Why the NFL’s Labor Strife Might Be the Best Thing That Happened to Madden (Kotaku)

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  • roadman
    *ll St*r
    • Aug 2003
    • 26339

    #46
    Re: Why the NFL’s Labor Strife Might Be the Best Thing That Happened to Madden (Kotak

    Originally posted by LiquorLogic
    What does EA have to gain from compromising after the license expires ? The current license is different. EA was worried that a possible lock out would kill their sales, so the NFL reduced their financial obligation, but, in return EA agreed to extend the deal and extra year.

    EA wanted some relief; the NFL wanted another year of security with the license; that's a compromise.

    It's not really wishful thinking. Yes, it's possible that another company enters the fold if EA doesn't renew the deal with the NFL, but it's also possible, as you pointed out, that no other publisher will be willing to develop a football game because they don't think that they can compete with the EA.

    The game will be better if the exclusive license ends regardless of whether EA has an actual competitor or not. They won't be paying that hefty fee, so they'll be able to put more money into the development of the game. Of course, a competitor would be ideal for us.

    I see what you are saying, but respectfully disagree.

    I just don't see the NFL and EA breaking up their partnership from the past 7 yrs. (9 yrs at the end of the license) Instead of paying $400 million for the license, maybe the pay 200 million for that same license. That makes the NFL happy and EA happy they can stole away 200 million for production.

    I like your idea, but my gut is telling me that Madden and the NFL will be in it for the long haul.

    Comment

    • blklightning
      MVP
      • Oct 2007
      • 1294

      #47
      Re: Why the NFL’s Labor Strife Might Be the Best Thing That Happened to Madden (Kotak

      all i know is that this license needs to end. i'm tired of seeing my favorite sport being the worst represented of the lot in the video game world. the show and nba 2k can amaze you at times. but madden just continues to tread the same waters. and in some areas, they've managed to drain a bit out of the pond.
      Last edited by blklightning; 02-22-2011, 03:08 AM.
      My score for Madden 13: 4.5/10

      3 points for graphics, 1 point for the passable commentary, and a half point for the boxart. I can give no further points since the all over the place gameplay would ruin it anyway.

      Comment

      • adfletch71
        Banned
        • Nov 2006
        • 727

        #48
        Re: Why the NFL’s Labor Strife Might Be the Best Thing That Happened to Madden (Kotak

        If 2k or Sony was too make a football game this gen, with the technology and ambition they have with there other titles, it would be a rap. It wouldn't be long before these company make a great football game. Wasn't it Ian himself that said he tired of people comparing Madden and 2k5 in the same sentence? Well Ian, what's the problem? Madden trying too cater to the casual gamers have bit them in the ***...look at the sales for proof.

        So they need too get the fundamentals of football right and surpass NFL2K5 presentation and ALLPRO2K8 GAMEPLAY too shut up alot of the majority of hardcore fans. They have the games too study, so I don't understand what's the problem? We not asking Madden to be just like those games, but we are asking that the presentation and gameplay surpass those games , its 2012 how much longer do we have too wait?

        Comment

        • Cryolemon
          MVP
          • Aug 2008
          • 1669

          #49
          Re: Why the NFL’s Labor Strife Might Be the Best Thing That Happened to Madden (Kotak

          As has been said, the next generation of consoles will be interesting. Now, we don't know when they will be coming out, but I know that developers get the dev kits well before the consoles are released (for obvious reasons).

          Lets say the PS4 is going to come out in late 2014 (That may or may not be a reasonable guess, but it'll do). The developers probably get the dev kits late 2013, which gives them 8-9 months to develop the first batch of games. If a company can develop a half decent football engine in that time and stick a generic league and some simple but deep customization over it then they might have a chance to keep their head above water against Madden '15 regardless of the license situation. We all saw the abomination that was Madden '06, and maybe people will be more cautious about trusting EA (or any company I guess) to deliver on the first iteration on a new console.

          Comment

          • mestevo
            Gooney Goo Goo
            • Apr 2010
            • 19556

            #50
            Re: Why the NFL’s Labor Strife Might Be the Best Thing That Happened to Madden (Kotak

            Originally posted by adfletch71
            If 2k or Sony was too make a football game this gen, with the technology and ambition they have with there other titles, it would be a rap. It wouldn't be long before these company make a great football game. Wasn't it Ian himself that said he tired of people comparing Madden and 2k5 in the same sentence? Well Ian, what's the problem? Madden trying too cater to the casual gamers have bit them in the ***...look at the sales for proof.

