Wednesday, October 7, 2009

2K Sports Introduces New "Playing for Pride" Mode

Addition to MLB Series "Just like Real Life"

By Jeremy Strauss

NEW YORK -- It's the bottom of the ninth in a game between the Washington Nationals and New York Mets at CITI Field.

With the Nats leading 3-2 and 2 men on base, David Wright steps up to bat. He swings as hard as he can and lines a double off the left field wall. Both runners score and the Mets win!

Unfortunately, this season, for New York and Washington fans alike, this situation might be perceived as "meaningless," as both clubs finished off the year at the bottom of the NL East division.

However, 2K sports has an answer to the issue of the thousands of baseball games played each year that wouldn't possibly matter to any lifeform living within a 20,000 mile radius of the Earth: Playing for Pride Mode (PPM).

Unleashed in their newest game -- MLB 2K10, the mode entails the following: users can pick a team, preferably one of the league's worst such as the Pittsburgh Pirates. The team will then begin the season mode 20 games back in the division with just 40 games to play.

The ultimate goal? Forget about the playoffs -- you were eliminated from them officially a few weeks ago and unofficially by the baseball community before the season even began. Now, just try not to finish last and gain a few ounces of respect along the way!


PPM means this pitch could the difference between 5th or 4th place

"We wanted to give that majority of fans that root for those awful teams something close to home," said 2K Sports designer Drew Peters. "This isn't about something like the Red Sox meeting the Yankees in the playoffs. It's more like the Washington Nationals reminding the world that they actually do play professional baseball."

In the mode, as the non-waiver trade deadline has passed, acquiring new guys is strictly prohbited. However, call-ups from the minors are allowed, and indeed encouraged. After all, if you aren't going to give those new guys a chance now, when the season is finished, then when will it happen?

One PPM feature is the "random injury" setting, which can be turned on or off by users. If set to on, the feature allows for several random injuries to the competing team's "best" players during their quest to get out of the gutter.


Jose Reyes' Random Injury setting is higher than most players'

"Random injury is just like real life," added Peters. "Have you ever felt like all your team's luck comes crashing down at once at the end of the season? Like everyone suddenly gives up? Here, we're trying to challenge users to counteract that."

In addition, teams will receive bonus points just for ending up on SportsCenter for any reason during the mode. If the SportsCenter anchor makes a snide comment ridiculing how bad the team is, those bonus points are tripled.

Users can also opt to fire their team's manager at any point during the mode. They are warned before the firing, however, that "someone far less competent, such as a sunflower seed-eating bench coach, will immediately take over and do virtually nothing to motivate the team from here on out." If this is the risk users are willing to take, then they may dump the manager.

"You always have to read about those games in the newspaper that don't matter to anyone," said 2K Sports CEO Grace Cornwallis. "We thought, why not make it matter?"

And make it matter they have. With 2K Sports' Playing for Pride Mode, your club won't be the worst anymore!

No comments:

Post a Comment