Continuing the Madden franchise's recent tradition of story modes, Madden
mut coins
introduces a new narrative campaign. This new mode generally falls
flat, but the pro football sim stands out on the field, with new
additions that faithfully capture the essence of the NFL experience
while making it fun to play again and again.
The new story mode,
QB1: Face of the Franchise, replaces the Longshot story mode that was
featured in Madden 18 and 19. Unlike those campaigns, which featured a
pre-set character, Madden 20's QB1 mode lets you create an entirely
unique football star and guide him through the final stages of his
collegiate career with the hopes of making an NFL starting roster, and,
on a longer timeline, complete a journey to hoisting the Lombardi Trophy
at the Super Bowl.
QB1's story picks up as you decide which college
to attend and play for. However, the college football elements within
Madden 20 are not anything significant. You select a school from 10
options, including heavyweights like Florida, Oklahoma, Texas, and
Clemson. It's a treat to see fully licensed college football teams,
complete with true-to-life jerseys, logos, stadiums, and marching band
songs, but the gameplay experience in reality is limited to two games in
the College Football Playoffs--and you can't play the college teams in
quickplay later on.
After winning the National Championship
against all odds, you're off to the NFL Combine where your performance
in front of scouts and GMs determines how high you go in the draft.
There are some genuinely funny moments here with your aloof agent Les
Moore, and interactions with him are some of the best character moments
in the story mode. After making it to the NFL, the game then
disappointingly becomes the standard Franchise mode, except your
character has more backstory that acts as fuel to drive you to succeed
on the field. That's the idea, at least; in practice, it leaves much to
be desired.
In part, that's because QB1's cinematic cutscenes and
Telltale-style choices end once you get to the NFL. At that point, the
narrative beats play out through text messages you receive from fans and
other players from around the league. This delivery method makes
conversations awkward and ultimately forgettable. There is one storyline
in particular involving a sick child rooting for you that falls flat;
it tries too hard to tug on your heartstrings, moody piano pieces and
all, without earning any payoff. Without giving too much away, another
major storyline in QB1 involves your college teammate and friend, and it
ends abruptly, with the strong suggestion that the story will continue
in Madden NFL 21. That's too bad, because this character, in the limited
screen time he gets, is far more interesting than the cookie-cutter,
run-of-the-mill one you create.
In general, QB1 moves at such a
fast pace that it doesn't allow for thoughtful character development.
Not only that, but the story that QB1 does tell is hokey and clumsily
unraveled. The story overall feels barebones and incomplete, with the
entirety of the QB1 mode feeling like a half-baked idea in the end.
Despite
the lackluster story and the way it's delivered, QB1 succeeds in
connecting you to your on-field performance and inspiring you to improve
or play differently each week once you've made it to the NFL. The text
message system, while not the best avenue for full conversation, is
better utilized in delivering week-to-week objectives and challenges.
You can complete these to earn XP, which you can then invest into your
character in an RPG-lite-like system where you choose which aspects of
your game you want to develop.
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