Sports Titles Named Misleadingly? 57
According to an accusatory column in the sports section of the New York Post, naming the 2003-season sports videogame titles as 'Sports Game Title 2004' is dishonest. The writer suggests that "..when it comes to selling video games.. Major League Baseball and all big-league sports eagerly sell their licenses and logos to manufacturers who can't or won't tell the simplest and most significant of truths.." Have you been confused by this naming method, or do you think it's fair and understandable?
eh... (Score:1)
Not that I really gave a hoot anyway... I was more of an RPG guy. Of course, I think slapping "Final Fantasy" on the front end of "Mystic Quest" was a blatant attempt to lead you into the lie that it was going to be a good game.
Re:eh... (Score:1)
So _that's_ why (Score:3, Funny)
so what (Score:2)
It's almost June, soon I'll be able to purchase a 2004 model car. Stupid? You bet. Confusing? Only to an idiot.
Re:so what (Score:2)
Re:so what (Score:2, Insightful)
What about ChessMaster 4000? (Score:5, Funny)
What about Mystery Science Theater 3000, or even worse, the Gruntmaster 9000?! What about Warhammer 40000?!?!?!!!
It's worse than you can imagine!
Ironic.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Isn't [acura.com] it [nissanusa.com] Ironic [msn.com].
Re:Ironic.. (Score:1)
What... (Score:2)
And save 40 bucks too (Score:2)
Slow news day? (Score:5, Insightful)
Besides, this is not exactly something people are unfamiliar with. I graduated from high school in the Class of '97, which means I began my senior year in the fall of 1996 and completed my senior year in the spring of 1997. This is exactly the same way sports games are numbered. Sports seasons are more formally called the "2002-2003 season," but if you want confusing, look at a couple of those next to each other. ("Do I want 2001-2002, 2002-2003, or 2003-2004?") Besides, "NHL 2k3" is much easier to say that "NHL 2k2 to 2k3." If you have to pick one year, at least for hockey, it makes sense to pick the second year, which is where the majority of games fall. Ditto for basketball, I think (but I'm not sure).
The guy who wrote this article is basically an idiot. You know what? I have never gotten the wrong sports game. Nor have I even come close. I looked at the box, saw one number, and then thought "Oh, it must be like graduation dates." I then confirmed my guess by looking at the price tag. A game that's a year old is not going to sell for $50. If it is, you're shopping at the wrong store. The EA Sports games sell for about $20 6 months after they come out. So it's very simple, even if you don't understand the reasoning at all: the most expensive product is the newest. Anyone who's spent more than $15 in his entire life should already be familiar with this rule, since it applies to everything.
Re:Slow news day? (Score:2)
Re:Slow news day? (Score:1)
So, if brand spanking new games go for $50... that SNES cartridge for Chrono Trigger I bought for 80 bucks must have come out... two years from now!
I guess it's called "Chrono Trigger" for a reason!
Oh come on (Score:5, Insightful)
Madden 2003 - 19.95
Madden 2004 - 49.94
Which is he going to think is the more recent title?
How hard is this to figure out? Please, show me one case where a gamer has been seriously swindled by this.
In other news, EA Sports recently reset their baseball franchise back a year to correct this.
To sum up: Yes, it's silly that sports games are usually named a year ahead of where they should. Is it really that big of a deal? No. Go find something more important to bitch about.
Re:Oh come on (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't buy this moron's argument either, but I still have a problem with the naming convention. I just never thought to write it up and submit it to a nationally known newspaper.
My problem is more historical nitpicking, expectation of league standings, and well,
Re:Oh come on (Score:1)
They also had a boxed set of 2002 EA Sports titles for $19.99. But, being a First Person Shooter Frames
I think the year means the rosters (Score:1)
So, MLB 2004 has what is supposed to be the 2004 season rosters... for college basketball where the season wraps the new year, the season is referred to as the ending year.
It doesn't have anything to do with the year the game was released or developed in other than that's usually right before a season starts.
This has always been my assumption and maybe I'm the one t
Storm in a teacup (Score:4, Informative)
doesn't work for MLB (Score:4, Insightful)
Contrarily, EA Sports' current offering is "MVP Baseball 2003".
Re:doesn't work for MLB (Score:2)
There's certainly less reason to use the naming scheme for baseball, then. There is some merit to having all the sports have the same year designator so gamers can expect that same-year games have similar features (eg. trading cards being new for all the '03 games) but it's not "correct" like the other sports.
Thanks for the info.
They CAN'T Rename Them (Score:5, Insightful)
First, if they change it, then what do they call the first title with the new naming scheme? The old one was "Madden 2k3", and the new one will be... "Madden 2k3"? That won't work. Will they call it "Madden 2k3 2.0"? I don' think that will work either. They can't call it "Madden", because most people would probably assume "Madden 2k3" (the older title) would be newer than the one named "Madden".
But more to the point, if one company changes things and names it correctly (so the game that comes out in 2k3 is called 2k3, not 2k4) then they are at a LOSS compared to the competition. If Joe Schmoe goes to buy a football game for his PS2/XBox/GCN and sees the following three things, which one is he least likely to buy:
I say he will be least likely to buy Madden (all else being equal to him) because it seems "older" than the other titles. So unless EVERYONE in the industry switches at once, it seems like it's not in the best intreset of any of the publishers to correct the naming problem. I think this is just something that we'll all just learn to accept like the naming of cars model years.
