come up with a game to match their quality and matching the price would defeat the whole purpose of their business model (sacrifice quality and your employees welfare for highest possible profits.) Thus they steal Sega's license.

    3. Re:Well this is a big poke in the eye... by lukewarmfusion · · Score: 1

      EA wants the market share. ESPN-branded games were released for $20, while EA's were listed at $50. They want to use the ESPN properties, but they really want to stop Sega from competing via the ESPN brand.

    4. Re:Well this is a big poke in the eye... by phriedom · · Score: 1

      ESPN has some rights to the Wold Series of Poker, but the one WSOP computer game I could find didn't seem to have anything to do with ESPN. The World Poker Tour is not affiliated with the WSOP and the WPT has their own video game.

      The WPT game is one of those "console in the controller" type things where you don't need any other hardware except a TV.

      Perhaps ESPN has since aquired the video game rights for the WSOP?

      --
      Don't moderate flamebait as Troll. Know the difference or you will be Meta-moderated.
    5. Re:Well this is a big poke in the eye... by BorgHunter · · Score: 1

      I can tell you one thing: either ESPN or ABC would have a major problem if a football game had Madden announcing and ESPN stamped all over the place. Probably both. For all other sports, as long as the commentators are ESPN's, I would forsee no problem, but I do not think that we'll see an ESPN-branded Madden.

      --
      "Excuse me, did you say 'Trekker'? The word is 'Trekkie.' I should know; I created them." -- Gene Roddenberry
    6. Re:Well this is a big poke in the eye... by beerits · · Score: 1

      I can tell you one thing: either ESPN or ABC would have a major problem if a football game had Madden announcing and ESPN stamped all over the place. Probably both. For all other sports, as long as the commentators are ESPN's, I would forsee no problem, but I do not think that we'll see an ESPN-branded Madden.
      ABC and ESPN are owned by Disney. Chris Berman does the half-time show on monday night football. A ESPN/Madden crossover could easily happen.

    7. Re:Well this is a big poke in the eye... by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

      They probably don't want to commit to anything that they don't have to publically, because, you can be damn sure that if they said we DEFINITELY will be doing ThisThing on games A through Z, and a couple years later, they don't for whatever reason on thing L, they're goin to get soooooo many people complaining that they "lied".

    8. Re:Well this is a big poke in the eye... by Jace+of+Fuse! · · Score: 1

      "We don't anticipating changing anything significantly from what we are currently doing'..."

      So in other words it's business as usual for EA?

      --

      "Everything you know is wrong. (And stupid.)"

      Moderation Totals: Wrong=2, Stupid=3, Total=5.
    9. Re:Well this is a big poke in the eye... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Madden works for ABC. ABC & ESPN are owned by Disney. ESPN video games would lose a sizeable chunk of change with out a football game. If Disney owns John Madden's image (in addition to his soul) they could, possible, put the kabash to the Madden football game.

      In short, is EA being evil or Disney covering it's assets?

  15. Blitz (Some Real Creativity) by Zeromous · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Despite what many have said, this may not be such a bad thing.

    I mean now with Blitz free to do what they want, and a niche market opening up- I'm excited about sports games for once!

    It's really too bad there will likely be no 30$ ESPN Football or hockey again, but for each on of those, there will be an outlaw golf, or baseball stars.

    These unlicensed games have been missing from 'popular' libraries for years. I see this as only opening up a market for the smaller, savvy developer/publisher.

    --
    ---Up Up Down Down Left Right Left Right B A START
    1. Re:Blitz (Some Real Creativity) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quote : These unlicensed games have been missing from 'popular' libraries for years.

      Because they do not sell for crap, genius. Welcome to the free market!

    2. Re:Blitz (Some Real Creativity) by Zeromous · · Score: 1

      Play Action Football/Super Play Action Football
      Tecmo basketball
      Baseball Stars 1, 2, 3 Neo/NES
      MLB (NES)
      Blitz
      ArchRivals
      Outlaw Golf
      Mario Golf
      Ken Griffey Jr Baseball (SNES)
      Just to name a few...

      The list goes on...all have these have sold nearly a million copies and most are franchises that have come and gone or become licensed.

      --
      ---Up Up Down Down Left Right Left Right B A START
  16. My thoughts by John Kerry by extra+the+woos · · Score: 1

    I was for this deal before I was against it /sorry

    --
    replacing it with NEW Folger's Crystals! (lets see if they notice the difference)
    1. Re:My thoughts by John Kerry by ArsSineArtificio · · Score: 1
      I was for this deal before I was against it

      This deal was conducted in a manner reminiscent of Ghengis Khan.

      --
      All employees must wash hands before seeking equitable relief.
  17. And now ALL motivation for EA to innovate is gone by samdu · · Score: 3, Insightful
    "We don't anticipating changing anything significantly from what we are currently doing," Larry Probst, chairman and chief executive of EA, said in an interview.


    And there is EA's CEO admitting as much. This is horrible for the industry. EA has cranked out some crap this year, but the pressure from Sega has been keeping the Sports line programmers on their toes. Now with no competition, they're free to churn out crappy sports games, too. Sigh.

  18. That's it. by djatari2600 · · Score: 2, Funny

    EA announces purchase of Skynet.

    Challenge Everything (Exept our corporate empire.)

    --
    "It is the mark of an educated man to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." - Aristotle
  19. The dangerous thing is by Solr_Flare · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What is dangerous is that EA is definitely trying to consolidate the industry. They are doing sports games right now, but how long till they start moving in on your company of choice? They already made an initial attempt at Ubisoft, and they are buying licenses from Nintendo. Who is going to be next on the list?

    If EA gets enough control over the gaming industry, even if you never play their games they'll still be able to have an impact. How about, for example, increasing the price on their games to $60 a pop? If EA has enough marketshare in the industry, you don't think every other publisher wouldn't follow suit?

    That's just one example. EA is out to win big. Check out this article here:

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/4180453.stm

    EA's stated long term goal is to become the largest Entertainment Firm in the world. They want to take on the big names in the movie industry via games. They cite Disney as one of their targets to beat in future years.

    EA isn't going to stop this, it is just going to keep getting worse until they are either:

    A) Forced to stop B) The well dries up on them and they die from bloat.

    Either way, this is bad for the consumer. This is most definitely *not* a healthy monolopy they are trying to form.

    --
    You are who you are, let no one tell you different. But, never close your mind to a new point of view.
    1. Re:The dangerous thing is by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      Yeah, well, welcome to the real world. Where corporations compete.

      EA isn't the threat you think it is. I think you'll find that any gaming company has the same stated goals. No one would invest in a company who's long term goal is to be mediocre.

      They'll do something stupid and disappear into obscurity for another decade.

      Stupid as in pay a ridiculous amount of cash for the ESPN name, which has nothing to do with team names or logos. They just get to use "ESPN" in the game title. Please.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    2. Re:The dangerous thing is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The $60 is definitely going to happen. It would be no surprise if they put this pricetag on either the 2006 or 2007 Madden.

    3. Re:The dangerous thing is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What this means is, ESPN is no longer free to contract out and publish any game bearing their name. So, the cheap $20 game with the ESPN logo (for brand-name identification) that was pretty good won't be available for 15 years, but instead something relatively lame and poor will appear.

      I'd love to see the fine print on that contract. ESPN marketing people have tended to be smarter than this in past - suppose there's a poison pill hidden in the contract in the event that EA doesn't come out with something that meets ESPN's terms?

    4. Re:The dangerous thing is by TSage · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Sorry, but I'm not buying this.

      They are doing sports games right now, but how long till they start moving in on your company of choice? They already made an initial attempt at Ubisoft, and they are buying licenses from Nintendo. Who is going to be next on the list?

      OK, they went after Ubisoft and that was stopped. And how dare they buy licenses from Nintendo!! That obviously means EA will soon be buying Nintendo. Watch out Sony, you're next. Or so the implication goes. I mean somehow a company with a market capitalization of under $19 billion will be dominating an industry full of giants (another giant, FOX, will possibly soon be getting into). That would be some amazing business feats to accomplish.

      Now assuming they get all this market share, we should be wary because they will oppress the market to such a degree that you will feel their presence in every video game played. And if the largest publisher were to raise prices to $60 per game, obviously the smaller companies who are trying to compete with the juggernaut would follow suit. Much like Apple and Linux companies are selling their operating systems for the same price that MS does. And how Sega had to cut their videogames to $20 in order to match EA's own $20 pricing scheme.

      I believe most companies stated goal is to be the best firm in their given field (and now fields). This should be made headline news so people realize this immmediately! They must be stopped before they are allowed to commit egregious crimes that we cannot even think of yet!

      Meanwhile everyone on Slashdot mentions how most of their games are crap and don't buy them. If all their new NFL games are crap, well good luck to them; maybe they'll find a way to get water from a rock. I think videogame consumers generally don't respond with lots of money for junk games. Look at the community's latest rage over WOW despite heralding it as one of the best games of last year.

      I see why you are concerned, but I don't think it's anything to really worry about long term. There will be at least three much larger players involved for at least the next generation of consoles (Sony, Nintendo, MS) that have a larger impact on the industry.

      TSage

    5. Re:The dangerous thing is by assassinator42 · · Score: 1

      I remember the Nintendo 64. Nintendo sold all their games for $60 a game. They've actually gone down this generation because others are charging no more than $50

    6. Re:The dangerous thing is by notbob · · Score: 0

      No they paid a ton of money to get ESPN out of Sega's hands, taking away credability.

