MVP Baseball 2005 Game |
MVP
Baseball 2005 is a baseball video game developed and published by Electronic Arts.
It features then-Boston Red Sox left fielder Manny Ramirez on its cover. The game features full Major League Baseball, Minor League Baseball, and Major League Baseball Players
Association licenses.
It holds the 98th spot on IGN's reader's choice top
100 games ever as of 2006. As with previous versions of the game, the
announcers are Duane Kuiper and Mike Krukow,
real-life announcers for the San Francisco Giants. A PlayStation Portable version of the game, entitled just MVP Baseball, was later
released in May 2005.
MVP
Baseball 2005 includes all 30 official Major League Baseball teams, stadiums,
and all 30 unique dynasties, as well as the more than 1,000 individual players
that populate their respective teams. A notable exclusion is Barry Bonds, who
does not appear in the game due to his withdrawal from the MLBPA's licensing
agreement. His "replacement" is a fictional player named Jon Dowd.
Dowd bears no resemblance in appearance to Bonds, but his skills mimic those of
Bonds. The game also includes authentic minor league teams and actual minor
league players by including double-A and triple-A-level farm teams. 2005's
installment includes ballclubs from the High Single-A ranks as well, giving
each MLB team three levels of minor league farm clubs. 2 legends teams, 63
legendary players, 15 classic stadiums, 5 fantasy parks, and more than 100
retro uniforms round out the list of unlockable features. Rosters are current
as of January 12, 2005, and the game included the then-new Washington Nationals, along with their
then temporary home, RFK Stadium.
At the time, new rosters could be downloaded to the Xbox and PS2 versions by
accessing their online play menus. MVP Baseball 2005 includes an
exhibition mode, a manager's mode, two different franchise modes, a scenario
editor, and a handful of baseball-themed practice games. The exhibition mode
lets the player quickly set up a game against another team, and both pick a
starting pitcher and adjust the lineup, if needed. The manager mode is
simulated based on the choices the players make before the opening pitch. The
players don't actually see the players swing or make plays. Instead, the player
picks from a list of managerial choices, and the outcome of each play is
printed onscreen in a running box score. The scenario editor lets players
adjust 20 different variables—such as the teams involved, inning, count, who's
on base, and so on—the players can set up every possible scenario that has ever
occurred in baseball history. A minor glitch in Kuiper's commentary is
about switch-hitters who are currently batting, claiming the batter hits better
from one side, but when looking at the batter's power and/or contact stats,
they actually hit better from the other side. For example, although Lance
Berkman's power and contact stats are both higher batting left-handed in the
game by default, Kuiper will claim that Berkman hits better batting
right-handed. Another quirk is that he claims Hack Wilson set the MLB single-season runs scored record with 192 in
1930. However, he actually set the MLB single-season RBIs record
with 191 in 1930. A common glitch in the announcing occurs when Krukow ends a
statement with the phrase "Big Boy", causing his voice to crack. The
single-A Wilmington Blue Rocks' uniforms are
misspelled, with an extra L in "Wilmington."
Initial
release date: February
22, 2005
Genre: Sports game
Platforms: PlayStation 2, Microsoft Windows, GameCube, PlayStation
Portable, Xbox
0 comments:
Post a Comment