PS: Sorry to pick on Madden, it's just the name of the first football game to come to my mind, so I used it as an example. I haven't played ANY football games in years (not my thing) so don't go fanboy on me and take it as some kind of judgement.
Re:They CAN'T Rename Them (Score:1)
Re:They CAN'T Rename Them (Score:2)
Re:They CAN'T Rename Them (Score:1)
There's some truth in there. However, I think that if I released Extreme Football 2005 not that many people tough it were better than the 2004 offerings by other companies. Using next year's title makes your product look "from the future" instead of "current". Lying it by two years makes your product to look fake. I've no
a bit of a nit-pick (Score:1)
I wonder if the author feels the same way about car manufacturers. After all, a 2004 Jetta actually first comes out in 2003.
It's too late (Score:1)
"Sports Game 2003 - Really, We Mean It!"
I'm not a sports game fan, but surely it's obvious what the new title is and what the old title is? Besides, why not just look at the copywrite date?
Verne.
This is what they call it in sports too (Score:1)
The 2003-2004 NFL season is about to begin, but the super bowl is in the year 2004 so 10 years from now they will refer to the team who wins as the 2004 season winners.
I dont see anything wrong with what the game companies are doing.
Re:This is what they call it in sports too (Score:2)
Um...
1. It's the Mavericks and the Spurs in the West this year, not the Kings and the Rockets.
2. They're finishing the NBA season in 2003, and they'll be referred to as the 2003 NBA Champs (sometimes they'll even be called the 2002-2003 champs.)
Re:This is what they call it in sports too (Score:1)
1)My point has nothing to do w/ who is in the playoffs or not, i made a mistake
2)you actually support my conclusion here, the nba season started in 2002 but will end in 2003 therefore, the champions will be referred to as the 2003 nba champs. So if we call these teams as such in retrospect, what's the problem with referring to them in the future tense? (e.g. the upcoming 2004 NBA season; as such EA Sports NBA Live 2004)
Re:This is what they call it in sports too (Score:1)
I live in this crazy little backwater nation in the south pacific which I choose to call Australia because it is called that. We have a lot in common with Americans. Like Americans we watch American TV shows and American movies. We eat McDonalds even though it's horrible and we know it's horrible and nobody likes it. Middle class white kids here seem to get about in weird baggy clothes with rags on their heads pretending to be homeboy
When I saw NYPost (Score:1)
I immediately knew that it was Phil Mushnick. Basically, the guy is the resident Sports TV critic for the post (which at any newspaper is a job they give the old fart who's effectively retired). He's complained about the hits in sports games being illegal.
The guy's a crackpot troll...
Retarded (Score:3, Interesting)
First, MVP Baseball 2003 is not "the 2002 version." That is a lie. It has 2002 stats because the 2003 stats do not exist. Duh.
As to the others, they *all* take place in the 2002-2003 season. The seasons are all 2003, and the name of the game is 2003. He could say, "well, but the stats are 2001-2002," but that has already been dispensed with (and in the case of Madden, it isn't even true, since you can update the stats on the PS2 version to BE the 2002-2003 stats).
Yes, he has a point with High Heat 2004. That leapfrogs an entire season, and literally makes no sense. But logical arguments can be made for all the others mentioned.
Industry Standards (Score:2, Informative)
And of course the hard disk industry insists a megabyte is 1,000 bytes, not 1,024.
Just assume they're goosing the stats and you won't be pissed off when they do.
Named for when the finals take place--usually (Score:1)
I don't like sport so much. (Score:2, Funny)
You know what I like ? Beer and pizza. Where are all the beer and pizza games ? Remember that one where the kid delivered papers ? That was a stupid game, I hated that game and you could never quite control him properly and he kept hitting the mail box and I think there were little dogs maybe I don't know but sports games I know about and I don't care for them at all, didn't I used to get beat up by sports guys at school ? And now I'm supposed to relive my worst memories of high school by immersing
The only really irritating thing... (Score:1)
My job is only easy when you aren't doing it right....
Re:The only really irritating thing... (Score:1)
Besty Buy in east tennesee; we pulled customers from east tenn, SE kentucky, and god only knows where else.
I hate retail.
--
a.b. murray
Learning from the automobile industry (Score:1)
What's the appeal anyway? (Score:1)
Re:What's the appeal anyway? (Score:2)
Because it's too time consuming to actually go to the gym, train for years just to make a sports team and play the real thing. It's a lot easier to plop Madden into your PS2 and play it for an hour.
That and gamers are too lazy to go outside and play sports!
From what I can remember... (Score:1)
Cars are now made extremely quickly compared to the 50s and available before the year is half over but the original concept still remains (even though the ideals are long since dead).
As for the sports game naming it's completely pointless. There is absolutly
Salespeople Won't Help (Score:2)
The real way out of the dilemma is to create downwardly compatible software that can read the players and stats of the previous year's edition. Throw in things like collectible uniforms (they change), insignia (they change, too), and special game-only features (different fo
Really (Score:1)
Newspapers are bitter (Score:1)