            So they need too get the fundamentals of football right and surpass NFL2K5 presentation and ALLPRO2K8 GAMEPLAY too shut up alot of the majority of hardcore fans. They have the games too study, so I don't understand what's the problem? We not asking Madden to be just like those games, but we are asking that the presentation and gameplay surpass those games , its 2012 how much longer do we have too wait?
            If sales are your barometer for success then Madden was in the right all along and continues to do so. PS2 sales vs the HD consoles show an improvement in market share from one generation to the next.

            Originally posted by Cryolemon
            As has been said, the next generation of consoles will be interesting. Now, we don't know when they will be coming out, but I know that developers get the dev kits well before the consoles are released (for obvious reasons).

            Lets say the PS4 is going to come out in late 2014 (That may or may not be a reasonable guess, but it'll do). The developers probably get the dev kits late 2013, which gives them 8-9 months to develop the first batch of games. If a company can develop a half decent football engine in that time and stick a generic league and some simple but deep customization over it then they might have a chance to keep their head above water against Madden '15 regardless of the license situation. We all saw the abomination that was Madden '06, and maybe people will be more cautious about trusting EA (or any company I guess) to deliver on the first iteration on a new console.
            Like the transition to the HD consoles, this generation will outsell the next one for the first year or so anyways.

            Comment

            • adfletch71
              Banned
              • Nov 2006
              • 727

              #51
              Re: Why the NFL’s Labor Strife Might Be the Best Thing That Happened to Madden (Kotak

              mestevo...show me the chart my friend? From what I have seen and heard, last generation consoles for madden sold almost 7.5 million for Madden 2005. Madden hasn't sold that many copies yet in a annual year of the current consoles. So that's not improvement, that's decline. Madden has been around 5 million copies yearly on this gen consoles.

              Comment

              • mestevo
                Gooney Goo Goo
                • Apr 2010
                • 19556

                #52
                Re: Why the NFL’s Labor Strife Might Be the Best Thing That Happened to Madden (Kotak

                Originally posted by adfletch71
                mestevo...show me the chart my friend? From what I have seen and heard, last generation consoles for madden sold almost 7.5 million for Madden 2005. Madden hasn't sold that many copies yet in a annual year of the current consoles. So that's not improvement, that's decline. Madden has been around 5 million copies yearly on this gen consoles.
                This was covered in the other thread:

                That's actually a good point, looking at it again, the HD consoles combined have surpassed the numbers of the highly regarded PS2 versions, with far fewer consoles on the market. Sales leading up to 10/11 were caught up in the gradual death of the PS2 which was still selling over 1m copies until this year with the huge drop from 948k to 391k (so far).

                PS2 topped out at 4.36m with Madden 05. Madden 10 on PS3/360 sold 5.44m copies in the last 70+ weeks, and 11 is sitting at 4.2m at 27 weeks.

                Makes the move towards Facebook and microtransactions look a lot smarter if they think they're reaching market saturation. Get potentially more $$ per box, online pass and more DLC generates revenue from used sales that they got almost nothing from before.
                Original Xbox sales were almost irrelevant the last generation, they didn't peak until Madden 06 and then dropped sharply, while the PS2 took until 2009 to fall below the best numbers the original Xbox ever saw. The stacking of sales (PS2 and HD consoles), for the first part of this generation create an illusion that Madden is on the decline when sales are probably flat at best this generation.

                Comment

                • LiquorLogic
                  Banned
                  • Aug 2010
                  • 712

                  #53
                  Re: Why the NFL’s Labor Strife Might Be the Best Thing That Happened to Madden (Kotak

                  Originally posted by roadman
                  I see what you are saying, but respectfully disagree.

                  I just don't see the NFL and EA breaking up their partnership from the past 7 yrs. (9 yrs at the end of the license) Instead of paying $400 million for the license, maybe the pay 200 million for that same license. That makes the NFL happy and EA happy they can stole away 200 million for production.

