MLB The Show 24 may not be the best-looking sports game on the market anymore, but San Diego Studio continues to lead the field by pushing the boundaries of the genre overall. This year’s release may feel largely familiar when you’re at the plate, but the expansion of narrative-based experiences in the Storylines section demonstrates how the first-party developer is evolving elsewhere.
For starters, the user interface is extraordinarily stylish this year. While it contains many of the same features and functions from years past, transitions fizzle and pop with a level of polish we’ve not seen from the series before. The new documentary-like Derek Jeter mode is a particular highlight, with its menus adopting the look and feel of New York’s iconic subway.
Classic stadiums, like Seattle’s legendary Kingdome, have been recreated for the first time this year, completing the period appropriate presentation, which already utilised classic broadcast overlays. While the gameplay amounts to little more than repurposed Moments – hit a crucial RBI, for example, or score a home run – the interviews and archive footage add crucial context.
The same is true of Season 2 of the Negro Leagues, which continues the outstanding work San Diego Studio started in last year’s game. While the format is largely identical – anchored once more by the infectiously enthusiastic Bob Kendrick – the stories are bolder this time, with female player Toni Stone’s tale being a particular highlight. The only downside is that Season 1’s content isn’t bundled in as well.
For a sports game, it’s an unexpectedly progressive one, with a new Road to the Show storyline focusing on female athletes. This comes with its own narrative about two high school friends supporting each other’s journeys, and while the writing is a bit heavy handed, the content could potentially prove inspirational to an entire generation of young ladies trying to make it to the big leagues.
Out on the field, batting remains largely
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