      It's all a move to slice sega to shreds, sadly EA will most likely win but hopefully buy up the Sega leftovers and take the best of both teams together.

    7. Re:The dangerous thing is by okayplayer · · Score: 1
      And how Sega had to cut their videogames to $20 in order to match EA's own $20 pricing scheme.

      Uh, Sega was first. EA followed.

      --
      What a horrible thing the ESRB just did to the game industry.
    8. Re:The dangerous thing is by TSage · · Score: 1

      Sorry if it wasn't clear from the context, but I was being sarcastic. I was trying to show that even if EA was the largest videogame publisher in the world, they couldn't force other companies to charge $60 per game like the parent suggested.

      Thanks for showing interest and trying to correct FUD,
      TSage

  20. Really matters by siskbc · · Score: 5, Insightful
    These sports games are getting really stale anyway. These deals actually free Sega up to do something creative with the genre...

    It matters. The reason why EA did this is because last year ESPN came out with a pretty damned good football game and priced it at $19.99. EA priced theirs at $49.99, figuring that their brand recognition would allow them to charge double. They were wrong. EA had to drop their price, and evidently didn't like it because they got pissed enough to shell out for an exclusive license.

    Result is they have a monopoly on NFL-licensed games for a long time. For sports fans - clearly not you, but there is some gamer/sports overlap - this sucks because we only have one choice, and it's guaranteed to be overpriced.

    More than likely, no other significant NFL games will be made. Even creative games like NFL blitz etc typically need licenses to survive.

    RPGs are the most important thing on any console anyway.

    You are kidding right? Console sales of RPGs are almost negligible.

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    1. Re:Really matters by geminidomino · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You are kidding right? Console sales of RPGs are almost negligible.

      For values of "consoles" limited to "In the US" and RPGs approaching "Not Final Fantasy" you're right.

      Japan is a different story. There's a reason that Dragon Quest games can only be released on weekends over there.

    2. Re:Really matters by Scott7477 · · Score: 1

      C'mon; how much more can be done with console-based football games. Maybe having a steroid selection screen, and you have to practice injecting yourself.
      Also, random drug testing so if you get busted, game over. How about the winter meetings, spring camp and the weight room?

      --
      "Lack of technical competence coupled with the arrogance of power, as usual, leads to no good end."
    3. Re:Really matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You are kidding right? Console sales of RPGs are almost negligible.
      If I remember correctly, Final Fantasy VII is what made the Playstation take off in Sales when compared to the other systems. I believe there's sales datas showing that the Playstation and Sega Saturn were about even in terms of sales, and once FF7 launched, the Playstation blew the Saturn away in sales in Japan.
    4. Re:Really matters by May+Kasahara · · Score: 1
      That's just one game, though... and one that began as being exclusive to a single platform. There's games like that in every console generation (Grand Theft Auto III in this current one).

      I too don't agree that CRPG sales are "negligable" (unless he means tactical RPGs), but certainly, most non-Final Fantasy/Square Enix RPGs aren't nearly as big as your average, annually-released sports game.

    5. Re:Really matters by wishlish · · Score: 1

      Actually, EA looked into the exclusive with the NFL long before it was announced that ESPN NFL 2k5 was going to ship with the $19.95 price point. If anything, that move may have prompted the NFL to sign with EA (rather than vice versa), as a price war for video game products is not seen as good for their business.

    6. Re:Really matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe in America, but RPGs are ridiculously popular in Japan. And you're forgetting Pokemon.

      The thing is, no really big RPG titles have come out this past year. Sure, there have been some great games like Phantom Brave, Paper Mario 2 and Shadow Hearts: Covenant, but no really big titles to rival Final Fantasy X. This coming year, we are going to see Final Fantasy XII, Kingdom Hearts 2, and Dragon Warrior VIII, Xenosaga II amongst others. I would expect them to do pretty well.

    7. Re:Really matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, compared to the United States, video game sales in Japan are negligible.

    8. Re:Really matters by Maul · · Score: 1

      Tales of Symphonia was better than Final Fantasy X by about a million miles.

      --

      "You spoony bard!" -Tellah

    9. Re:Really matters by CortoMaltese · · Score: 1
      Moreover, Sega had a nice development going on not only in NFL but also in NHL and NBA games. All of them ESPN branded. Now, instead of developing the games further, I guess they will have to concentrate on removing any resemblance to ESPN broadcasts. If they are still going to make new versions of the games.

      EA, on the other hand, has admitted they're not going to use the ESPN brand anytime soon. They just bought Sega out.

      As per the team and player names, the Pro Evolution Soccer series by Konami has always been more or less easy to modify. EA holds the FIFA license, but you can download the current rosters at http://pesfan.com/bulletin/home.php for PES. I guess this is the way to go for Sega as well: just make the better game.

    10. Re:Really matters by May+Kasahara · · Score: 1

      I realize the RPG market in Japan is huge, but I was talking about N. America. Sorry I didn't make that clear...

    11. Re:Really matters by May+Kasahara · · Score: 1
      Also: Final Fantasy XII, Kingdom Hearts 2, and Dragon Warrior VIII = Square Enix. Xenosaga 2 = third game in a series whose original installment was published by Square (yes, I'm counting Xenogears).

      Point still stands.

    12. Re:Really matters by siskbc · · Score: 1
      For values of "consoles" limited to "In the US" and RPGs approaching "Not Final Fantasy" you're right.

      Good point, I was assuming author was American and totally forgot the Japanese market. And yeah, FF is the only RPG on console I've heard of - and they're barely RPG's. More like delivery vehicles for nice cut scenes. ;)

      --

      -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    13. Re:Really matters by siskbc · · Score: 1
      C'mon; how much more can be done with console-based football games. Maybe having a steroid selection screen, and you have to practice injecting yourself.

      Honestly? They still manage to screw the game up every year with play-balance issues, and that could be addressed. Also, in the last few years, console sports games have just started to get decent "career" modes, where you play GM and put together teams year after year with players who age. Almost "RPG"-ish. Graphics get better as with any game. So have the physics of tackling. Passing controls have gotten better in football so you can do things like lead receivers and such.

      Also, of course, one would prefer to get a new game every few years to have the current NFL players.

      It may not seem like it, but a lot COULD be done with the standard football game to make it better. It's just that nothing will now thanks to EA.

      --

      -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    14. Re:Really matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, but it's a dumb point. It's like saying, "apart from popular games, games are not that popular." If we discounted sports games from EA and Sega, sports games would be a lot less popular, hmm?

    15. Re:Really matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know if I'd say that. It's hard to compare a turn-based rpg to an action rpg, and ToS was in certain respects derivative of FFX.

      I found both games pretty enjoyable, but my favorite RPGs for the current crop of consoles remain Shadow Hearts: Covenant and Kingdom Hearts.

    16. Re:Really matters by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      FF is the only RPG on console I've heard of - and they're barely RPG's.

      Oh you poor, miserable bastard... You've missed so much! While we miss out on a LOT compared to the japanese market (Shin Megami Tensei before the most recent one, for example...) there are some awesome games out there. Mostly for PSX (not much in the eye-candy dept) but I think the Shadow Hearts games are right up there as some of the best RPGs available on PS2.

  21. Unholy Trinity by tepples · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Not only that, but The Walt Disney Company owns ESPN. If you'll remember, Disney was behind the copyright term extension acts. This makes an Unholy Trinity of Disney, EA, and Microsoft (whose MSN network hosts ESPN's web site).

    1. Re:Unholy Trinity by I+Love+this+Company! · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, ESPN and MSN dissolved their partnership back in July 2004.

      --

      "All art is quite useless." -- Oscar Wilde
    2. Re:Unholy Trinity by failedlogic · · Score: 1

      According to an interview (w/ President of EA) I read in Business 2.0 a year or two ago, EA would like to become the next Disney.

      It wouldn't suprise me then if EA takes a similar stance on coyright - afterall, Disney still bases most of its sucess on old characters (Mickey, Donald) opting not to create the new. EA is doing the same with their games (Prince of Persia, Medal of Honour, Need for Speed, SIMS.....).

    3. Re:Unholy Trinity by fireman+sam · · Score: 1

      I'm sure most companies would like to be the next disney. Make millions on public domain stuff, then use those millions to stop your stuff from entering the public domain so you can make more millions. Sounds good to me.

      --
      it is only after a long journey that you know the strength of the horse.
    4. Re:Unholy Trinity by TooTechForYou · · Score: 1

      afterall, Disney still bases most of its sucess on old characters (Mickey, Donald) opting not to create the new. EA is doing the same with their games (Prince of Persia, Medal of Honour, Need for Speed, SIMS.....). Not to mention all the sports games. Add a player or two and re-release it.

      --
      -- Nic
    5. Re:Unholy Trinity by westlake · · Score: 1
      I'm sure most companies would like to be the next disney. Make millions on public domain stuff, then use those millions to stop your stuff from entering the public domain so you can make more millions. Sounds good to me.

      anyone can draw on the same public domain sources as Disney, but you have to make the story your own and not a derivative based on the Disney version. that's a fair enough challenge, I think.