                  I like your idea, but my gut is telling me that Madden and the NFL will be in it for the long haul.
                  There's really no value in an exclusive partnership for EA anymore. There won't be any competitors, viable ones anyway, so EA has no one to freeze out. The NFL is going to have to take what EA is willing to give.

                  Comment

                  • mestevo
                    Gooney Goo Goo
                    • Apr 2010
                    • 19556

                    #54
                    Re: Why the NFL’s Labor Strife Might Be the Best Thing That Happened to Madden (Kotak

                    Originally posted by LiquorLogic
                    There's really no value in an exclusive partnership for EA anymore. There won't be any competitors, viable ones anyway, so EA has no one to freeze out. The NFL is going to have to take what EA is willing to give.
                    There will be give and take for sure, as there is in any business agreement, the license holds a lot of value exclusive or otherwise for both sides.

                    The extension just ensures that the NFL won't be making a new deal after a season potentially marred by a lockout.

                    Comment

                    • roadman
                      *ll St*r
                      • Aug 2003
                      • 26339

                      #55
                      Re: Why the NFL’s Labor Strife Might Be the Best Thing That Happened to Madden (Kotak

                      Originally posted by LiquorLogic
                      The NFL is going to have to take what EA is willing to give.
                      Exactly my point above. The NFL will still hand out an exclusive license or agreement to EA for a huge yearly deduction from what they are paying now. We both agree EA will be paying less, you just don't feel it will be an exclusive license because EA doesn't need one.

                      EA may not need an exclusive license anymore, but that is the way the NFL operates. Doesn't matter if it's called an exclusive license or agreement the way the NFL sees it.

                      It's my firm belief that the partnership between EA and the NFL won't go away.

                      We'll see what happens, though, won't we?

                      Comment

                      • Cryolemon
                        MVP
                        • Aug 2008
                        • 1669

                        #56
                        Re: Why the NFL’s Labor Strife Might Be the Best Thing That Happened to Madden (Kotak

                        Originally posted by mestevo
                        Like the transition to the HD consoles, this generation will outsell the next one for the first year or so anyways.
                        Certainly, but the transition levels the playing field somewhat.

                        Comment

                        • kjcheezhead
                          MVP
                          • May 2009
                          • 3118

                          #57
                          Re: Why the NFL’s Labor Strife Might Be the Best Thing That Happened to Madden (Kotak

                          Originally posted by roadman
                          Exactly my point above. The NFL will still hand out an exclusive license or agreement to EA for a huge yearly deduction from what they are paying now. We both agree EA will be paying less, you just don't feel it will be an exclusive license because EA doesn't need one.

                          EA may not need an exclusive license anymore, but that is the way the NFL operates. Doesn't matter if it's called an exclusive license or agreement the way the NFL sees it.

                          It's my firm belief that the partnership between EA and the NFL won't go away.

                          We'll see what happens, though, won't we?
                          The partnership won't go away but the point is, EA is holding all the cards. After this contract expires, EA can basically go to the NFL and offer 1/10th of what it is paying now. If the NFL doesn't like the offer what are they going to do? Not sell an NFL videogame for 2-3 years while another company develops one?

                          Comment

                          • LiquorLogic
                            Banned
                            • Aug 2010
                            • 712

                            #58
                            Re: Why the NFL’s Labor Strife Might Be the Best Thing That Happened to Madden (Kotak

                            Originally posted by mestevo
                            There will be give and take for sure, as there is in any business agreement, the license holds a lot of value exclusive or otherwise for both sides.

                            The extension just ensures that the NFL won't be making a new deal after a season potentially marred by a lockout.
                            What value will the an exclusive license have, for EA, if there are no viable competitors ?

                            Originally posted by roadman
                            Exactly my point above. The NFL will still hand out an exclusive license or agreement to EA for a huge yearly deduction from what they are paying now. We both agree EA will be paying less, you just don't feel it will be an exclusive license because EA doesn't need one.

                            EA may not need an exclusive license anymore, but that is the way the NFL operates. Doesn't matter if it's called an exclusive license or agreement the way the NFL sees it.

                            It's my firm belief that the partnership between EA and the NFL won't go away.

