ESPN NFL 2K5

ESPN NFL 2K5

Box art for the Xbox version.
Developer(s) Visual Concepts
Publisher(s) 2K Sports
Series NFL 2K
Platform(s) PlayStation 2, Xbox
Release date(s)
  • NA July 20, 2004
  • EU February 4, 2005
Genre(s) Football (American) simulation
Mode(s) Single player, Multiplayer, Online

ESPN NFL 2K5 is an American football video game developed by Visual Concepts and published by 2K Sports and the Sega Corporation. It is the sixth installment of the NFL 2K series. The game was originally released on July 20, 2004, for both the PlayStation 2 and Xbox video game consoles. It was the last NFL 2K game to be released before Electronic Arts signed an exclusivity deal with the NFL to make 2K's rival Madden NFL series the only officially licensed NFL game. It was also the last game to be made by Sega before that happened.

Features

The game features a franchise mode with a SportsCenter feature hosted by Chris Berman. He outlines the games of the current week with his co-host Trey Wingo who talks about the latest injuries and free agent deals and trades during the season. Mel Kiper hosts the draft portion of the segment while Suzy Kolber reports from the sidelines. There is also weekly preparation for the coming week which allows the player to make decisions on training and preparation. The player can also create his or her own team deciding the team logos (over 10 are available), team name, the teams city, the teams stadium look and build, jerseys and how good the team is. It also has a feature called first-person football, which gives the player the experience on the field looking from the eyes of the players. There is also the traditional create-a-player mode.

Pricing and exclusivity

ESPN NFL 2K5 was the first in the 2K series priced at $19.99 the day it shipped, much lower than market leader Madden NFL at $49.99. This greatly reduced Madden sales that year; one EA Sports developer recalled that "[i]t scared the hell out of us".[1] EA reduced Madden NFL 2005's price to $29.95. In December 2004 EA Sports acquired an exclusive rights agreement with the NFL and NFLPA to be the sole creator of NFL video games.[2] The deal terminated 2K Sports production of any further NFL games. The ensuing season, Madden 2006, saw pricing returned to the $49.99 MSRP.

In December 2010, a U.S. district court judge certified a class action anti-trust lawsuit against Electronic Arts for anti-competitive practices to proceed.[3] Electronic Arts settled the class action suit in July 2012 for $27 Million, and retained its exclusive NFL license.[4][5]

Celebrity game

One of the features in the game is a celebrity game involving Jamie Kennedy, Steve-O, David Arquette, Funkmaster Flex, or Carmen Electra which is initiated by a phone call from one of the aforementioned "celebrities" in the player's custom crib. The player plays against a celebrity with his or her own custom team of Pro Bowlers. The teams the celebrities use are The Buartville Funkmasters, Cincinnati Electra Shock, LA Dreamteam, Los Angeles Locos, and the Upper Darby Cheesesteaks. During the game the celebrities appear in a small box and use trash-talk. If the player wins the game, they receive the team's stadium as a playable venue.

Voice Talent

ESPN NFL 2K5 features the voices of Terry McGovern as play-by-play announcer Dan Stevens, Jay Styne as color commentator Peter O'Keefe, sideline reporter Suzy Kolber, studio host Chris Berman, Trey Wingo, and Mel Kiper, with Berman appearing at the start of a player's own SportsCenter broadcast and during the loading screen for the player's own ESPN NFL Countdown pregame show, and Kolber appearing in the Player of the Game segment of the postgame show.

Reception & Sales

Reception
Aggregate scores
AggregatorScore
GameRankings(PS2) 87.84% [6]
(Xbox) 90.52%[7]
Metacritic(PS2) 90/100
(Xbox) 92/100
Review scores
PublicationScore
1UP.comB+
Game Informer9.5 out of 10
GamePro
GameSpot9.1 out of 10
IGN9.3/10

ESPN NFL 2K5 was critically acclaimed across the media spectrum. IGN was quoted as saying "ESPN NFL 2K5 will own your soul." GamePro was quoted as saying that it's "The most entertaining show in video game football." Game Informer went on record to say that ESPN NFL 2K5 is "The one football game you must have."

In 2014, Owen Good of Polygon wrote that "few other games — in any genre — have remained a constant part of modern conversation despite not publishing in a decade, and with no sign ever of returning". He called NFL 2K5 "sports video gaming's King Arthur, eternally populist, noble and heroic, champion of an age long ago enough to make its triumphs soar and its shortcomings recede to nothingness". Good stated that Madden NFL's developers "for 10 years have been haunted by NFL 2K5 — in forums, in comments, in social media — that nothing they do could be as good as something that by now really isn't a video game, but a mythological ideal that grows more romantic with every year".[8]

Awards

In 2005, the game won the Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences Interactive Achievement Award for Sports Simulation Game of the Year.[9]

References

  1. Bissell, Tom (2012-01-17). "Kickoff: Madden NFL and the Future of Video Game Sports". Grantland. Retrieved January 21, 2012.
  2. Cobbs, Chris (2004-12-15). "Electronic Arts Scores Nfl Exclusive". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved December 10, 2012.
  3. Pigna, Kris (December 23, 2010). "Judge Allows Madden "Price Fixing" Lawsuit to Proceed". 1UP.com. Retrieved February 26, 2012.
  4. Albanesius, Chloe (July 23, 2012). "EA Settles Football Game Class-Action Suit for $27 Million". PC Magazine. Retrieved March 6, 2016.
  5. Good, Owen (April 16, 2013). "The Madden Class-Action Settlement Triples Its Payout to Gamers". Kotaku. Retrieved March 6, 2015.
  6. http://www.gamerankings.com/ps2/919830-espn-nfl-2k5/index.html
  7. http://www.gamerankings.com/xbox/920177-espn-nfl-2k5/index.html
  8. Good, Owen S. (2014-07-20). "NFL 2K5 — sports gaming's King Arthur — launched 10 years ago today". Polygon. Retrieved 25 January 2015.
  9. "2005 8th Annual Interactive Achievement Awards". Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences. Retrieved 2011-07-13.

External links

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