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Cured of Madden fever

I used to wait as breathlessly as anyone for the release of the newest edition of Madden NFL. In fact, I was there from the very first edition on Sega Genesis, and bought the title uninterrupted until Sony introduced the original PlayStation. Even after that, I still loved Madden and bought it most years.

But in the past four years, I’ve grown less and less interested in Madden. Part of that is marriage, part of that is waning interest in football, and part of that is growing too enamored of PC sports management sims that are, simply put, more compelling to me at 43.

I mean, I still love football; I’m a fan of the Vikings and there will always be a place in my heart for, say, Adrian Peterson personalized footballs.

But Madden? Maybe I’ve played it for too long, too many years, but it’s just not compelling anymore. Sorry, EA!

Top 20 Videogames of the Past Decade #18

18. The Madden NFL series. (Just about every platform, period)

Love it or hate it, there is no sports videogame that rivals it. Arguing against it is like arguing against using floor tiles in a kitchen: pointless. Hands down, it is the biggest money-making sports videogame in the world.

The biggest bump in the road came a few years ago, when EA announced it had secured exclusive rights to the NFL, NFLPA and NFLCA licensing. This, in effect, drove alternate NFL games like Sega/2K Games’ football game pretty much out of the running.

The big argument has been that without competitors, EA would slack on game innovation. That has not been the case, and in fact Madden NFL ’10 has seen a changing of the guard on the development team, including a re-emphasis on producing a serious, realistic simulation of football, rather than a pinball scoring-machine style of play where the game has typically fallen down, due to the inclusion of so-called “magic plays” that almost always work.

With plenty of innovation each year, the Madden franchise has proven that their biggest competition is… every other videogame out there vying for gamers’ hard-earned dollars in a down economy. People are buying fewer videogames now than they were at the start of the decade; but most are still keeping Madden at the top of their list every August.