                            We'll see what happens, though, won't we?
                            The reason the NFL loves exclusive licenses is because they're more expensive, and the NFL can make more money awarding exclusive licenses. The licensees love exclusive licenses because it guarantees them a hundred percent of the market share. What the NFL has done is price all of EA's competitors out of the market; they, the NFL, have eliminated any benefits to an exclusive license, so I see no reason why EA would pay for one again.

                            It doesn't matter how much the NFL loves exclusive licenses. In the gaming world, there's no demand for an exclusive license.

                            Also, there are really no benefits for the NFL, in giving out a cheap exclusive license, to EA when they could make more money awarding multiple licenses. If the license is very expensive, it will be exclusive; if it's not, it won't be exclusive because it won't make sense for the NFL.

                            Originally posted by kjcheezhead
                            The partnership won't go away but the point is, EA is holding all the cards. After this contract expires, EA can basically go to the NFL and offer 1/10th of what it is paying now. If the NFL doesn't like the offer what are they going to do? Not sell an NFL videogame for 2-3 years while another company develops one?
                            Exactly.

                            What the NFL is going to have to is basically offer EA a license for a pennies on the dollar, make it non-exclusive, and award other publishers licenses whenever, if ever, another publisher decides to make a football game.

                            It would be stupid for EA to guarantee the NFL a large sum of money when they're the only publisher willing, or able, to produce an NFL game.
                            Last edited by LiquorLogic; 02-22-2011, 04:16 PM.

                            Comment

                            • roadman
                              *ll St*r
                              • Aug 2003
                              • 26339

                              #59
                              Re: Why the NFL’s Labor Strife Might Be the Best Thing That Happened to Madden (Kotak

                              Originally posted by kjcheezhead
                              The partnership won't go away but the point is, EA is holding all the cards. After this contract expires, EA can basically go to the NFL and offer 1/10th of what it is paying now. If the NFL doesn't like the offer what are they going to do? Not sell an NFL videogame for 2-3 years while another company develops one?
                              I don't see the disagreement here.

                              In the above posts, I've mentioned that EA will throw out a reduction on what they are paying now.

                              EA offers to pay $200 million per year instead of the $400 million/yr for the license.

                              That's where the give and take comes in.

                              Similar to the CBA talks going on. There will be an agreement at some point in time that won't disrupt the flow of football and video game football.

                              Comment

                              • roadman
                                *ll St*r
                                • Aug 2003
                                • 26339

                                #60
                                Re: Why the NFL’s Labor Strife Might Be the Best Thing That Happened to Madden (Kotak

                                Originally posted by LiquorLogic
                                What value will the an exclusive license have, for EA, if there are no viable competitors ?



                                The reason the NFL loves exclusive licenses is because they're more expensive, and the NFL can make more money awarding exclusive licenses. The licensees love exclusive licenses because it guarantees them a hundred percent of the market share. What the NFL has done is price all of EA's competitors out of the market; they, the NFL, have eliminated any benefits to an exclusive license, so I see no reason why EA would pay for one again.

                                It doesn't matter how much the NFL loves exclusive licenses. In the gaming world, there's no demand for an exclusive license.

                                Also, there are really no benefits for the NFL, in giving out a cheap exclusive license, to EA when they could make more money awarding multiple licenses. If the license is very expensive, it will be exclusive; if it's not, it won't be exclusive because it won't make sense for the NFL.
                                It doesn't matter if you call it an exclusive license or an agreement, EA or any other company will still be paying upfront fees for using the teams, stadiums and any other trademarks.

                                At this time, I don't see any different than EA and the NFL hammering out an exclusive deal that is fair for both sides.

                                In the end, it's a business agreement between both parties. If the NFL wants to make it exclusive and EA says, we'll make it exclusive for $200 million per year, both parties will start compromising in getting a deal done. If the NFL can still make more money with $200 million with one company vs trying to make multiple deals with other companies and receiving less money, they will stick to an exclusive with the one company.

                                I still feel it's wishful thinking that the NFL will give up exclusivity in any market.

                                Why would you ruin a 9 yr old deal that you have going with a customer or vendor? Just because one party doesn't think there is a need anymore? That one party, EA, still needs to use all the teams, coach's, stadiums, trademarks and that still will come at a price that the NFL and EA will negotiate on.

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