Dee4Three wrote:I have to disagree with this comment
"You can't run fast breaks"
I am literally running solid fastbreaks in the highlight videos I upload. In fact, I find running fastbreaks to be even more enjoyable because the court isn't bouncing around from the 2k view.
"you can't see certain parts of the court/ball. Rebounding and defense is harder since you don't get a good view of which way the defender is going"
What? Rebounding and defense are not harder at all on the broadcast view, in fact, they feel more responsive and make more sense on broadcast view to me. Again, you can see the baseline, you can see the distance between yourself and the basket, when a defensive rebound happens, you don't have to wait for the camera to rotate.
"The 2K view gives you a massive advantage competitively"
Ive played online against a few people who used 2k view, and I smoked them, easily. It gives a zero competitive advantage, as I can actually see the distance between the players better, and use the baseline better.
You are speaking as a matter of fact with those statements, and maybe you feel it gives YOU a better advantage. But, I'm talking about the facts of what you can, and cant see better on each camera view.
broadcast view offers:
- Screen not jumping around
- Camera not rotating
- View of baseline
- Better view of distance between yourself and player, distance from hoop, distance from baseline
- TV experience which we grew up on and still view the NBA today
2k view offers
- A better view down court
- 3rd person perspective behind the players
You like the 2k view better because you are used to it. Which is totally cool, but lets not act like the 2k view gives a "Massive Advantage", it absolutely does not.
Andrew wrote:The rotating camera in 2K Pro-Am is definitely a problem, and one of the things I don't like about the angle. I don't have any issues with the angle that's available in MyCAREER since it remains behind my player at all times and I feel it's pretty smooth (at least on PS4), but unfortunately it's not available in 2K Pro-Am. There's a similar one, but it's zoomed in too closely.
Andrew wrote:The rotating camera in 2K Pro-Am is definitely a problem, and one of the things I don't like about the angle. I don't have any issues with the angle that's available in MyCAREER since it remains behind my player at all times and I feel it's pretty smooth (at least on PS4), but unfortunately it's not available in 2K Pro-Am. There's a similar one, but it's zoomed in too closely.
[Q] wrote:Andrew wrote:The rotating camera in 2K Pro-Am is definitely a problem, and one of the things I don't like about the angle. I don't have any issues with the angle that's available in MyCAREER since it remains behind my player at all times and I feel it's pretty smooth (at least on PS4), but unfortunately it's not available in 2K Pro-Am. There's a similar one, but it's zoomed in too closely.
I had it set up in Live 10 where it wouldn't rotate so you can still face the opponents on defense. No rotating necessary.
Dee4Three wrote:I see the "seeing up the court better" as a decent reason, however, I feel like otherwise it has to many limitations. I think catching the ball in the corner, and driving hard baseline is a big part of basketball (I play, and its a huge part of a perimeter players game), as well as a post up players game to spin baseline (See David Robinson/Hakeem/Ewing, etc).
In regards to seeing up the court better, broadcast with height 5 and zoom 1 or 2, allows you to get a board and see about to halfcourt (roughly), in 2k, they discourage the long pass so much that 99% of the time the ball goes sailing over the players head after the pass anyway. So for me, that is zero impact. And it also seems that the CPU In this game refrains from making those long passes anyway.
I guess I think of it as the whole experience, like when you boot up the game and start playing. Wouldn't you want the experience that you have experienced with all your memories of the NBA?
I was actually surprised to see how many people on that 4th video only use broadcast, I actually thought most people still used 2k.
StyxTx wrote:Dee4Three wrote:I see the "seeing up the court better" as a decent reason, however, I feel like otherwise it has to many limitations. I think catching the ball in the corner, and driving hard baseline is a big part of basketball (I play, and its a huge part of a perimeter players game), as well as a post up players game to spin baseline (See David Robinson/Hakeem/Ewing, etc).
In regards to seeing up the court better, broadcast with height 5 and zoom 1 or 2, allows you to get a board and see about to halfcourt (roughly), in 2k, they discourage the long pass so much that 99% of the time the ball goes sailing over the players head after the pass anyway. So for me, that is zero impact. And it also seems that the CPU In this game refrains from making those long passes anyway.
I guess I think of it as the whole experience, like when you boot up the game and start playing. Wouldn't you want the experience that you have experienced with all your memories of the NBA?
I was actually surprised to see how many people on that 4th video only use broadcast, I actually thought most people still used 2k.
Well, I never watched basketball on TV and still don't, so I have no TV experience with it. All my basketball joy came from playing. Even my favorite sport, baseball, I never watched on TV. I'd listen on the radio and that was the #1 sport I played.
hedop wrote:Because Ronnie2k insists that I play the game like that.
Dee4Three wrote:StyxTx wrote:Dee4Three wrote:I see the "seeing up the court better" as a decent reason, however, I feel like otherwise it has to many limitations. I think catching the ball in the corner, and driving hard baseline is a big part of basketball (I play, and its a huge part of a perimeter players game), as well as a post up players game to spin baseline (See David Robinson/Hakeem/Ewing, etc).
In regards to seeing up the court better, broadcast with height 5 and zoom 1 or 2, allows you to get a board and see about to halfcourt (roughly), in 2k, they discourage the long pass so much that 99% of the time the ball goes sailing over the players head after the pass anyway. So for me, that is zero impact. And it also seems that the CPU In this game refrains from making those long passes anyway.
I guess I think of it as the whole experience, like when you boot up the game and start playing. Wouldn't you want the experience that you have experienced with all your memories of the NBA?
I was actually surprised to see how many people on that 4th video only use broadcast, I actually thought most people still used 2k.
Well, I never watched basketball on TV and still don't, so I have no TV experience with it. All my basketball joy came from playing. Even my favorite sport, baseball, I never watched on TV. I'd listen on the radio and that was the #1 sport I played.
While I still don't see the advantage to the view, THIS makes a whole lot of sense.
StyxTx wrote:Dee4Three wrote:StyxTx wrote:Dee4Three wrote:I see the "seeing up the court better" as a decent reason, however, I feel like otherwise it has to many limitations. I think catching the ball in the corner, and driving hard baseline is a big part of basketball (I play, and its a huge part of a perimeter players game), as well as a post up players game to spin baseline (See David Robinson/Hakeem/Ewing, etc).
In regards to seeing up the court better, broadcast with height 5 and zoom 1 or 2, allows you to get a board and see about to halfcourt (roughly), in 2k, they discourage the long pass so much that 99% of the time the ball goes sailing over the players head after the pass anyway. So for me, that is zero impact. And it also seems that the CPU In this game refrains from making those long passes anyway.
I guess I think of it as the whole experience, like when you boot up the game and start playing. Wouldn't you want the experience that you have experienced with all your memories of the NBA?
I was actually surprised to see how many people on that 4th video only use broadcast, I actually thought most people still used 2k.
Well, I never watched basketball on TV and still don't, so I have no TV experience with it. All my basketball joy came from playing. Even my favorite sport, baseball, I never watched on TV. I'd listen on the radio and that was the #1 sport I played.
While I still don't see the advantage to the view, THIS makes a whole lot of sense.
In my case, it's a lot easier to move my player around 'naturally'. If I want to go right across to the other side of the court, I push the stick right. If I want to drive the basket, I push it forward, etc. I tried playing from the side view but it just threw me off completely, especially passing. Anyway, I guess it's a matter of personal preference. Everyone has their own way.
[Q] wrote:I don't think I've ever seen madden played in another camera other than the behind view so you can see everything. Makes me wonder why they don't show it that way on TV as well
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