    6. Re:Unholy Trinity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Prince of Persia is made by Ubisoft. While EA holds 19.9% of Ubisoft, they should not be confused as being the same company.

      Also, Microsoft and EA haven't seen eye-to-eye in many things. One should only look back to how difficult it was to get EA Xbox Live games to realize there is no real "partnership" between the two. Until just recently, Microsoft was making sports games too.

    7. Re:Unholy Trinity by Fulg · · Score: 1

      EA is doing the same with their games (Prince of Persia, [...]

      Erm, unless EA has bought Ubisoft while I wasn't looking, Prince of Persia still belongs to Ubisoft (or rather, Jordan Mechner).

      Actually that's the scary part, EA is getting so big we start crediting them with games they haven't made...

      --
      gcc: no input sig
  22. Just another example of the "Golden Rule" by Coldglow · · Score: 1

    What is the "Golden Rule" you might ask? "He who owns the gold makes the rules."

  23. when asked for comment by stratjakt · · Score: 1

    Randy Moss mooned EA and went home in the middle of the third quarter.

    And his stupid ass team choked and lost me 20 bucks.

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    1. Re:when asked for comment by MrFrank · · Score: 1

      I'm from Minnesota, I hoped the Vikings would win, but wasn't dumb enough to bet they would.

      They had to beat the Packers the week before, or the fans in MN would have thrown them out of the state.

      I guess it's true, a fool and his money are soon parted.

  24. Antitrust anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Could all of these deals by EA be considered monopolistic by the FTC? Is there anything that can be done about this (aside from boycotting EA products)?

  25. SkyNet... by emjoi_gently · · Score: 1

    I cant even imagine what Video Games will be like in 15 years.
    15 years ago... 1990... I remember playing a Football Arcade game. Top down view of little sprites running about. 10 Yard Fight!

  26. Sega should play this game by cgenman · · Score: 1

    I think it's time for sega to seriously consider luring Madden away from EA with gobbs of cash. Who wouldn't want to play Madden Football 2k6?

  27. Typical Slashdot moderation idiocy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "This sort of thing shouldn't be legal."

    Yeah, REAL "Insightful" post there. Care to explain WHY? To anyone that moderated parent as "Insightful", care to explain just what the hell is "insightful" about that post? I dare you... Or is it modded up simply because EA is an unpopular big corp in the Slashdot hivemind?

    1. Re:Typical Slashdot moderation idiocy by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      Because he doesn't like it. So it should be illegal. He probably does like downloading the games for free via suprnova, so that should be legal, right?

      Also, because he thinks that TV channels like ESPN are government agencies, and aren't free to licsense whoever the hell they want to use their image.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
  28. ESPN execs asleep at the wheel by Infonaut · · Score: 5, Insightful
    ESPN gave someone an exclusive license for FIFTEEN YEARS?!

    The industry could radically change in fifteen years. EA could shoot itself in the foot in five years, becoming an also-ran. Fifteen years in the video game industry is like 45 years in the world of broadcasting.

    It might be three years from now, or five, or 10 years from now, but ESPN will live to regret this deal.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
    1. Re:ESPN execs asleep at the wheel by radeon_xt · · Score: 1

      15 Yrs is a long long time.. The yr. 2020.. Playin game with our minds, all logged onto a Matrix-ish Server(Owned by EA). Scientist's will find a way for us to survive without food. We'd be living in an old telephone booth and the only thing we'd be able te afford'll be EA's server rent which'll be $1000 per month.

    2. Re:ESPN execs asleep at the wheel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      *current* ESPN management is laughing all the way to the bank. In a few years they are all cashed out on hawaii and then what do they care ?

      Its all about short term profits.

    3. Re:ESPN execs asleep at the wheel by jimmyCarter · · Score: 1

      15 years may be a little long, but when you get a chance to jump into bed with Disney 2.0, you do it.

      EA is big enough now to survive a couple of well-placed shots in the foot, anyway.

      --

      -- jimmycarter
    4. Re:ESPN execs asleep at the wheel by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

      In every deal like this there is always plenty of language written in for "this deal will become voided if party A does any other this list of 100 things or if party B does any other this other list".

      For example, remember when Activision sued Viacom?

      And also, why would it be ESPN to regret this deal?
      Many people think EA probably paid ESPN TOO MUCH/A

  29. Here is an idea by yorkpaddy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If I were sega, I would design a football game that lets users plug in team data. Make everything like the NFL except for uniforms, logos, and names. Then have some anonymous person on the internet post a mod pack that exactly replicates the protected NFL data. Make it very easy for consumers to plug in this data pack.

    --
    "brxref .k.p ,.by xprt. gbe.p.oycmaycbi yd. cby.nci.bj. ru yd. am.pcjab lgxlcj" don'
    1. Re:Here is an idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      agreed. All the next gen consoles will have internet support. What they need to do is allow these sport games to be moddable. There is still hope. Modding will/can be the savior.

      Midway hired that guy from the canceled ESPN show play makers. So they may make a football game where you can power up on steroids and other performance enhancers, all while trying to avoid the piss man. Couple this with a moddable game and it'll provide a more interesting and original game concept, one that EA cannot do. EA is tied into a deal with the NFL...they can only change the gfx and rules and control aspects while other companies will be flexible because they aren't tied to the NFL.

    2. Re:Here is an idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IIRC, there was a game put out by Sierra a few years ago called "Football Pro $year". This game had permission from the NFLPA, but not the NFL itself. The result was that you had real player names, players on the teams in their real cities (Minnesota Norsemen instead of the Vikings, for example), and anagrams of the coaches' names. The game didn't sell as well as the Madden titles, but the game was solid and well-written (DOS-based) Perhaps Sega can cut a deal with the NFLPA without the NFL and still turn out a solid product.

  30. EA jumped the shark when []()/\ ended by tepples · · Score: 1

    On the other hand, when I was a teenager there was a Sega Genesis game by the name of _Mutant League Football_

    That game was made by Electronic Arts back when EA didn't suck. Many Slashdot readers would agree that EA jumped the shark when it stopped using the box-ball-cone logo and started putting the EA Sports logo on non-sport games. Sorry, but you're probably not going to get a sequel, as EA would rather sell more Madden games so as not to have to maintain an extra SKU using the Madden engine.

  31. EA = gaming genious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Once again, the knowledgeable consumer loses out. Of my friends who atleast have book smarts, many do not, love all the sega sports games. The others who are basically brain dead, yet still college educated, love EA. It seems to me marketing has such a pull on the public, the only thing consumers can do for themselves is sleep.

    Ohh btw, EA will have to update their sports games soon, new consoles are coming out soon, thus a new graphics engine might be implemented.

    1. Re:EA = gaming genious by fwitness · · Score: 1

      "...marketing has such a pull on the public..."

      This is especially true of the sports fan market. This is why Nike and Gatorade deals are big bucks. In sports, image is an extremely close second to athletic ability.

      For an example, SportsCenter is heralded *every night* by sports fans like it is the second coming of Christ. I don't care how much in-depth coverage another network could do, it won't be SportsCenter, and fans are, by definition, loyal.

      I never realized what EA has become until these last few 'deals'. This is amazing and I can't see how this will end will for the consumer.

      --
      -- I have fans? Wow.
  32. Trademark law has changed by tepples · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure that most people buying an American fooball game know that Red, Back, and White team called "Atlanta" is the Atlanta Falcons.

    Except trademark law has changed in the four decades (of Internet time) since Madden 64 came out; with the expansion of the scope of trade dress, it's possible to trademark a color scheme now. NFL and the Atlanta Falcons probably have Red+Black+White+Atlanta, GA, trademarked.

  33. new slashdot icon by syrinx · · Score: 2, Informative

    So who runs EA? (Wasn't it started by Trip Hawkins?) Currently it seems to be Larry Probst... can we get a Larry Probst Borg icon here for EA stories?

    --
    Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur.
    1. Re:new slashdot icon by blueZhift · · Score: 1

      Here ya go!

      Icon Sized

      Full Sized

      Disclaimer: Just having a little fun with Fireworks Mr. Probst!

    2. Re:new slashdot icon by syrinx · · Score: 1

      hahaha, that's excellent. someone should mod you +5, r0x0rs.

      --
      Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur.
    3. Re:new slashdot icon by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

      Why?...just buying some companies to integrate into a larger makes you a Gates/Borg?

      If so, you've got LOTS of others to cover too, from the food products industries, shipping industries, car manufacturers, phone companies, media networks, dairies, book retailers both online and off...

      etc.etc.etc.

      Doing such is typically just plain smart business practice, where hopefully both parties will benefit (that's the idea, or neither one would agree to the deal!).

  34. Will The Madden Name Be Dropped Soon? by blueZhift · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well now that EA has essentially bought up everything that a competitor like Sega might want to use to brand their football games, I wonder if Madden 2006 will be the last game with the Madden branding. Madden himself is getting old and given the way EA puts out a new football game every year, perhaps less relevant. Soon many of the fans playing the game won't even know who Madden is, many probably don't now. So the Madden name itself may not be worth as much as it used to be. Another question I would have is just how much longer does the current deal to use Madden's name last? If that deal expires soon, then what many of us know as Madden may eventually be known as EA ESPN NFL Football 2007.

    So maybe EA isn't an evil monopolist after all, they're just planning for the future!

    1. Re:Will The Madden Name Be Dropped Soon? by blueZhift · · Score: 1

      Whoops! My bad, I see that EA is negotiating with Madden right now. Heck we may see ESPN branding sooner than we think if Madden wants too much money!

    2. Re:Will The Madden Name Be Dropped Soon? by doormat · · Score: 1

      Legally its probably in the clear. ESPN is owned by Disney, which also owns ABC, and ABC monday night football, which Madden is the comentator.

      --
      The Doormat

      If you're not outraged, then you're not paying attention.
    3. Re:Will The Madden Name Be Dropped Soon? by emjoi_gently · · Score: 1

      Well, who the hell is Norton, and why are his Utilities so special anyway?

    4. Re:Will The Madden Name Be Dropped Soon? by nicksthings · · Score: 1
      While it wouldn't be too big of a deal, I think it would be silly for them to drop the Madden name. Consumers know "Madden" first and EA Sports second. No one says "Hey, have you played the new EA football?"

      Real simple, you hear time and time again, "I need to get that new Madden" (and they're not talking about the Madden real doll I saw on Ebay...which was creppy).

    5. Re:Will The Madden Name Be Dropped Soon? by hetairoi · · Score: 1

      Madden himself is getting old

      Madden actually died 5 years ago, what you see on TV is just a hologram developed by EA.

      Soon many of the fans playing the game won't even know who Madden is

      Doesn't matter, I hear EA is actually in talks with the NFL to change the name of the game itself to Madden.

      As John himself would say, "Boom! Sega didn't see that coming!"

      --
      you're all figments of my deranged imagination
  35. That reminds me... by Pollux · · Score: 1

    Back when I was a good ol' Nintendo player... I never really liked sports games. They were all the same...you had over twenty baseball games alone to choose from for the NES, they all got stale rather quickly...let's see here, there was "Baseball", "RBI Baseball", "RBI Baseball II", "Bases Loaded", "Bases Loaded II", "Bases Loaded III", "Bases Loaded IV"...

    Then I found a friend who rented Baseball Simulator 1000. Baseball was unreal to the point where it was fun. Bunt on a "tornado pitch" that goes over 200 mph and you could get a home run! Choose to hit a "missle ball" and whoever was dumb enough to get in the way of the ball was carried all the way to the outfield fence, smacked against the wall, and knocked out cold for two seconds of play. The game added creativity to an otherwise stale game.

    The other fun baseball-spinoff was Base Wars. Unless it was a force-out, you got to battle your opponent to determine if the base runner was out or safe (all the players were robots). When you won games, you got extra money to purchase for faster movement on the field, armor, or weapons that you could really use to waste your opponent with.

    But I find sports games to be a lot like first-person shooters. Every year, you get about 50 new titles. On average, 49.5 of them are recycled from previous titles; the gameplay is always the same, just with different "maps" (a.k.a. "stadiums" in the sports genre) and different players to play with.

  36. Sad Day by dr.banes · · Score: 2, Insightful

    EA has been making crap lately. The fact that ESPN 2k4 and 5 has been kicking Madden's ass for the past 2 years is not news,the same goes for their hockey and basketball lines. ESPN continued to tweak gameplay and graphics to the point that it looks and feels like a real game--not to forget that videogame magazines,websites and tv shows have noticed and gave more favorable reviews to ESPN despite pressure from the mega publisher. So I may not buy console football for another 5 years f---it. I doubt the doj will get involved unless the smaller companies make a big deal of it.

    1. Re:Sad Day by lavar78 · · Score: 1

      Speak for yourself. Chopping the price for 2K5 to $20 increased sales, but the game still isn't as good as Madden. Sega got closer than ever before, but it didn't quite bridge the gap.

      --
      "Dave, I stand still--the conclusions jump to me!" - Bill McNeal, NewsRadio
  37. Great by einer · · Score: 1

    Now Sega can go back to making real games.

  38. How they _really_ could annoy EA by mmkhd · · Score: 1

    You know, Sega could just release a decent game with a fantasy league, no sweat. With the kicker that you could create your *own* fantasy league!

    There would immediately be hundreds of websites with skins and mods for the real league.

    But than most of the revenue stram for those kinds of games comes from yearly updates, I guess.

    (Fools buy it every year. Happy flaming about that ;-)

    (Mmmh, they could do an online league. Every player builds his own team and they pay for access to the servers.....)

    1. Re:How they _really_ could annoy EA by mmkhd · · Score: 1

      On review: Isn't there something like this already? I don't like spr0ts games. I have no idea. Seems so obvious.

      (Now racing --with a force feedback wheel-- that is fun.)

    2. Re:How they _really_ could annoy EA by blew_fantom · · Score: 1

      yes. but i ask you - would it be more fun if you drove around as 'johnny farter' in a 'wheelsRus' or as 'michael schumacher' battling 'jenson button' at imola for the championship with the drivers and constructor's championship in the balance? to the uninitiated, racing sims can seem just as obvious and pointless... well, the same can be said for sports fans. especially when you take control of your favorite team with your favorite players leading the team on to victory. the intangible joy that anyone gains isn't so obvious.

    3. Re:How they _really_ could annoy EA by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      They could even create it themselves and then release it upon the world through some covert cracker channel.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
  39. I've just made a deal... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...that will keep the Empire out of here forever.

  40. The Gaming Industry vs The Application Industry by twoes00 · · Score: 1

    Seems like to me the gaming industry is just a few years behind the monopoly-run software/applications industry. Here's an analogy for you all :) Microsoft is to Computer Applications as ______ is to Electronic Entertainment. EA just seems to be climbing the ladder.

  41. Arena Football by Reignking · · Score: 1

    Maybe Sega could try Arena Football?

    Oh wait, EA signed them to a contract, too, last week...

    --
    One man's Funny is another man's Offtopic.
  42. Stating the obvious by sicking · · Score: 1

    How can anyone be so stupid as to sign a 15 year deal in an industry as changing as end user software. And in games nontheless, and industry that is currently changing at an insane pase.

    Here's my prediction. EA is going to continue releasing halfassed titles with the ESPN brand that are nothing more then minor incremental upgrades of previous releases. They're going to pull in some money to start with, but as people start to realize that there are other much better titles out there sales are going to drop.

    Inevitibly they will drop so far that the many of the titles are going to be scrapped and fewer and fewer titles are going to be released with the ESPN brand bringing in less and less money for ESPN.

    At this point we're probably somewhere 4-8 years down the road.

    EA (or EA sports) will either manage to stay valuble on their other types of games, or they will start dropping on the stockmarket.

    If they manage to stay valuble the ESPN brand will be sub-leased to other companies making the profit be split up between three companies, as well as making ESPN loose control of their own brand.

    If they drop too far in value the exclusive right will eventually be picked up by some other major games company (Microsoft?) and things will restart with them.

    I'm guessing we're now somewhere 8-13 years down the road.

    What might possibly break this bad cycle is if the exclusive right deal drops so much in value that ESPN can buy it back and do something sensible with their brand in the games industry instead.

    All in all this is a great shortterm deal for EA and I send my congratulations to their negotiators (who I'm sure is walking home with a big stack of greens). ESPN is the big looser here as they'll loose out on the getting-very-big computer games market. The general public will loose out on the ability to play great titles with their favourite teams, but they'll still be able to play great games.

    Of course all of this is quite obvious. I just wanted to put it down in a slashdot post so that I 10 years from now can point back and say 'I told you so'.

    --
    Failing to learn from history dooms you to repeat it.
  43. Does it really matter.. by radeon_xt · · Score: 1

    EA's going to buy Sega anyways. They're goin one company at a time, and sometime around 2010 they'll buy microsoft and then they'll stop - not coz they'd run outa money but coz they'd own the entire software industry by then.

    1. Re:Does it really matter.. by Xuranova · · Score: 1

      Sega was bought by Sammy a while ago. And Sammy isn't getting bought anytime soon.

      --
      "There is no real right or wrong, just what the majority accepts at the time."
  44. Re:What About Madden? by satoshi1 · · Score: 1

    "At least in the short term..." the article says. Hm... Maybe that plan on dumping Madden??

  45. Holographic playstation games? by voss · · Score: 1

    I guess EA really is planning ahead.
    ESPN locked up until the year 2020 ;-)

    1. Re:Holographic playstation games? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How much are they paying? How much will they have to charge for football to make their money back? Will they drop Madden now? Enquiring minds want to know! I do not relish the thought of paying $69.99 for EA'S ESPN NFL Football 2007.

    2. Re:Holographic playstation games? by StingRay02 · · Score: 1

      So don't pay it. If they have to charge $70 for (what will probably be no more than) a roster update to make their money back, and consumers say "Hell no, I'm not paying that," then EA, the NFL, ESPN and all the rest lose money on their ridiculous licensing deals. If that happens, I guarantee ESPN and the NFL will be looking for loopholes in their contracts. I doubt it will, though, because consumers have just gotta have their new sports games, even if it means nothing more than a few name changes.

  46. Not Nethack, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've was really looking forward to TimeSplitters: Future Perfect, only to realize today it's published by EA, and online play is on EA servers.

    I _was_ looking forward to it, but given how much I dislike EA these days, I'm not anymore. I'm going to pay attention to what I purchase to be sure I don't support EA in any way. I refuse to be a part of that anymore.

  47. Is this legal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does anyone see an anti-trust suit in the making? I'm pretty sure this is illegal. this is what I like to call a M$.

