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Blitz: The League is the antithesis
to the Madden series. Think
about every aspect in EA’s
multimillion-selling franchise, turn it
on its head and you get Midway’s
American football sensation. Those who
played it two years ago on the Xbox will
know it throws tactics out the window
in favour of aggressive, bone-breaking
arcade action. Ultimately, its predecessor
is Blitz 360’s biggest downfall.
If you picked it up in 2005, there’s
no point in buying what is essentially
nothing more than an upgrade. Sure,
it looks a lot prettier and some of the
animations are smoother, but we’ll
confidently tell you that, despite this,
the graphics are most certainly not true
HD. Instead, Blitz has that cheap, slightly
polished look. If there had been other
changes implemented there’d be no
problem, but guess what? There aren’t
any. Sift through the visual sheen and
the core is no different.
We’re a fair bunch, though, so we’ll
give this its due. Blitz is still a fantastic
alternative to the more-realistic Madden.
You’re encouraged from the off to break
bones and take your opponents down
with remorseless aggression. Hell, you
even get rewarded for it. A bar known
as the Clash Meter fills up every time
you successfully stiff-arm or annihilate
someone, and causing enough carnage
grants you the power of Unleash moves;
safe to say they can be unbelievably sick,
which in turn means they’re amazing!
Due to this there’s little room for
strategy, as the emphasis is definitely on
throwing elbows and destroying careers.
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This wasn’t enough for the guys
and gals at Midway, though and the
decision to include a story mode is a
smart move. Being given the unenviable
task of saving a team in crisis, you have
to scrap the rule book to succeed; you
can even inject players with steroids.
It’s surprisingly fun but an inconsistent
AI results in some matches becoming
wearisome as you struggle to figure out
the next best move.
If we’re only focusing on Blitz: The
League, we’d tell you it was a barrel of
fun wrapped up in a blanket of profanity
and illegal drugs. Unfortunately, it’s just
not possible to do that, as the Xbox
version is pretty much identical and
for that reason it’s impossible to advise
anyone in that category to splurge.
Still, if you’ve never sampled its charms
before you’re in for a treat; let’s just hope
Midway gets off its backside and makes
a real sequel.
Simon Miller
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