The 10 Best Sports Videogames of 2014
Arguing what “counts” as a sports game is as dull and pointless as the “are games art?” debate. It doesn’t need to be based on a sport you watch on TV, with licenses for real team names and players, and weird generic character models for the superstar athletes who refuse to lend their likeness. It doesn’t need photorealistic graphics and repetitive commentary and a soundtrack of rap and EDM. Sportsfriends features four entirely fictional activities, but each one has the defined rules and internal logic of a “real” sport. You can define almost any videogame as a sport, which turns the entire concept of the “sports game” into an arbitrary distinction. But for our purposes today we’ll look at games built entirely around competition, and preferably against others, although we’ll accept a game like Desert Golfing where your only competition is your own past and patience. And we’ll limit it to games that don’t easily fit into other recognized genres, so no MOBAs or real-time strategy games or whatever all the esports kids are wrapped up in. If it looks or feels like a sport, it’s in, even if in real life it’s less competition than choreography, as with the first game on our list.
10. WWE 2K15
This might be a step back from last year’s WWE game, but the new My Career mode can be as addictive as any sports game. It translates the best parts of the NBA 2K My Career mode and MLB The Show’s Road to the Show to the world of wrestling, with your create-a-character starting off in training before graduating to the NXT developmental league and, eventually, the WWE itself. The matchmaking eventually grows repetitive and incoherent, but for several hours the My Career mode makes 2K15 worth playing for any wrestling fan.—Garrett Martin
9. Mario Golf: World Tour
As an on-the-go sports title, World Tour does its job: It collects a series of relatively short, themed courses that will test your long and short game. [It] delivers a simple and easy-to-play golf experience: Choose your club, line up your shot and swing. Mario Golf: World Tour is like the Disneyland of golf games, offering plenty to look at and do, but wearing you out with quirks in its navigation and design.—Charles Webb
8. Pro Evolution Soccer 2015
While clearly not going into Football Manager territory, PES allows for much more robust control over the tactical aspects of the game. The main tactics creation/tweaking screen allows for finite control of player positioning. FIFA tried to get on this in this year’s offering but PES simply does it better, not least because the position a player is in changes dynamically based on where he is on the pitch. This tactical sensitivity extends to the actual gameplay, where new tactics can be implemented on the fly. This offers a deeper approach to FIFA’s simple (yet, admittedly, effective) commands of “press higher” or “offside trap”. It’s an approach rewarding of work put in to understanding the system, but there is a learning curve with all of this that FIFA, with its jump in and play readiness, doesn’t have.—Ian Williams
7. Rusty’s Real Deal Baseball