NFL 2K
Editorial Review
Armchair quarterbacks and wannabe coaches will like Sega’s NFL 2K, unarguably one of the best-looking sports video sports meeting ever made. Realistic plays are perfectly matched with equally realistic graphics–a sharp contrast to the hyperactive arcade qualities of NFL Blitz 2000. Not only are the players more detailed and lifelike than in any other game we’ve played, but their charming moves and impressive array of animations make it hard to remember you’re in fact playing a game and not watching one on TV. You can even see the breath of each individual player during cold-weather sports meeting.
NFL 2K also features a full-league fantasy draft, a tutorial mode, extensive game and season statistics, and brilliant play and player creation options. Even its play-by-play and affect commentary surpass other sports meeting on the market. All 31 NFL teams are included as are most of the real players, though each team does have a few generic guys with names like “Seahawks WR.” Not surprisingly, some offseason transactions are not reflected in this game–namely, the Barry Sanders situation in Detroit. But he’s in this game, so fire up NFL 2K and see Barry run again. Better yet, make a custom player designed to fit your stylishness and sign him to your favorite team’s roster.
NFL 2K does not make any special use of the optional Visual Memory Unit, apart from reduction your game and roster data. In fact, if this game has a flaw, it’s that a release saved game fills up nearly an entire VMU. So if you want to save your game info in NFL 2K but don’t want to save over other saved sports meeting, you will need another VMU.
If you have even a passing interest in football, this is a must-buy, since it is visibly the new standard by which all future football–and other sports–video sports meeting will be judged. –Michael Ryan
Pros:
- Outstanding lifelike graphics and player animations
- Brilliant play-calling interface
- Simple to learn and play, even for novices
Cons:
- Saved sports meeting take up too much memory on VMU
Buy Cheap NFL 2K
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this one of the worst sports meeting ihave ever played
Rating: 1 / 5
NFL 2K has probably the best graphics ever on a video football game… but the realism leaves much to be desired. Scoring is way too simple… running is very unrealistic. Playcalling is highly simplistic. If you like eye sweetie, then this game is for you. If you need a hardcore football game, but, that stresses realistic teams, players, plays, etc, then you need Madden 2000 (especially for the CPU).
Rating: 2 / 5
the graphics are the best their is and is nearly to excellent to be right, the main conundrum with the game is the limited amount of plays and they get ancient quick, the game is worth buying just because of the graphics, not the gameplay. this game cannot touch madden 2000 as for as the options and gameplay, maybe sega will increase this conundrum with the part 2. bottom line-wait to see if the sequel is any better
Rating: 3 / 5
Don’t pay a penny for this, folks. Go on to an EA game. There is very small in the way of actual physics calculations between players in this game, every interaction is merely a scripted animation. RBs are bunged in full stride by shoestring tackles. WRs run their routes at half alacrity while the DBs shadow them *IN FRONT* of their routes. Offensive line programming is horrible. Guards and tackles blow assignments on EVERY play, doubling up on a DT and allowing LBs to come free and tackle the RB at the handoff. There is no player momentum, a flaw I’ve noticed in a number of Sega Sports sports meeting, meaning any player can stop in mid-stride and immediately run full stride in the contrary management. Sit back and watch the computer play: 3and out, 3 and out, 3 and out… This was an incomplete game that should not have been released. So what if it looks pretty? It plays like crap.
Rating: 2 / 5
THIS GAME IS LIKE SO COOL! IT IS LIKE YOU ARE ON THE SIDELINE OF A REAL GAME!
Rating: 5 / 5