Xbox One Owners Get To Play NBA 2K16 For Free This Weekend

Ein kurzer Vergleich der cheap NBA 2K16 MT coins Grafik von NBA 2K16 auf Xbox 360 und Xbox One – ein Last-Gen Current-Gen Vergleich. Es ist bloß ein kurzer Vergleich, man bekommt aber einen guten Eindruck über die Veränderungen.

So I’m a SG inside scorer and couldn’t hit ANY shot that wasn’t right in front of the basket. But then I hardly can get near the basket at all because I’m way too slow to get ANY opposing player. I drop the ball at the slightest contact and bounce off every guy like I’m made of rubber. And then my agent is telling me I’m the guy that shoulders this team and is the upcoming superstar? Doesn’t feel like that at all. Well at least as I’m not spending another 20 bucks on VC so my player gets to proper NBA rookie ratings to start enjoying the game.

I’ve tried alternate genres and over time I’ve found myself blacklisting certain types of games from my field of interest. These things no longer ping on my radar. If a game describes itself as a ‘procedurally generated rogue-like’ – I’ve lost interest. I don’t do sports or racing games because I watch neither. I poke at fighting games, but never play much of them. I’ve dabbled in strategy, but it’s a genre I seldom look at, let alone actually play.

Suddenly I’m talking about a sports game. Not just any sports game, a basketball game at that. The last basketball game I’ve played was NBA Jam. The only one I’ve ever been good at was Bulls Versus Blazers And The NBA Playoffs for the Genesis. It’s been a long time since I’d even looked at this sort of thing that this strange piece of news came and went with me none the wiser.

There are a lot of questions about this. Will it actually be entertaining? Will the story be interesting enough to keep my attention, even if I’m not entirely interested in the core experience? It’s Spike Lee. I’ve only seen a few of his films, but they were all great. He’s even written and directed a basketball movie. And then there’s the protagonist, a Mr. Frequency Vibrations. That name is ridiculous, but considering Jesus Shuttleworth of He Got Game, it’s not too far off from Spike’s writing style.