I've noticed some benefits of both the Revamped Rosters and the one Tonic modified.
The Revamped Rosters offer really good player seperation, but it seems like from the second year onward things just get messed up (even after re-worked potentials). I also noticed that since there's such a great ratings gap between players, the trade logic can be bad. E.g. Detroit traded away Jimmy Howard to the Canadiens for a 2nd round pick and Danny Kristo.
In year 2, I'm seeing depleted goalie crops after Martin Brodeur retired. New Jersey has Kinklaid starting, and he only has about a 72 OVR. I'm also seeing some defensemen on the 4th lines o certain teams. Stats are great for the most part in the first year, and I especially like the goalie stats. What I'm noticing is that there's no grey line between the good teams and the bad teams; no real middle of the road teams. It's either your good, or you're really bad, and simulating games shows no mercy in that regard.
For Tonic's rosters, AI is alot smarter. You won't see as many weird trades. Rookies play and progress. On the other hand, progression is overdone (because of EA's system not the rosters), so teams end up having ratings of 4.5 starts for offense, defense and goaltending by years 2 and 3. Goalie stats are a little shaky at times too.
Getting a bit frustrated.


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