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by
Joe - jgand@pcfootball.net
3-23-05
As
a community, the Madden gamers have been a pretty innovative
bunch over the years.
We
have been using Madden’s in-game creation tools to create
teams and leagues that you might never have seen in any other
game. We have created files to re-play seasons of the XFL,
USFL and the WFL. We have created Arena League teams and High
School teams to wile away our spare time. We have created Div
I-A NCAA teams to settle arguments and hold our own playoffs.
Some of us have even created teams from the movies so that
those characters we saw on the screen can come to life…sort
of. So as you can see, we Maddenites have been entertaining
our brain power for a long time.
So
how is it that we haven’t seen a good 3rd-party
roster editor since Madden 2002?
I
know that the codes in Madden 2003, 2004 and 2005 have been
very hard to crack and that some of the roster editor creators
may not have that much time to devote to deciphering it. But
because of what I have seen over in the MVP Baseball
Community, I would have to say that we have been passed by on
the innovation superhighway.
A
few weeks ago when MVP Baseball 2005 came out I went down to
my local Target and got myself a copy. I got it home and found
that the game looked and played better than last year’s
version. In this new (and last) version they included some
mini-games that you can play to sharpen your skills. The Home
Run Showdown is back, but new to the game is the Batting
Mini-Game. It’s a good way to practice hitting the ball
where you want it to go, and it is also very addictive. When
we were kids we would always get in trouble if we broke a
window when we were playing baseball. In this game, you get
points for hitting the vehicles beyond the outfield fence.
The
owner mode is also new, as the MVP staff has taken a page from
the Madden development team. In owner mode however, you have
to create a new stadium at the beginning of your tenure
instead of trying to earn enough money to build your own as in
Madden. It’s a good thing that I discovered ArtMoney can
edit the amount of money you have in your ownership account.
Where
did I find out about that? Over at www.mvpmods.com,
that’s where.
These
guys have all sorts of files to enhance your MVP playing
experience, much as we do here at PCF with our Madden files.
Among the files that can be found over there are:
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They
have what they call “overlays” which allow you to
substitute TV graphics for ESPN, WGN, FOX, FSN, YES and so
on. I’ve tried them out in the game and they look
fantastic! The only thing missing are the actual
announcers for those networks, but I’m still holding out
for Vin Scully.
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Like
us Maddenites they also have rosters that you can download
for the game as well as portraits of players that may be
missing in the game. If you can’t find a portrait that
your looking for, have no fear because you can always put
it in the game using the EA Graphics editor that you can
get at the NBA Live site at http://www.nba-live.com/eagraph.
Of course figuring out how to insert those pictures and
getting them to work in the game is another matter
entirely.
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They
have newer versions of stadiums in the game. For instance,
someone “colorized” the Polo Grounds so that now you
don’t have to play with that old, grainy, black and
white look anymore. Now you can play at the classic
stadiums in living color. Personally, I’m hoping for
someone to create the “Field of Dreams” so that I can
have Joe Jackson hit one into the corn.
 
But
there is something that the MVP Baseball crowd has that we in
the Madden community do not. It is something that we have been
clamoring for for a long time now and we’re still waiting to
see if anyone will take a shot at it:
There
is a third-party roster editor for MVP Baseball that will work
in the 2004 and 2005 versions of the game! The MVP Baseball
crowd has not only a third party roster editor that allows you
to set lineups, make trades and create new players, but one
that allows you to input actual major league statistics for
certain players through the use of Sean Lahman’s Baseball
Database!
I
tracked down this roster editor at www.glass4.com/rglass4
and started using it, and boy is it ever a great tool to use!
What it does is extract the default rosters from the MVP
database and allows you to edit it in any way, shape, or form
you see fit. You can make trades and build a dream team for
your favorite franchise, or you can do what I’m doing and
create all-time rosters for each team. And since the Lahman
Database can be integrated with the editor, you can give
historical players the actual stats they had in their best
year.
Needless
to say I have now lost a lot of productive hours due to this
discovery, and I have fallen behind in my quest to fill in all
of the actual names on the classic teams for my Madden
All-Time roster. Work will continue on this venture, I assure
you. But what really gets me is that the MVP crowd has managed
to put together a 3rd-party roster editor, while
the Madden community has not. Not only do they have their
editor, but theirs can input stats that will show up in game
play! Can you imagine what we could do if we had a 3rd-party
editor that could do that in Madden? I could have Instigator
stats follow the team around from year to year, I could give
players the same numbers in the All-Time teams, the numbering
limitations wouldn’t exist, and the list is endless!
I
have no idea if the code for the MVP series was easier to
crack or if the programmers who made the editor are simply
that good. But whatever the reason, it has been done to the
delight of many historical fans such as myself. Now we don’t
have to go into the game and search out a free agent that
physically resembles Ted Williams. We can just go into the
editor and change whomever we want into him. I only wish it
could be that easy with Madden 2005.
This
whole situation leaves me a little bit jealous, and also a
little bit sad. Jealous because there is an editor for MVP and
not for Madden; sad because this is the last series in the MVP
franchise because of Take-Two’s exclusivity license with MLB.
It’s a good thing that EA got their exclusive license with
the NFL or else we wouldn’t even have that to look forward
to on the PC next year.
In
fact, for those of you who are still gnashing your teeth over
the deals that EA made to enhance Madden, take a look at what
is happening with MVP Baseball right about now. Because if EA
hadn’t gotten that license we would be in the same boat with
the MVP fans right now: faced with the prospect of playing
Madden 2005 with no further updates or support from EA. Yup,
no Madden 2006 if Take-Two had gotten that license, nor would
we have had ESPN 2k6 to look forward to since they refuse to
market their games for the PC.
I
look at what they are doing over at www.mvpmods.com
and wonder why we can’t do the same thing over here. Why
can’t we create a roster editor that can be used in Madden?
Why can’t we figure out how to alter the stadiums in the
game to give them a classic or updated look? Why can’t we
figure out how to replace the EA Sports scoreboard with
graphics for FOX, CBS, ABC or ESPN?
I
look at what is happening with Madden and only dream about
what MVP could have done in the future. I look at what is
happening with MVP Baseball and only dream about what we can
do with Madden in the future, if we just put our minds to it.
Instead of complaining about what we don’t like about the
game, why don’t we do something about it? Why not make the
game more to our own liking by doing what the MVP crowd has
done? Could we do it? Sure we could!
So
to all of you programmers out there or to all of you who have
wondered the same things as I have…I want you to spread the
word around. I am putting out a challenge to anyone out there
who is willing to take it up to create a third-party roster
editor for Madden. In fact, let’s make it a contest.
I’m
announcing a contest to see who can create a third-party
editor for Madden 2005 and/or 2004. The winner will be the one
whose editor can:
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Change
player names
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Change
player attributes
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Change
player appearance, including which face, hair color and
style the player uses
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Change
what equipment the player will use in the game
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Change
what the players physical appearance will look like
(muscle, pads, etc.)
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Change
player numbers without being limited to the NFL standards
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Save
all of these changes without corruption of the roster file
or any other file within the game.
The
prize? Well I have access to www.selectyourgifts.com
through my new yob, and I would be willing to get an item off
of that site with a gift certificate I have and award it as a
prize to the winner. In fact, how does one (or more) of these
items look as a potential prize?
   
  
I’ll
keep this contest open until the release of Madden 2006.
Afterwards we might just have another contest to see who can
create a roster editor for Madden 2006, or whatever they plan
on calling it next year. But for now, good luck, and may the
best man or woman win.
Now
if you will excuse me, I have to go see if Babe Ruth can hit
the Koufax Curve.
Until
next time…
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