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FCUK u EA!! No more ESPN NFL..

kobashi

Reserve Team
EA felt the pressure from the better ESPN game so they go and do this..

December 13, 2004 - Just when you thought ESPN Videogames was catching up, in one move, they've never been farther behind. Electronic Arts announced today an exclusive licensing agreement with the National Football League and Players Inc. to develop, publish, and distribute interactive football games. These agreements give EA the exclusive rights to the NFL teams, stadiums, and players for use in its football video games for the next five years.

You read that right…exclusive rights to the NFL teams, stadiums, and players.

Meaning no ESPN NFL 2K6, no more NFL GameDay, and bye-bye NFL Blitz. All football fans will be left with are Madden, NFL Street, and a new unannounced football management game that is in the works from, you guessed it, EA Sports.

"All of our data shows that there is a huge market for manager-style games," said Jeff Brown, Director of Corporate Communications for Electronic Arts, "and you could see a new type of football game from EA."

The agreement also provides the opportunity for new games and for EA to access both NFL Films and the NFL Network for use in the games.

"We are pleased to expand our agreement with Electronic Arts, the leading video game manufacturer and a valued NFL partner," said NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue. "We look forward to working with EA to continue to enhance the quality of NFL video games that our fans have enjoyed for many years."

"For more than a decade, EA has produced the most authentic football product for fans of the game" said Players Inc. Chairman Gene Upshaw. "This exclusive relationship will maximize the value of NFL players through EA's continued commitment to bring fans closer to the game."

"We are excited about the opportunity to further enhance our relationship with the NFL and Players Inc." said Larry Probst, Chairman and CEO of Electronic Arts. "The five-year agreements will usher NFL fans through the console technology transition with new ideas and innovative game play experiences."

The agreement covers consoles, PC, and handheld systems, as well as console online features. The agreement does not include other games available on the Internet or wireless devices, including cellular phones.

"We (EA) have proposed exclusivity several times in the past, but this year, in the spring the NFL had an off-site meeting, and they decided to consider bids for exclusivity," Brown told IGN in an exclusive interview. "Several bids were submitted but they accepted EA's. I cannot tell you how much this cost, but exclusivity is expensive, we are paying a premium. It wasn't cheap. I can tell you this, though, all parties all happy with this agreement, and Wall Street seems happy with it too."

Brown continued: "Look at what else EA has done, look at FIFA, PGA Golf Tour and NASCAR, we have exclusivity rights for all those licenses as well."

"The reason that you're noticing a certain vagueness to the language in the press release is because the license deals do not include smaller games such as Atari's Backyard Football; it's not subject to this agreement due to their numbers. And any wireless game or cell phone game is not part of the deal either."

Also not part of the deal are, obviously, non-licensed football games. The first company to come forward to IGN with such a game is Midway, makers of classic sports titles like NFL Blitz and NBA Jam.

Midway has hired the writer of the show "Playmakers" to develop a new title, Blitz: Playmakers. The game will feature everything the NFL hated about the TV show, including drug use, and off-the-field habits the NFL likes to pretend never happens.

According to an interview earlier this year with Street & Smith's Sports Business Journal, an NFL spokesperson confirmed that they were through working with Midway: "Midway has been quietly dropped in a 'mutual decision' as an NFL video game licensee after years of controversy over the level of violence in its NFL Blitz game."

When IGN contacted Midway about the rumored Blitz: Playmakers, a spokesperson confirmed the game's existence and told us: "Enough of the 'No Fun League'…it's now time to talk about and prepare for the game the NFL wouldn't let anyone make…Blitz the way it should be played."

Whether or not ESPN, 989, and Microsoft follow Midway's lead and develop football games without the license remains to be seen.

On a scarier note for these same publishers, rumors are already circulating that EA is attempting to negotiate similar deals with the NBA and Major League Baseball. When IGN contacted Trudy Muller, spokesperson for Electronic Arts about these rumors, she told us: "We cannot speculate at this time about any further plans these other leagues may have."

An ominous sign for sports game publishers everywhere to say the least.

Check back to IGN Sports for the latest on this genre-shattering deal.
 

Hans

How big is YOUR penis?
Licenses will not lure pure sports lover. Real football fans will choose PES over FIFA anytime, basketball fans will prefer ESPN 2K5 than Live. Licenses are only cosmetics . . .
 

Mel Brennan

Youth Team
Worst. Decision. Ever.

This is why EA are horrible for gaming; now, ironically, gridiron fans are getting to suffer some of what was the state of FIFA gaming for YEARS, one that is slowly being broken down by folks at Konami, with a much better experience in PES4, Sony's This Is Football, Codemasters' Club Football series and even Namco's Football Kingdom.

Although I'll state further that it STILL won't be AS bad, as Tiburon have a development/work ethic that drives them to better themselves in terms of their Madden series each year, while EA Canada are hit-and-miss, and usually miss.
 

Mel Brennan

Youth Team
Originally posted by celtic_bhoy
i thought ea made good NFL games though?

Madden 2005 IS great; has nothing to do with the fact that ESPN/SEGA's game was great too, and drove Madden's price down an average of $20.

EA's ability to throw money at their competitive problem and essentially buy-out the competition should be illegal in a nation that values competitive capitalism so highly. EA's product should be forced to sit alongside other products, and the CONSUMER should be the final arbiter of which gmae wins out, if any, not EA's checkbook (made fat by the very consumer they are now depriving of choice!).

What a sad state of affairs...EA must be challenged, on every front.
 

Lean

Fan Favourite
But for soccer games there are editors/patchers everywhere, and a lot of people will still play PES. Although i doubt they'll buy exclusive licenses. The world knows that FIFA sucks, with or without licenses.
 

Bobby

The Legend
They currently hold the exclusive rights to soccer games (a contract with FIFA), that's why PES can't have the stuff. I think it runs out after FIFA 2006 or 2007 is released, we can only hope FIFA doesn't renew a deal with them.

EA tried to get the exclusive NBA rights, and thankfully (and wisely) the NBA turned them down.
 

Frostwolf

Starting XI
Yes, but that decision was purely financial seeing as the NBA would be losing money if the only games available were NBA Live and NBA Street.
 

jefferson goh

Senior Squad
Originally posted by Bobby
They currently hold the exclusive rights to soccer games (a contract with FIFA), that's why PES can't have the stuff. I think it runs out after FIFA 2006 or 2007 is released, we can only hope FIFA doesn't renew a deal with them.

EA tried to get the exclusive NBA rights, and thankfully (and wisely) the NBA turned them down.




Because nba will lose $$$??
 

xiaoarc

Senior Squad
If we wanna stop them geting licenses..we should stop buying EA games..because most of it are quite boring games..
 

Rocky

Forza Suarez! (ps brotha can you spare a dime?)
I dont know but isnt like creating a monopoly, which is illegal:confused:
 

Bobby

The Legend
http://www.gamesindustry.biz/content_page.php?aid=6210

Now we all know EA isn't actually going to MAKE an Arena Football Game, they just did this so sega couldn't.

Sega needs to do what people did in the early 90s. Make a football game with teams who happen to have everything in common with their NFL counter parts except the name.

Surely "Green Bay", "Dallas", "Arizona" ect. aren't trademarked.
 


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