Gameplay comparison 21-22
-
Pitching being worse is a disincentive for sure. I remember the whole introduction of PPP in 21 was because of all the gravity balls in previous versions, so, I guess they’re back.
$50 for standard edition on Sept 18. Hmmm.
-
@halfbutt_PSN said in Gameplay comparison 21-22:
Pitching being worse is a disincentive for sure. I remember the whole introduction of PPP in 21 was because of all the gravity balls in previous versions, so, I guess they’re back.
$50 for standard edition on Sept 18. Hmmm.
That seems pricey for this late in the season. 2023 is over 6 months out, tough choice
-
@
$50 for standard edition on Sept 18. Hmmm.
That seems pricey for this late in the season. 2023 is over 6 months out, tough choice
Well I pulled the trigger at $55.99 total purchase price. Hopefully I can get my theme team without TOO much ridiculous grinding.
See you all on the diamond!
-
@halfbutt_PSN said in Gameplay comparison 21-22:
@
$50 for standard edition on Sept 18. Hmmm.
That seems pricey for this late in the season. 2023 is over 6 months out, tough choice
Well I pulled the trigger at $55.99 total purchase price. Hopefully I can get my theme team without TOO much ridiculous grinding.
See you all on the diamond!
Nobody mentioned but monthly programs are a little bit of a grind now.
-
Well, they always were a bit of a grind. I suppose I’ll have to acquire a bunch of Topps now cards to complete these.
Fortunately, I’m really only interested in the programs that have JP Crawford, Matt Brash, and George Kirby. Mariners theme team will still take some grinding I guess.
-
I’ll say this much. Just from playing the intro game as things are installing, I can tell that 1) PCI is extremely sensitive and harder to position 2) CPU hitting and fielding and pitching is ridiculous 3) pitching is way harder to locate with pinpoint.
Might take a while to get my team going.
-
@halfbutt_PSN said in Gameplay comparison 21-22:
Well, they always were a bit of a grind. I suppose I’ll have to acquire a bunch of Topps now cards to complete these.
Fortunately, I’m really only interested in the programs that have JP Crawford, Matt Brash, and George Kirby. Mariners theme team will still take some grinding I guess.
All that you need for the MA programs can be earned in the program, buying the MA players only helps you complete stage 2 faster but make sure you dont do the all collect,only the 5 is needed for the lightning.
Also mini seasons is the best new thing in the game. Have fun. -
Much worse in my opinion.Plus play options are not as good,trading extra innings mode for that rigged mini mouse season is a joke. Games vrs anything CPU for critical rewards are 80 % scriptlike feeling. Trend towards forcing online play continues and overall the game suffers. 21 is better than 22 . The Show is on the Madden path. Hate it too , big fan of the Series, The Show I mean. Do not expect change in this trend . Hang on to your 20 and 21 copies.
-
Yeah, I have to agree. Now that I gave in and bought 22, I’m reminded how heavily manipulated all the vs cpu stuff is (moments specifically). This has always been one of my biggest beefs with the game, the way difficulty is inconsistent from mode to mode. They should really just eliminate the different difficulties altogether, because aside from pci size, they seem largely irrelevant.
-
I don’t think it is even close. Gameplay with ‘21 had issues, but ‘22 is significantly worse. Diving plays all over the place including full Superman dives in the outfield, foul balls more often than ‘21, pitching is super inconsistent and with hitting it is just a roll of the dice. I have played a little ‘21 lately and it was really a breath of fresh air. I sometimes wonder if people just compare out of memory or if they have recently played ‘21 to see the difference. That doesn’t even mention the non-gameplay pains of ‘22.
-
I have to agree, although my experience with 22 is only a couple days old. I’m already kind of regretting the decision because there is NO way I’m grinding the amount of moments I’ll need to unlock George Kirby, JP Crawford, etc. sigh.
-