  48. Boycott by pieisgood · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I swear to god I am never buying another EA game. These guys are ruining the face of the video game developement industry. There are a few proud companies out there though, id, Oddworld inhabitants, Valve (I don't like them or how they work, but they are still better than EA), and Atari. I really want to see more small game dev. companies poping up. I am sorta really at a loss when I hear people say "Need for speed underground 2 is so awesome!", if EA can pump out a game with so many ads and then start putting all of the POP culture greats into a game .... gah I can't take it. as previously stated in another post of mine "Fuck off EA".

    --
    Eat sleep die
    1. Re:Boycott by Heoko · · Score: 1

      Oddworld Inhabitants are signed into EA. That is all I need to say.

      --
      Pie, A magical delicetessant!
    2. Re:Boycott by pieisgood · · Score: 1

      God Damnit!

      --
      Eat sleep die
  49. Re:What About Madden? by Joshua53077 · · Score: 0

    Well, in 2006, Madden will be 70 years old. By the end of the 15 year agreement, which will start in 2007, Madden would be 86. EA probably wants to ensure the long term viability of the franchise by being associated with ESPN....Stuart Scott Football 2011 anyone?

  50. Ruffians! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I CAN'T believe it. They snubbed the Dreamcast, forcing Sega to produce its own sports series, then when that series moved to other consoles and threatened their market share they grabbed exclusive NFL rights so that Sega couldn't produce sports games any more, and on top of all that now they stole Sega's ESPN license.

    GOD, how can these guys get away with this?! They have cut the throat of Sega Sports and stolen its clothes.

  51. Innovate? by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

    Um, aren't the rules for most sports games pretty much set in stone anyhow? You can do things like individualizing the stats of players and programming in preset plays, but it's still going to be football, or baseball, or whatever. It's like playing checkers with pure-diamond figurines of various political figures, hand-carved painstakingly by the rare diamond-billed antarctic penguin. It may get flashier, but it's still checkers.

    --
    ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
  52. Re: Best Sports Game Evar: by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

    Nintendo's "Blades of Steel". Like pong with hockey players. So very awesome.

    --
    ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
  53. online lock out - you'll be frozen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I expect online only versions of console games in 4 years. This means that EA can force you to pay a monthly fee to play a sports game.

    You will be locked out of any non-online game playing.

    Currently, I don't mind the yearly releases of sports games. It just means that I can always pick up a newer used sports game for $5.

  54. EA? by orangeguru · · Score: 1

    Meet the new Microsoft of Entertainment.

    I am pretty sure such a huge monopoly won't do gamers and the products any good.

    1. Re:EA? by realinvalidname · · Score: 1

      This is a very good analogy, because EA is buying the respect it cannot earn, and preventing quality products from coming to market. Just like Microsoft.

      I switched from EA Sports games to Sega Sports games a few years ago because EA was obviously coasting and Sega was making more realistic games. Take hockey for example - in EA's NHL series, the game play is "Big-hit everyone. Even if a penalty is called, the power play is meaningless". You lose the passing game, playing the points is impossible, and it ends up turning into frickin' "Power Stone" (a silly four-player brawler). In Sega's NHL 2K5, moving the puck and setting up quality shots (getting one-timers, getting it right in front of the net, or getting breakaways) is the only way to score. And yet, the checking game is still far more interesting than EA's, as you use the right analog stick to sweep your stick, hip check, or deck the guy (another, more easily accessible button is used for typical stick checks).

      Don't even get me into the style-over-substance spew that "EA Big" has become. I've never seen a game series self-destruct as badly as "Sled Storm" did between its PS1 and PS2 versions.

      Well, with kids now, I'm too busy to game much anyways, so I'll just hold on to NHL 2K5 and NFL 2K5 as the last good sports video games that will ever be made.

      --realinvalidname
    2. Re:EA? by nb+caffeine · · Score: 1

      I used to be a huge fan of EA BIG, their SSX games continue to amaze me (im still playing ssx3 many hours a week, 1.5 years after release). The rest of BIG's games are complete dreck. NFL Street has become the ninja gaiden of football games (run along walls, etc) Im waiting for an independant developer to make a semi-realistic snowboarding game ala ssx. Im sure it would totally rock.

      --

      "Something's wrong with you...and I hope we never do meet again." - Deftones When Girls Telephone Boys
  55. Insanely Stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The parent is absolutely correct. This is a mindbogglingly short-sited decision by ESPN.

    In 15 years, ESPN could have had 40% or more of the market just by developing their own game (or pushing NFL 2k5 and beyond). We all know EA hasn't shown any progression in the Madden games since 2002. NFL2k5 was just as good, and at least they were trying with the in-the-helmet view.

    Now that was one option. Instead of doing that, they said "let's give one company that has only been around, what, 20 years, a contract to COMPLETELY OWN US for 15 years".

    And I though the NFL was stupid. This is just plain retarded.

  56. NHL? by IllogicalStudent · · Score: 1

    <Bitter Canadian Hockey Fan Rant>
    Any word yet as to whether or not Bettman has sold out or is looking to sell out the NHL yet to these asshats at EA? It's only a matter of time I suppose; the commish fscks over everything else with his league.
    <Bitter Canadian Hockey Fan Rant>

    --
    But Maaa! Everyone else has a .sig !
    1. Re:NHL? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmrph, guess ⁄ doesn't work on /.

    2. Re:NHL? by NeoChaosX · · Score: 1

      Considering the damage the lockout (not a strike, which is where players refuse to play; a lockout is where the management refuses to let the players play, there's a difference) is doing to the NHL, I wouldn't be suprised if the league and NHLPA did that after settling their differences. After the shitty TV deal the NHL got from NBC, they'll probably be desperate for some guaranteed money.

      --
      One man's selflessness is another man's annoyance.
    3. Re:NHL? by unclethursday · · Score: 1
      I fucking hope not. EA's NHL games are CRAP CRAP CRAP. Sega's are so much more realistic and all NHL like.

    4. Re:NHL? by Erbo · · Score: 1
      I'm not even sure whether the NHL will still exist in anything like its present form in another year. Of course, it may be replaced by some new league consisting of, say, the top dozen current NHL teams (in terms the money they make), in which case, I wouldn't be surprised if EA looks to line up a deal with them.

      Pity. I enjoy Sega's ESPN NHL 2K5. Maybe Sega can work exclusive deals with the National Lacrosse League and Fox Sports Net.

      --
      Be who you are...and be it in style!
  57. Re:What About Madden? by HarvardAce · · Score: 1
    Stuart Scott Football 2011 anyone?

    Last time I checked, Stuart Scott focuses primarily on basketball. I would say your better bet is Chris Berman Football 2011, although he'll be quite old by that time as well. Maybe Mike Golich Football? Anyone who listens to ESPN Radio from 6-10AM every weekday knows what I'm talking about.

    --
    Note to self: Stop putting jokes in my insightful comments so I can get something other than +1 Funny!
  58. gah! by sw33tjimmy · · Score: 1

    mod me down for redundancy, but this is friggin horrible.

    --
    Get Virtual.
  59. Re:FP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Too bad you aren't.

  60. Re: Best Sports Game Evar: by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

    You're just jealous.

    Besides playing with "Real players (tm)" just celebrates them. I find nothing to celebrate in whiny, often questionable and rarely honourable people that play a game for a couple of years for many millions.

    Oh it's tough work. No doubt about it. But they also get to "play for a dozen years" then retire at 30 with millions in their pockets. Pay the players say 60 to 80 grand a year plus travel expenses [e.g. hotels, food] and then we can say "whoa, they work hard for the money". ...

    Tom

    --
    Someday, I'll have a real sig.
  61. Boards of Directors have become a joke by Infonaut · · Score: 1
    Its all about short term profits.

    No argument there. Directors have become mere rubber stamping tools for management teams. Why? Because the boards are all composed of O-level guys from other public companies, all of whom seem to observe a tacit agreement not to screw with each other's executive decisions.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
  62. question for you lawyers by Flunitrazepam · · Score: 1

    Can a company still release a game featuring players with roughly identical attributes, and allow you to rename them? How about teams?

    Could a company create an easy way to create/swap rosters online, so the fans could make whatever they want and post it online for you to download?

    That's what I'd do, if I were smart.

    --
    1) Your analysis is based on bad assumptions so your result is way off. 2) You're a sick bastard for fucking a horse.
    1. Re:question for you lawyers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Can a company still release a game featuring players with roughly identical attributes, and allow you to rename them? How about teams? Could a company create an easy way to create/swap rosters online, so the fans could make whatever they want and post it online for you to download?

      Cosole sports gamers want the home team/home town game experience with every detail exactly right. But without the work of maintaining a stats-oriented fantasy league.

  63. Re:What About Madden? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Chris Berman rocks. "Curtis 'My Favorite' Martin", etc, etc :-)

  64. Madden 2k5 vs. ESPN NFL 2k5 by DesiGuy421 · · Score: 0

    Personally, I think some of you need to lay off the Madden series just a bit. Don't get me wrong, I agree EA is an evil company, but the last 2 Madden games have been absolutely great, and in my opinion, much better than the ESPN series. With each play, there are so many different combinations of player assignments and formation changes that are possible whether you are on offense or defense. ESPN does not offer the same level of chess-game-like tactics as Madden does.(ESPN still has them, just not as much.) I would say that there is vast improvement over the Madden series every year, especially the last 2. ESPN, by no means, blows Madden out of the water. Maybe with the exception of the $20 price tag, ;). ESPN may be better value, but it wasn't the better game. Although, maybe the competition w/Sega is what fueled Madden to be that good. There's a good possibility that this will cause EA Sports' developers to be a little lax on improving this year's version of Madden.

