Mark Little flicks the joystick and opens a special developerâs menu in Major League Baseball 2K12. The screen jumps to an empty ballpark, with a few lines representing the trajectory of a pitch and the timing of the batter trying to hit it. Little starts fooling with some ratings, creating a situation involving a high-contact hitter with not much pop.
âIn last yearâs game, we werenât getting enough of the hit types we usually see in baseball,â Little, the gameâs senior producer, tells me. The designers wanted to introduce more of these kinds of outcomesâearly swings on outside pitches that actually pull the ball, inside-out swings and the likeâbut wanted to be sure they happened with the appropriate frequency. So Little and his lead engineer built this tool, which simulates the outcomes in bulk and helps them refine the gameâs physics.
Little clicks a button and, with a whooshing sound effect, the screen becomes a spray of arcs, like a fireworks finale caught in mid-explosion. A pitch outside still strongly goes to the opposite field, but with the better contact rating, more go to the center of the diamond and some even to left field.
âWe were unhappy with the dice roll,â Little says, using the term for the background calculation the game made in determining where and how hard the ball would be hit.
Thereâs another unhappy dice roll to come, one that Little and his Visual Concepts team has no control of: Whether theyâre even working on this game next year. 2K Sportsâ license with Major League Baseball expires this year, something thatâs been brought up every year since MLB 2K9 landed with such a gut-churning thud three years ago.
Little was showing me the hitting outcomes tool to demonstrate that Visual Concepts wasnât phoning it in on a foregone conclusion this is the last game for MLB 2K. Little and his lead engineer built this tool and another, over the course of about six months, beginning work on it right after MLB 2K11 shipped last March. Little even talked about what the second tool, which speeds up the gameâs live-playing AI, would allow them to do with the gameâs super-simulation mode in MLB 2K13
I think itâs more likely that, if weâre talking about this concept next year, itâs in another studio. Thatâs barring something like another publisher buying out 2Kâs parent company. Electronic Arts bid $2 billion on Take-Two in 2008, and some analysts have suggested that Activision should do the same thing now, but an analystâs job is often to tell others what to do with their money.
Everything 2K Sports does with this title leaves behind tea leaves for sports fans to read, and they got another cup full this week when 2K announced it will release a pairing of MLB 2K12, the flagship of a money-losing franchise, with the much more popular NBA 2K12, for $69.99-or $10 more than MLB 2K12 would sell for on day one.
The cheapest you can find NBA 2K12 is $50 on Amazon. So the message sent here is either MLB 2K12 is a $20 game or NBA 2K12âs a $10 one. Guess which one is closer to what consumers think.
2K Sports is trying to bootstrap its baseball franchise to its NBA title, which is a smart thing. NBA 2K has been an outstanding game for years now, certainly since the crisis of 2009 when 2K Sports took the MLB project away from Kush Games and saddled Visual Concepts with a nine-month development cycle that ended in disaster. Why 2K Sports waited until now to try this, and whether it signals an attempt to save its baseball marriage, or giving up on it, who can tell. But it may be a moot point.
âI think that they are done with baseball, unless MLB is willing to take
sharply reduced terms,â said Michael Pachter, the noted games industry analyst for Wedbush Securities. âThe last deal cost Take-Two $30 million a year in losses, and they canât renew it without a $30 million reduction in royaltyâeven then they would just break even.â
That assumes Major League Baseball would want to negotiate with Take-Two, 2K Sportsâ parent company. All Take-Twoâs senior leadership has done is disparage its own product and the value of the Major League Baseball brand. Even without Take-Twoâs conduct and mishandling of the franchise, MLB could expect to take a haircut in its next deal, and not just because everyone thinks Take-Two overpaid way back in 2005.
The Major League Baseball audience on the Xbox 360 is now literally smaller than the NHLâs in the middle of the summer
Consider this: At no time last year, not even in its launch week, was MLB 2K11 on Xbox Liveâs weekly top 20 list of games played. Iâm not sure Iâve ever seen any edition of the game on that list, to be honest. So what? Well, consider every other simulation sports title shows up there at some point, and many usually appear there all year long. In the middle of July, with MLB and the MLS the only major professional team sports in season, FIFA 11, NBA 2K11, Madden NFL 11 and NHL 11 all made the top 20.
This isnât just online multiplayerâthis is connected users playing any mode of the game. Also, remember this is the only baseball game on the Xbox 360, so itâs not like thereâs a fragmenting of the audience across two or more titles. The Major League Baseball audience on the Xbox 360 is now literally smaller than the National Hockey Leagueâs in the middle of the summer. That will come into the discussion when MLB opens the bidding on its next Xbox 360 license.
Furthermore, anyone picking up that license has an absolutely Sisyphean task awaiting them in the PlayStation 3 market. MLB 2Kâs repeated shortcomings, and frankly, its poorer visual quality by comparison, have helped make MLB The Show into a striking rarity: a sports video game capable of selling a console. A diehard baseball fan without a PlayStation 3 has had only one satisfactory option: buy one. Those with a PS3 are extremely unlikely ever to move.
Only in name would an exclusive third-party license, which MLB is said to want again, involve the PlayStation 3. Iâm not even sure nostalgia for EA Sportsâ MVP brand, goodwill built on a previous console generation, could make much of a dent in the dominance Sonyâs MLB The Show exerts over that platform. That will definitely factor into the risk a publisher is willing to take and the amount itâs willing to pay. And thatâs assuming thereâs any label other than EA Sports who is ready to take over and ship a product by next March.
***
Back in his office, a menagerie of consoles, controllers, monitors and papers, Little is again on the sticks, adjusting the pitch location, timing, contact and power. Round ball on round bat, the most difficult and inscrutable act in sports. He can batch-render the same swing on the same pitch at the same instant as many times as he wants to, and see just as many unique outcomes. How many times do you want to do this? Fifty? A hundred? Two hundred?
If only it could show where MLB 2K will end up.
STICK JOCKEY
Stick Jockey is Kotakuâs column on sports video games. It appears Saturdays.