At the very least Longshot provided a full story even if it was pretty lame and shallow.įranchise mode largely remains the same with some minor tweaks. ![]() Unlike the Franchise mode you only need to manage your one player, but the “story” ends there. Once you get on a NFL team it essentially turns into the normal Franchise mode, with a similar layout, dialogue options, training, and upgrades. There is a quick part in the combine where you run some drills and depending on how you do it will determine your draft pick, but you’ll always get picked. Needless to say you win the game, you win the championship, and now the NFL is scouting you. Timed vague dialogue options determines the stats of your QB. Whoever decided that deciding on your character stats by using vague dialogue options on a timer needs to be smacked. The choices are frustrating because it’s on a timer and if you accidentally pick the wrong one you may get stuck with stats and bonuses you may not want. You’ll go through some dialogue options that essentially choose the type of QB that you’ll be, as well as introduce some characters that will disappear and won’t matter in about an hour. There are some meager story lines in place and you conveniently start in the final game to get to the championship game. You are only able to be the quarter back in the mode and while you do get to customize how you look, the models and customizations are not pretty. Face of the Franchise is the new story mode and I use “story mode” lightly. I can’t believe I’m going to actually say something positive about that mode, but at least it told a story. It was about characters I didn’t care about and barely featured any of the sport that you payed to play. ![]() Now that you went back and read my Madden NFL 19 review, you know I was not the biggest fan of the Longshot story mode. The Face of the Franchise sure doesn’t have good looking models.
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