    1. Re:Madden 2k5 vs. ESPN NFL 2k5 by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

      Don't get me wrong, I agree EA is an evil company

      And you think that why??

  65. Sega basketball games are superior by dolphin558 · · Score: 1

    I thought the NBA 2K series was better than the NBA Live games. Even the venerable Madden football games had a VERY SLIGHT edge over the NFL 2K games. I hope Sega can hold on...

  66. The Rise and Fall of the Electronic Arts Empire by superultra · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is actually good news. I think it's the beginning of the end for EA.

    First, my bet is that Sony, MS, and Nintendo are as worried as anyone about EA's rise to power. The could quite nearly already ruin a console (cf. Dreamcast). But now, if a console maker isn't doling out favors and money to EA, they will find themselves in a very difficult position. I wonder if we won't begin to see some interesting powerplays behind the scenes, with MS/Sony/Nintendo running some subvert rescue operations to somehow curb EA from gobling all the power dots on the board.

    The other positives in this is that we will probably start to see all the things that come with being in a near-monopoly level of control. Lawsuits against EA will inevitably ensue.

    Finally, I don't care what EA says - a vaccum of competition makes teams lazy. What does Tiberon, the studio behind Madden, have to worry about if they have a few bad features in the game? Why bother paying for focus groups, or worrying about review scores or message board feedback, if your game is the only NFL game on the market for the next X years? Mark my words: the progression we've seen in the quality of EA's sports titles will begin to diminish.

    You don't use an ICBM to kill an ant hill. EA was obviously worried about Sega. They wouldn't have gone to all this trouble for the hell of it. You don't see them suddenly making exclusive Curling League contracts. They were starting to hurt after last year's $20 high quality sports titles.

    If EA can bleed, they can be killed.

    1. Re:The Rise and Fall of the Electronic Arts Empire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But what if they bleed ACID!?
      Like the ALIEN in the ALIEN movie?!?!??
      Won't somebody think of the CHILDREN?!?

  67. Gutless by Shihar · · Score: 4, Informative

    There is nothing wrong with a fantasy league other then that people want to use the real thing. Now people are terrified that EA has a monopoly on that name that everyone wants so badly. To this I say, who gives a fuck? Get a grip. This isn't an OS by stretch of the imagination where at least crying monopoly makes sense. This is a sport. A piece of recreation. EA and ESPN hold absolutely no monopoly over the things I can do to recreate. Don't like the way NFL or ESPN is doing business, DON'T WATCH. People have the power to make every stupid corporation under the sun vanish over night, they just are too lazy to do it.

    A good friend of mine is a sociologist. She will preach endlessly about how evil Wal-Mart and globalization is - then go to Wal-Mart to buy stuff instead of a mom and pop shop because they offer the largest selection at the lowest price. For fuck's sake. You don't need government action to take these companies down, just a week or two of not giving them your money.

    ESPN, the NFL, and EA are perfect examples of this. So ESPN enters into an agreement with EA that any right thinking person should immediately recognize as stifling innovation in sports games. The real question is not when EA is going to get nailed for being a monopoly, but when are YOU going to stop giving ESPN and EA your money. This is football for fuck's sake. Grow a pair of balls, suck it up, and don't watch the shit if you think their practices stink. This is a luxury we are talking about it. It is something that doesn't require loss of life or limb to boycott.

    People are whiny and obnoxious these days. I bet easily 95% of the people here that complain about this move on Slashdot are going to bitch up a three page essay on why EA is evil, then fork over a couple of twenties for their NFL 2005. Bah. The whiney masses are so gutless and spineless they deserve to have corporations like EA and ESPN walk all over them.

    1. Re:Gutless by Rhone · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I've been boycotting CDs (no, I don't use Kazaa either) because of the ridiculous prices for many years now, and the prices haven't gone down. Actually, CDs are MORE expensive now than before I started boycotting.

      I avoided paying to see movies in the theatres for years too, but that doesn't seem to have changed anything either.

      Likewise, I can boycott Madden football games, ESPN, and the NFL. I completely agree with you that we have the choice to do this.

      However, any support I could conceivably get for my boycott would just be a drop in the bucket, so let's be honest about the result: Me, or any other Slashdotter (most Slashdotters hate sports games anyway, so this is kinda moot) boycotting EA, the NFL, and ESPN doesn't mean that those companies are going to change their policies. It just means that I'll never be watching football or playing football video games again.

    2. Re:Gutless by Loco3KGT · · Score: 1

      How dare you claim I should stand up for myself in the market as a consumer. I'm an American, I'm entitled to everything and fight for nothing!

      --
      Blessed be he who reads this post, Cursed be he who tells my boss.
    3. Re:Gutless by Londovir · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Okay, this story has faded enough that this response is going to be lost in the archives of history. Still, I cannot and will not abide such a response without giving an opinion back.

      How amazingly narrowsighted your views are. You are one of those wonderful individuals who will sit back and watch grievances take place without speaking out or against it, all under the banner of "rationality". How many things develop to the point where they negatively impact society in one fashion or another simply because, at their onset, people said, "It's a triviality, it's luxury, it has little importance."

      Why does the status of a videogame mean less of value than an OS? For that matter, by your own statement, even an OS company couldn't be a monopoly, as using an OS is "a luxury...something that doesn't require loss of life or limb to boycott". Monopolism, in any form, is something that should be aggressively fought against. The ripple ramifications go far beyond your narrowminded ability to see the forest for the trees. If EA is allowed to remain unchecked, as they are going in the present, their negative influences will cascade outward. What starts today to you as a recreational endeavor will begin to become acquisition of competition, closing of studios, terminations of employees, loss of income for those employees, unemployment, stifling of competition, increase of pricing for limited choice products, and so forth. We've already seen many cases where the electronics industry (both videogame and computer) have definite impact on the stock market, thus the economy to a small scale.

      You speak so cavalierly in your post it frankly reflects poorly on your view of civilization. When do you draw the line? At what point does your so-called morality dictate that you stand up and take a stance. You speak derogatively of people who rightly speak out against EA's tactics as being "whiny" and "obnoxious". Did you read your own post? It didn't read like an intelligently composed opinion of others, but rather a blasting, ill-thought tirade against other people's opinions, which I'm disappointed to see that the moderators of /. chose to mod all the way up to +4 for being Informative.

      The reality is, whether or not a company promotes, produces, or owns something which is not life supporting, it is still morally [and legally] WRONG to own a monopoly of it (in most cases). Your friend's choice to violate her own argument against WalMart by shopping there does not translate to the arguments of those of us who may have little choice but to purchase a game from EA if it's the only choice we have. We are not hypocrites if we choose to do so, for in our case we literally have no alternative. Your friend, however, may very well go shopping at KMart, Target, etc. That's the difference. Perhaps you could argue we shouldn't support EA with our dollars since a football game is not a life necessity, but we also shouldn't have to go without entirely because a company utilizes business practices that are beyond contempt.

      No one deserves to have a corporation walk all over them, and I'm disappointed that you believe anyone does. We have laws in this country that are there to protect competition, protect innovation, and to protect the consumer. These laws aren't written to say "so long as the product is vital to life", or "so long as the product is important", or "so long as the product is deemed worthy of protection by Shihar". That's the point. The consumer shouldn't have to vote with their money (if they even can at all) in order to be protected by the laws of the country. That's why people post here, and also write their government representatives (such as I have) to seek their assistance in having the laws applied to corporations.

      My point is, I've read of the difficulties that many programmers have faced working at EA. I've read the blogs from some of them about the hours they worked and the lack of pay they encountered. My first reaction was not, "If they didn't like it, they should hav

      --
      Londovir
    4. Re:Gutless by Shihar · · Score: 1

      I have a monopoly on long winded rants written by myself do I need a lawsuit? EA has a monopoly on the monopoly of sports crap sold by ESPN. If you narrow down the type of product enough you can claim monopoly on anything. Owning the rights to produce video games based off of another corporations work is by no stretch of the imagination a monopoly in any way, shape, or form. The only reason why it irks people is because they are hopelessly devoted to a brand name. If you want to hitch your life to a brand name, don't be surprised when that brand name has the ability to pull you around by the balls.

      If Mattel won the rights to produce American Idol dolls that wouldn't make Mattel a monopoly. There are people that can't live without buying their American Idol doll of Justin (or whatever the fuck one of them is named), just in the same way there are people that simply can't contemplate not buying their official NFL video game complete with all their favorite player stats and names. Begging the government to use the force of law to protect their narrow brand name obsession without a doubt earns the use of words like "whiney", "gutless", "spineless", and "obnoxious".

      More to the point, if you want to use the argument that "We have laws in this country that are there to protect competition" you can rest easy in the knowledge that none of those laws have been violated by one company buying up the rights to produce a spin off product using the brand name of another company. Perhaps we should call our congressmen to get them to get Uncle Sam to twist the arms of these corporations to give us the appropriate rights to all the American Idol dolls and Official NFL® football video games that we so rightly deserve.

