![]() There’s no preference for you to make yourself a flashy forward, defense wins championships and can also win you the Calder Trophy. As you go through your career you can buy cars, houses, and toys like guitars to show off your earnings, and each gives your a boost to an on ice skill or an off ice relationship.Ī Q&A was held with Creative Director William Ho after our play time occurred, looking at some options in the game, not just Be A Pro. As you progress through the Memorial Cup tournament, you have pre-game meetings with your coach to set some goals, post-games with your agent or GM to go over the results, and hallway meetings with teammates to plan day-off activities. So far, in this first chapter, that’s my only complaint. Back in NHL14 I loved being able to make a Niagara IceDogs OHL dynasty as I played three seasons ahead of the draft, but now we jump straight into the Memorial Cup and then the draft. No full season to set your draft ranking. This was one of my low points in the game mode you have to start at the championship tournaments for each league. ![]() Once you’re made, you pick your starting point: The Canadian Hockey League in North America or the Champions Hockey League in Europe. Your agent talks you up, and you’re then thrown into the player creation screen where you can customize every detail down to your skating stride. Cybulski’s radio show will be a Greek Chorus for the game, describing action and people shown on screen, and setting the stage for events and moments. The game starts with a James Cybulski radio show talking about a hot new prospect as the camera pans over the mountains and some pond hockey. You once again meet with your agent, coach, GM, and teammates, have conversations, and make some money in side jobs. It’s called Be A Pro once again, but the elements of Live the Life are here and improved. While I liked the addition of expansions, and World of Chel as mentioned above, I’ve never had as much fun as I did with Live the Life. Eventually my 360 died, and I was without hockey until I got NHL18 and beyond. Live the Life was dropped from the game, and with it, an incentive for the offline player to keep going with the series. Even the choice to start as a 16 year old in the CHL and play a full career there before you get drafted was a brilliant edition. Adding that little bit of RPG element really made the single player experience so much better. You could be a conceited jerk, and the team would hate you, but the fans would eat it up. If the team was doing poorly you could slag management and see your team’s appreciation grow. Your choices affected how your teammates, management, and fans liked you. It was Be A Pro but vastly improved, with player interviews and options for going out with the team, getting endorsements, and contract decisions. NHL 14 had a feature called Live the Life. One thing has constantly bothered me though. Building teams, designing jerseys and team colours, expansion drafts, and constantly getting fired as GM is the kind of gameplay I’ve invested my time in. I also haven’t invested much in a computer, or modem, or quality WiFi, so I’m pretty useless in online gaming.įranchise Mode has been my go to of late. ![]() Secondly, I’m a lonely man who has no one to play with. That right there is the worst part of playing online. Now, they have added a lot of new features - World of Chel was a fun addition from last years edition - but the majority of the work has been to upgrade and enhance the online experience. ![]() For the last five years I have been complaining a lot about the NHL video games. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |