Don Bradman Cricket 14

Don Bradman Cricket 14

Cover image for the game
Developer(s) Big Ant Studios
Publisher(s) Tru Blu Entertainment
Platform(s) PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 4, Xbox One
Release date(s)

PlayStation 3, Xbox 360[1]

  • EU 11 April 2014
  • AUS 3 April 2014

Microsoft Windows[2]

  • WW 26 June 2014

PlayStation 4, Xbox One

  • WW 11 February 2015
Genre(s) Sports
Mode(s) Single-player, Multiplayer

Don Bradman Cricket 14 (re-release retitled Don Bradman Cricket) is a cricket video game for the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 4 and Xbox One. It was developed by Big Ant Studios and published by Tru Blu Entertainment.[1] The game was originally released for PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 consoles in various countries that compete in cricket in April 2014; it was released for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One on 11 February 2015.[3][4] On 28 May 2015, Big Ant Studios confirmed that a Don Bradman Cricket sequel would be released in the final quarter of 2016.[5][6][7]

Features

The game features a number of different game modes, including a career mode, custom matches and online games. The career mode involves a user creating a player and playing matches in order for their player to progress. A users player starts at the age of 16 and has a maximum of a 20-year career. There is also a Cricket Academy program in which a user can create and edit teams, players and competitions. This was released as a stand-alone game before the console release date. The game contains the original cricket stats of every player and they can be modified too. Each cricketer face is created in a realistic way to experience a new feel. Big Ant Studios updated the academy and brought the 'Practice Nets' feature into it in the weeks prior to the launch of the full game.

The gameplay features were announced as having "Unique Batting and Bowling Controls" with a full 360 shot delivery with no shot markers. The gameplay also involves a "Fully featured Fielding System" which allows "full control of the field". The Ball Physics in the game has been labelled as having "realistic edges and ball movement off players". Appeal and Electric Reviews have also been included into the game, which enables a user to challenge the umpire for a decision in which is questionable. There are Practice nets and Match practice which are new features to the game and are supposed to help a new 'cricketing gamer' to play the game. Users can also save games online and offline. The commentary team consists of Matthew Hill and David Basheer.[8]

There are 11 unlicensed grounds within the game, with 2 licensed. The game includes 79 teams within the game, most of which are unlicensed. There are international and domestic teams (current generation) historical teams and future generation teams. There are 17 international teams, 6 Australian domestic teams, 18 English domestic, along with "All time best" teams and "historical" teams.[9]

Development

According to Ross Symons, CEO of Big Ant Studios, development of the game was hindered by the parallel development of Ashes Cricket 2013, an officially licensed rival cricket game. Symons claims that the developers of Ashes Cricket 2013 applied pressure via the Australian Cricket Board to warn various partners off his game, while the eventual poor reception to Ashes Cricket 2013 forced him to delay Don Bradman Cricket 14 as not to be caught up in the controversy.[10]

Soundtrack

Track listing
No. TitleArtist Length
1. "Feels Like Real"     
2. "Looking Good"     
3. "Off the Radar"     
4. "Road Junkie"     
5. "Rokit"     
6. "Smiley"     

Reception

Reception
Aggregate scores
AggregatorScore
GameRankings(PS3) 75.00%[11]
(X360) 73.00%[12]
(PC) 80.00%[13]
Metacritic(PS3) 73/100[14]
(X360) 73/100[15]
(PC) 80/100[16]

Don Bradman Cricket 14 has received positive reviews from critics. Tristan Ogilvie of IGN rated the console version 6.8/10, praising the "comprehensive control setup" and "License-dodging player creation", but also criticized the high amount of bugs, lack of field radars and unrealistic super-fielders. However, the PC version was rated 8/10 by IGN, who later believed that the fixes made it in the interim turned it into "easily the finest and fully-featured cricket game ever made".[10] Dene Benham of NZGamer gave the game 7.9/10, praising the batting and bowling aspects, but criticized the clunky menus and twitchy animations. Lazygamer awarded it 8.7 citing it as "the best cricket game of this generation".

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, March 04, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.