      There are plenty of instances when I am more then happy to see the state wade into the market and act as an arbitrator in cases of disputes and monopolies. A company selling off rights to your favorite brand name to produce a spin off product that you so desperately want doesn't qualify as one of the times when I want the force of law to protect gutless consumerism. If you really think this is the end of the world, do yourself a favor and try a football game without a brand name attached. Even better, realize that the market for entertainment is infinitely vast and that instead of giving money to EA, the NFL, or ESPN, you could be posting angry rants about gutless consumerism on Slashdot and getting just as much entertainment without paying a cent.

  68. Yet another incorrect statement on this topic... by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

    We all know EA hasn't shown any progression in the Madden games since 2002.

    Maybe you do, but don't speak for the rest of us -- the public at large. A quick look at www.metacritic.com yields the following scores (PS2 versions):
    2001 - 91
    2002 - 94
    2003 - 95
    2004 - 94
    2005 - 91

    It helps to do your research before you make sweeping incorrect claims. Score went up, 2003 to 2004.

    But what's actually much more impressive is that all the scores are above 90, which is very rare (just check metacritic and look).

  69. Blatant revenge by rkischuk · · Score: 4, Insightful
    If it wasn't obvious before, it should be fairly evident now. Sega pissed EA off like never before when it dropped all its game prices to $19.99. Not only did it threaten their market share, it threatened to change the paradigm for sports game pricing.

    EA would take a MASSIVE hit if customers began to EXPECT to only pay $19.99 for each year's incremental update to the prior year's sports games. It would not only hurt them in the games where Sega provides direct competition (NFL, NBA, NHL, etc), it would force them to shift the price of their unopposed games. Why would gamers pay $50 for Tiger Woods or NASCAR after paying just $20 for Madden?

    Rest assured, somewhere in the upper levels of EA, the bosses are paying a premium for these deals because they're factoring in the extra cash they'll make once Sega is crushed. The NFL was the opening salvo, the failed NBA bid an attempted backbreaker (especially since Sega's NBA game has been generally better in recent years). The Arena Football League deal attempts to seal off Sega's escape route (Sega could have design an AFL game to keep their football engine primed for the expiration of the NFL deal). But this is the heavy artillery. While Sega had begun establishing itself as a credible creator of sports games, the added ESPN name gave immediate credibility to the series in the eyes of consumers. Sega is some company that made a console they used to play Sonic on, ESPN almost defines sports to many Americans. Taking ESPN out of their hands puts them back to trying to build the Sega Sports name, but without a licensed NFL game as their flagship. EA is out for blood.

    --
    Seen any BadMarketing lately?
  70. Yet another incorrect statement on this topic..... by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 2, Informative

    I guess some of that applies to ESPN too. By taking the deal from EA they are cutting them selves off from Sega and other companies that might be willing to pay for the priviledge of promoting ESPN.

    Hiow do you know that the amount that "Sega and other companies" would be willing to pay is larger than that of what EA *has* offered to pay?

    1) Do you know how much EA paid? No.
    2) Do you have financial models taking into account a number of factors to try to predict what the most beneficial outcome is for ESPN? I highly doubt it.

    So do not make assumptions otherwise.

  71. And here's another flawed statement... by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

    In 15 years, ESPN could have had 40% or more of the market just by developing their own game (or pushing NFL 2k5 and beyond).

    ESPN doesn't develop games. They hire people (Sega, Konami, etc.) who hire people (Kush Games, Visual Concepts, etc.) to develop games. The only thing that is different now is they've signed a longer than usual with someone they've hired to hire. Someone with a fantastic track record at doing such, to boot.

    Besides, I kinda have more faith in the judgement abilities of the heads of ESPN's licensing division than "an anonymous coward on slashdot".

  72. New EA Jingle... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    EA Games!
    Ethics aren't everything!

    How about that for a opener on every game?
    (instead of challenge everything)

  73. Sega's Option by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Sega has only one viable option - what they should do at this point is release a basketball and football game again next year... only with the names and uniforms ever so slightly changed. The Falcons become the Fulcrums (or something much less stupid anyway but similar in nature). The players look kind of similar to real players, but perhaps have clown noses. The stadiums are variations on the real thing.

    Then, since they no longer have to pay for licensing fees and are covered under fair use of similar liknesses by the parody clause, they release the game at $9.99. That's right, scorched earth policy. I think a lot of people will be happy to play a good football game with clown noses rather than pay $40 extra for nothing special, and it would really stick it to EA.

    Sega owes it to the population of the Earth to spend every second now tormenting EA the company to an early grave.

    And THAT is capitalism at its finest. :-)

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  74. Re:And now ALL motivation for EA to innovate is go by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

    EA has cranked out some crap this year

    Has it? Which?

    Let's see, taking a look at EA's sports games 2004/2005, we see...hmm...critically acclaimed pretty much across the board. Lots of "green" scoring there...

  75. Re:And now ALL motivation for EA to innovate is go by unclethursday · · Score: 1
    Might wanna check someplace relevant to game scores... like GameRankings.

    If we consider a game with an average score of over 85% to be "critically acclaimed", we see Madden still falls there on the PS2. However, Madden's score has been dropping, slowly but surely since Madden 2003. Madden 2003 got a 91.3% average, 2004 got a 90.8%, and Madden 2005 has a 90.0%.

    NBA Live doesn't make it above 81% average this year, so it isn't what we'll call "critically acclaimed" for this unscientific survey.

    MLB 2005 also doesn't make it with only a 79.9%

    NHL 2005 saw a drastic drop year over year in averages. NHL 2004 had an 84.4%, which would have almost made it, but this year's NHL 2005 has only a 77.1%.

    Now, let's look at Sega's lineup for this year.

    ESPN NFL 2K5 scores an 89%. A mere 1% lower than Madden, and almost 2.5% higher than last year's, which was also higher than 2K3's score. Sega's game goes up in review scores, EA's goes down. Funny that EA got this license from the NFL, eh?

    ESPN NBA 2K5 gets a 84.8%, not making it "critically acclaimed" for our survey, but close, and rated higher, overall, than EA's NBA game.

    ESPN NHL 2K5 gets a 87.8%. That makes it to our list, and is 10.7% higher in the ratings than EA's arcadey crap NHL game (as it should be, because EA's is arcadey crap).

    There is no Major League Baseball released for ESPN this year to compare. Or, at least no reviews of ESPN Major League Baseball 2K5.

    So, take Metacritic's "green" rating and toss it. Go to GameRankings and see a site dedicated to just video game reviews, and it will give you a much better idea of what reviewers thought of any game out there. And these were scores just for the PS2 versions, not the Xbox versions.

  76. Re:And now ALL motivation for EA to innovate is go by samdu · · Score: 1

    Catwoman comes to mind. There have been others recently, but I don't have the wherewithall to look 'em up right now. My point was that, without the pressure exherted by the other sports franchises, Sega/ESPN in particular, how long before EA lets their sports games deteriorate to the craptacular level of the drivel that they've started pouring out lately?

  77. Vikings by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm a huge VIkeings fan, but I know well enough to never bet cash money on them. They have a way of always fucking it up.

  78. Re:Yet another incorrect statement on this topic.. by unclethursday · · Score: 1
    As I've said before, FUCK METACRITIC.

    They aren't a goddamn gaming only meta-study/review average site! They do books and DVDs and all sorts of other shit. Look at GameRankings for averages for games based on just GAMING SITES.

    And, in there, you will see that EA's Madden has gone down since 2003, not up. Not a huge amount, but it is falling in scores.

  79. RPG are more important that sports games... by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    for the simple fact that, if you want to play Final Fantasy, you have to buy a PS/2. I can get the latest sports game for any console, because EA ports the same damn to all of them (and will scale down their specs to the lowest common denominator).

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  80. Honestly,... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ESPN is ass. The whole network. It's Fox News for Sports (Sound a fury signifying nothing). And do I have to get into the declining state of their commentary? Brutal. Way better to tune to the local radio guys for which ever team your watching (Thank you Sirius) and turn the volume all the way off on the TV. It completely amazing to me that nearly every set of guys calling the game for the radio is vastly superior to nearly everyone doing it on TV.

    Oh and for a branded Analysys portion of the game, give me NFL Network or the equivalent, ESPN sucks ass.

  81. I think this goes to prove by fr0dicus · · Score: 1

    that EA have no intentions of innovating their way back into the publics hearts. It's probably fair to say that these 15 games will be so slightly incremental that you'll be hard pushed to tell the difference between one release and another from five years later.

  82. Re:And now ALL motivation for EA to innovate is go by unclethursday · · Score: 1

    Dammit used the 989 crap MLB instead of EA's MVP scores. MVP 2004 would make it above 85% with an 88.2%, but no MVP 2005 released yet.

  83. Re:And now ALL motivation for EA to innovate is go by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

    Catwoman, well, yeah....lol...but the very movie was a bad idea from the start...heh.

  84. Re:Yet another incorrect statement on this topic.. by ChristianBaekkelund · · Score: 1

    1) As I've said before:
    "You're whining about one game reviews site over another??? THAT'S your major complaint? If so you COMPLETELY missed the point that was attempted to make. This site, that site, screw it, any site with 20+ reviews from professional reviewers, I don't give a damn, because it's completely and utterly beside the point."

