The Vibrant Online Community of College Football Videogames
Sports games are infamous for being heartless annual retreads—little more than roster updates with few tweaks to core gameplay. Instead of deepening or refining the career modes that hardcore fans love, the sports titles churned out every year by EA and 2K add and update new ways of extracting money. There’s hardly ever a reason to play an old sports game unless you’re pained with deep nostalgia. Yet it turns out nostalgia is easy to come by if they stop improving the game, or stop making a series altogether. The thirst and hunger created by the unfilled hole in the market sparks innovation among enthusiasts. Modding games is a pretty common process across genres, but the fans around NCAA Football have given the defunct franchise something most sports games don’t get: longevity.
In July 2009, former UCLA basketball player Ed O’Bannon filed suit against the National Collegiate Athletic Association, alleging they had violated the Sherman Antitrust Act and deprived him his right to publicity. He agreed to be lead defendant after seeing his likeness used without his permission in EA’s NCAA Basketball 09 (released 2008). The 2009 edition of the game (NCAA Basketball 10) was the last they published in the series. During the course of O’Bannon v. NCAA, the class action antitrust suit that found the NCAA to be a cartel and led to schools being allowed to offer full cost-of-attendance scholarships to athletes, the NCAA terminated its license with EA to publish NCAA Football, so the 2013 edition was its last release.
The list of football games that would qualify as among the most influential games of all time is probably very short, but some names stand out above all others. TECMO Super Bowl, for one; ESPN NFL 2K5, for another; and both NCAA Football 06 and NCAA Football 14 would have to be in that conversation. Two and three console generations removed from their release dates, these games have remained relevant to tens of thousands of college football videogame fans. 06 was the peak of the game on the sixth generation of consoles, the last one made only for PlayStation 2 and the original Xbox. 07 began the transition to the seventh generation of consoles, and the PS2 and Xbox games had a precipitous drop-off in quality while the versions for the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 didn’t really find their way until at least 2010. 2013’s release, NCAA Football 14 , was as good a swan song as the series could have gotten. It was also designed to be malleable enough that it far outlived its original sale window. In fact, while you can find 06 for around $10 on eBay, PS3 copies of 14 run around $50, and Xbox 360 copies are north of the century mark.
On the message boards of Operation Sports, a community of enthusiasts and modders thrives decades on. There, users congregate to share roster files and develop gameplay and recruiting house rules for the single player Dynasty mode, which spans seasons. They discuss play calling strategy, share career mode stories, and talk the ins-and-outs of modifying the games, through save file editing, PS3 “jailbreaking,” and a lot of work in databases with dry or tedious inputs and exciting results that allow games made for football seasons that are now long-past stay fresh and new.
Beyond OS, one of the most striking things about this online community is the effective YouTube presence. The certified phenomenon Miles Dawkins 247 has cultivated over 79,000 followers on his YouTube channel by focusing on old games, sharing edited, narrated clips of his NCAA Football 06 dynasties.
YouTuber Al Sexton, who also runs the website Playbook Gamer, has a similar, if smaller beat, with multi-year video series of alternate universe college football seasons, and explainers of both videogame and real life college football offenses. Meanwhile, Playbook Gamer began as a site running down playbooks in NCAA Football 06 and has turned into a resource for strategies on several editions of NCAA Football, as well as other sports games. Sexton, a PhD in Leadership and Business Management, has begun collecting retro videogames and has incorporated those into his channel.
While we’re now three gaming console generations removed from the PlayStation 2 era, those remain some of the community’s favorite games to play. NCAA Football 06 and 07 (my personal favorite) retain popularity both on console and through the RCPSX2 emulator. So much so, in fact, that a computer software engineer who goes by jet5195wvu on the OS forum has developed a tool to modify that game’s dynasty files. So, fans can take a game made in 2005 and update its conferences to resemble what’s really going on in college football in 2021. The games weren’t built for that. By 2010, the EA games had incorporated conference swapping; by 2012, they allowed players to take full control of each conference’s membership before a dynasty. Though a successful player could get his school recruited to a better conference in dynasty mode, the in-game mechanics of 2005’s edition did not allow conference swapping or reshuffling; fans created mechanisms to edit it from the ground up.
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