NCAA Football 2003, released for the PlayStation 2, Nintendo GameCube, and Xbox, featured University of Oregon quarterback Joey Harrington on the cover. New features in this version included over 200 licensed fight songs, 3D cheerleaders and 144 different schools. Dynasty mode was enhanced with the ability to redshirt a player and schedule non-conference games before each season. Trophies and awards, modeled after real-life college football awards, was another feature new to this version. Players could win trophies by playing games and could add them to a personal collection which is shown off in a trophy room. These awards include the Heisman, Coach of the Year and Bowl-specific trophies. The game featured 23 different rivalry trophies that were created to represent their real-life counterparts. Create-A-School mode returned in this edition of the game after being absent from the previous year. The game also featured a customizable interface for the first time. A player could choose his or her favorite team and the game interface would be based around that team's fight song, mascot, logos and school colors.
Video games aren’t what kept José Muñoz in his parents’ basement for much of the past seven years, slipping into…
Back in the summer, the NCAA piously announced it would no longer license video games, leaving it to members to…
Two letters and a number. That's all you need to be a household name in college football—or its video game, at…
The Video Game Awards celebrated 10 years of giving out hardware on Friday. Bet you didn't know, or at least you…
Five years ago, an NCAA executive said EA Sports should be allowed to use actual names of its amateur…
This week, the Portland Trail Blazers released Greg Oden after a five-year, injury-tainted marriage that was…
This Saturday was about as throwing-things livid I've been over a sports contest in a decade. The last time I was…
Looking back on the list of video games I finished in 2011, it's an embarrassingly thin roster. It may be my least…
Advertisement