    2) Keeping a consistently high average year after year IS a sign of some progress anyway, as consumers would not buy something that was exactly like the previous years version without some substantial changes. The fact that Madden (just as an example) maintains consistently high ratings year after year is indicative of them (Tiburon and EA) doing a good job at adding new interesting features and content year after year.

    But none of that as the point anyway...but then again, my point of "at least vaguely check your facts before making broad sweeping statments" is probably fruitless on Slashdot.... ;)

  85. Looks like ESPN pulled an EA on Sega by MunchMunch · · Score: 1
    Remember when EA built up its brand on the Sega Genesis platform, and then soon refused to make games for its successful Dreamcast? Nobody could figure out the deal at the time, since the PS2 was only announced, not due out for a year, and the Dreamcast was selling like hotcakes. Basically, EA gave Sega a good slap in the face and crack in the kneecaps for no apparent reason other than to butter up Sony who, collectively, the gaming world had already chosen as its new leader.

    Fast forward to now, and ESPN built up its name thanks to Sega, gained marketshare and mindshare exponentially (ESPN 2K5 sales were almost on parity with Madden, albiet with the lower price and the game had gained cachet perhaps solely because of Sega's excellent development efforts), and then took a page from EA and crowbarred Sega in the solar plexus.

    I know the question is itself fallacious, because at some level these were both business decisions, but: Why do successful companies who built their brands on Sega's success hate Sega? I mean, you'd think there'd be some goodwill and comradery between the Sega and ESPN execs that would at least make them think twice at 15-year-exclusive-deal time with the biggest competitor.

    1. Re:Looks like ESPN pulled an EA on Sega by Rhone · · Score: 1

      I doubt there was any comraderie between ESPN and Sega aside from Sega just forking over cash for the license.

      As it was, even though Sega was selling "ESPN" football games, ESPN used Madden on their shows when demonstrating plays etc. They were already in EA's pocket even while Sega was using their name.

    2. Re:Looks like ESPN pulled an EA on Sega by DarkAdonis · · Score: 1

      EA and Sega have had sour relations starting sometime during the days of the Sega Genesis (or was it the Sega Saturn). In any case, at some point EA refused to make games for any Sega console ever again.

      Perhaps someone with more knowledge on the subject would care to elaborate. I want to say it had something to do with the Sega developing its Sega Sports brand, but that may be incorrect.

    3. Re:Looks like ESPN pulled an EA on Sega by Alizarin+Erythrosin · · Score: 1

      "Goodwill and comradery" always seem to go out the window when there are fat sacks of cash money involved.

      --
      There are only 10 kinds of people in this world... those who understand binary and those who don't
  86. There is always Europe. by master_p · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The biggest football league, the UEFA Champions League, witnessed by billions around the globe, is the single most important event in the world of football each year. SEGA can easily grab that licence, and release a football game based on that. If coupled with Virtua Striker graphics, it could not be anything else than a winner.

    And along with the UEFA CL, goes the FIFA World Cup.

  87. Just one more reason... by BladesP9 · · Score: 1

    This is just one more reason that I am glad I do not play any kind of sports game.

  88. 850.000.000.- $ up their Ass by guru512 · · Score: 0

    EA with their yearly output of crappy Sportgames, which hardly differ from last years version appear to me more and more like a Company for increasing stupidity among gamers.

    the cash would have been better spent on their codeslaves, to develop some innovative and fun games after all.

    fuck EA

  89. Re:And now ALL motivation for EA to innovate is go by notbob · · Score: 0

    You're a total troll whore for that game rankings site, you sponsored by them or something?

    Annoying as hell, every other post you make is "nooo look at game rankings"... "that site X doesn't matter cause game rankings is better..."

  90. $75 Madden? by solomonrex · · Score: 1

    It's widely known they're planning to raise the costs of videogames on the next systems. This is EA getting the Heavens aligned to charge Micro$oft-level money. I think the major players, Sony, Micro$, NFL, EA have it in their interests to have fewer games and charge more for the really popular ones. I think Sega IS toast. They challenged the champion, but couldn't knock him out. Now he's getting revenge.

  91. If Sega is smart... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They'll team up with the CBC for their hockey titles. I can see it now...HNIC2K6. The sales would be massive in Canada.

    I know people are going to say that the rest of the world wouldn't care for that title. But come on...how many gamers outside of Canada buy hockey games?

  92. The Gaming Landscape Will Change by prezkennedy.org · · Score: 1
    Fifteen years is a really long time in the game industry. To put it into perspective, look back fifteen years to see the types of consoles and computers that were available at the time. In terms of technology, this exclusive license will span about 5 computer lifetimes (3 year lifetime).

    This type of exclusive deal feels far too anti-competitive to be right... The fact that EA publishes many other games makes me nervous too. What if they start doing these types of deals outside of the sports gaming industry?

    --
    It started back in Team Fortress Classic
  93. Re:What About Madden? by HarvardAce · · Score: 1

    Yes, most of those are funny. But after playing ESPN NFL 2K5 as the Jets, I am really sick of hearing "Curtis 'My Favorite' Martin." I heard it several times a game, as he was always on the highlight reels and was often the player of the game.

    --
    Note to self: Stop putting jokes in my insightful comments so I can get something other than +1 Funny!
  94. Re:Yet another incorrect statement on this topic.. by phriedom · · Score: 1

    You're missing my point entirely. I believe that EA is paying ESPN more for an exclusive license than ESPN would have received from EA+SEGA+other parties for non-exclusive licensing. I'm not contesting that the EA deal makes sense for ESPN on a balance sheet or a revenue model.

    My issue is that the promotional value of video games isn't properly valued on a balance sheet. Corporations spend millions of dollars on advertising to try and improve their image and it isn't as effective as video games. No advertising reaches that critical 12-25 demographic the way that video games do. To put this completely into the hands of EA, who isn't even going to put the ESPN name on the front of the game box is a mistake in my opinion.

    --
    Don't moderate flamebait as Troll. Know the difference or you will be Meta-moderated.
  95. Nice... by Ryan+C. · · Score: 1

    If you don't watch a lot of football, you're just not going to get the parent post's joke. Ever. If you do, BitwiseX, that was sublime. Kudos.

    --
    -Ryan C.
  96. Curiousity... by th3space · · Score: 1

    Is there any type of an exclusivity clause in the contract between ESPN and EA? If so, that leaves Sega wide open to partner up with another sports network that is in a position similar to their own (David to EA's Goliath)...Fox Sports Net.

    Think about it, Fox Sports Net typically has better coverage with market-specific programming, which allows them to create a better allegience with viewers who like to actually watch sports rather than sports recap shows (as I can invariably turn on ESPN and catch Sportscenter). Sure, they're lacking the NFL license, but they can make a 'generic' football game and still have a commentary team with stylized and recognizable graphics. And it would be something that is applicable across any and all of their sports games...my hope is that they partner with FSN and get in on the FIFA action and produce a soccer game that I actually enjoy playing (EA I refuse to play anymore and Winning Eleven # is too sterile for my tastes).

    This is potentially bad for a lot of companies, but Sega doesn't have to be one of them. Of course, this is all moot if there isn't exclusivity between ESPN and EA (which I sincerely doubt).

    --
    "How like you to drag your keyboard to a gun fight." - Aaron Bedard (BANE)
  97. Re: Best Sports Game Evar: by sebi · · Score: 1

    Oh it's tough work. No doubt about it. But they also get to "play for a dozen years" then retire at 30 with millions in their pockets. Pay the players say 60 to 80 grand a year plus travel expenses [e.g. hotels, food] and then we can say "whoa, they work hard for the money". ...

    Just out of curiosity, if the world were to follow your visionary plan, who would get to take home the extra money? There are a handful of sports organisations with quite astonishing payrolls and they still manage to make a profit. Player salaries are mostly what they are because the market values them like that. If you want to admire athletes who can't live from what they earn, even though they play in the majors, then you might want to check out Major League Lacrosse.

  98. RPGs by siskbc · · Score: 1
    Oh you poor, miserable bastard... You've missed so much! While we miss out on a LOT compared to the japanese market (Shin Megami Tensei before the most recent one, for example...) there are some awesome games out there. Mostly for PSX (not much in the eye-candy dept) but I think the Shadow Hearts games are right up there as some of the best RPGs available on PS2.

    I didn't say I don't play RPGs - just not on the PS2. I play them on PC all the time - which seems, to me, to be a far superior medium for RPGs.

    Since you seem to be better versed, how do PS2 RPGs compare to their PC cousins?

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    1. Re:RPGs by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      I prefer the console J-type RPGs to the PC versions. While I loved Fallout 1/2, I'm not a huge fan of the current D&D-based RPGs like NWN. Exceptions of course for Planescape: Torment and the classic EoB series. I've played some more obscure games that I really liked, like Septerra Core. I really dislike so-called "Action RPGs" like Vampire:Redemption.

      Console games tend to be less linear(until recently at least) and they have the disadvantage of not having messes of mods for them, but I've always found that I liked the stories and characters better. I like those types of RPGs on PC too, they just dont show up nearly as often.

  99. City of Heroes by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1
    Bad idea if you don't want to get sued.

    IIRC the publishers of a superhero game got sued by marvel/dc because users were able to use the costume designer to create heroes that looked similar to their trademarked comic book characters.