What works: The “real player motion” promised in the game really does feel great after taking some time getting used to it. It’s still not a perfect simulation of football, but what I initially perceived as a more difficult game was actually a better-defined set of rules around its gameplay that is the most rewarding and true-to-life the franchise has ever offered. EA Sports has propped up nothing-features with fancy names in the past (remember vision cones?), but there’s a lot more meat on the bone with this one.
There are still many animations that you will see over and over, but the collision and responsiveness feels better than ever. During my time playing the game, I have experienced the occasional glitch when running the ball too close to my own teammates, and there are still troubling bugs with specific plays (such as the infamous fake FB handoff to HB toss, where the quarterback starts the animation, then stops and stands there waiting to be sacked). But they seem to happen a lot less than they did in Madden NFL 18.
Changes to gameplay include a heavier focus on finding the hole as a running back, with indicators letting you know if you did it well or not, and a larger focus on individual 1-on-1 interactions.
As a run defender, you can now press either bumper while engaged with a blocker to reach in a direction to make a tackle without fully shedding said blocker. As a receiver, there is a big focus on moves directly before and after catching the football, with the “real player motion” really shining in these interactions. Good players have better control and awareness of their own body, in particular when making sideline catches on either side of the ball. It works a lot more often than it doesn’t.
Essentially everything else the feel — hitting the gap, spinning around defenders, making interceptions, and having immediate, fluid control over the defender after the fact — is top notch.
What still needs work: Other gameplay-related changes include the ability to influence what kind of celebrations your team has after scoring a touchdown or making a big defensive play. This allows for individual “signature” celebrations as well as team-wide celebrations. The latter brings up an EA Sports transition screen to hide the loading of all the players in the right spots to do those celebrations — but it’s blatantly obvious that’s what it’s doing.
The celebrations were fun and interesting for about two games I played, and now I don’t bother. It’s an area that should be a focus for improving in future games.
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Post je objavljen 19.11.2018. u 07:54 sati.