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Apr 2, 2021 · “We’re delighted to announce that MLB The Show 21 is coming to Xbox Game Pass on day one, and will be available on April 20 for Xbox Series X/S and Xbox One,” he wrote. The game will also...
- Line driver.
- What We Said About MLB The Show 20
- Score: 8
- Who will win the 2021 World Series?
- Microtransaction Reaction
- MLB The Show 21 Screenshots
- Verdict
By Gabriel Moss
Updated: Nov 4, 2022 12:18 am
Posted: Apr 21, 2021 4:33 pm
MLB The Show 21 is a historic game: For the first time since the series began as a PlayStation exclusive in 2006, both Xbox and PlayStation owners can take their favorite teams head to head in Sony San Diego’s consistently excellent baseball simulation. And it’s even on Game Pass! With that in mind, this year’s addition of three distinct difficulty modes and in-depth tutorial cards makes a lot of sense for helping new players break into its complex game modes. It also has an enticing new custom Stadium Creator, and the ability to export your Road to the Show player across modes, which fans have been asking for for years. That said, moment-to-moment gameplay isn’t meaningfully different from the most recent iterations, and it doesn’t look like a generational leap forward, so it’s not quite a home run for series veterans – especially if you aren’t playing on a DualSense controller.
The biggest new feature of the year is the flexible Stadium Creator, which brings a new layer of depth and creativity to MLB The Show. You can alter seating arrangements, change the height and location of your walls, and even create entire cities in the background. But like most first drafts, it has some areas that need improvement: The controls are tough to get used to and can often seem misleading, especially if you’re trying to make your way through its confusing menu system. It’s also weird that none of your custom ballparks have a nighttime variant, so evening games that should extend into the night remain bathed in perpetual sunlight.
Of the returning modes, the Road to the Show campaign mode has received the most significant changes from last year’s version. For starters, your character is a “two-way” player by default, meaning that they can be a hitter and a pitcher without you needing to create a new save file in order to switch between the two roles. Eventually, anyway – you need to play several games before you’re even allowed the option to specialize the way you want, which is a little annoying. The story in this year’s Road to the Show is still barebones, but if you’re playing on PS5 or Series X you’ll get video commentary on your performance from sportscasters like Ben Gellman. It’s certainly a neat addition that vaguely calls out your decisions on the field, but it still manages to fall flat in its delivery.
In what feels like a minor but noticeable update, MLB The Show 20 doesn’t break what wasn’t broken. Developer Sony San Diego has tweaked and tightened everything that was presented in MLB The Show 19, and as a result, playing baseball on a console has never been this fluid. But even with the excellent new Showdown mode, longtime fans may be just a ...
Read the full MLB The Show 20 Review
Another nice touch is that when you take your custom Road to the Show player into Diamond Dynasty or Franchise mode you can finally pair them with your own custom teams. The bummer here is that you can no longer move your save file forward from previous games in the series, meaning you need to start fresh. Given how insubstantial the changes are to the mechanics of how characters work in MLB The Show 21 this is surprising – I can’t imagine what’s so different about this year’s version that would prevent a feature that’s carried over for years.
Just as we’ve seen for years now, MLB The Show 21 includes microtransactions in the form of Stubs. This is the currency used to purchase card packs and entries to specific competitive game modes in Diamond Dynasty, like Battle Royale and certain Showdown series. You don’t ever need to shell out real-world money in order to get Stubs, since you can simply earn them by completing challenges across other sections of Diamond Dynasty (such as by completing specific challenges in the delightful Moments mode) or by staking the field in Conquest mode.
Much like in MLB The Show 20, it’s surprisingly easy to rack up Stubs by regularly nailing Moments and Conquests, and you can always just sell cards and items you don’t want to the community market for even more, so you aren’t likely to feel a lot of pressure to spend. If you do choose to speed up the process with cash, you’ll find the cheapest pack of Stubs costs 99 cents for 1,000 Stubs. Likewise, the cheapest card pack is 1,500 Stubs, equivalent to $1.49. It includes four all-stars (of any grade, including up to Diamond) and one random item. So MLB The Show 21 is nowhere near the level of offender as something like the NBA 2K series has become, but microtransactions are definitely present.
MLB The Show 21 can also lay claim to the cleanest main menu screen in the series’ recent memory. Where previous years’ modes were unintuitively jumbled together, this time I could easily figure out exactly where I wanted to go for the experience I wanted to have, and all of the most feature-rich modes are right at the top. It really ties everything together.
Upon loading up for the first time, you immediately have a selection between Casual, Simulation, and Competitive modes, which means you can fine-tune the amount of challenge you want right off the bat. For a game as complex as MLB The Show 21, it’s probably wise for most people jumping in for the first time to dabble in Casual to find their footing before cranking it up to the more intensive levels. Everything you need to know about each of MLB The Show’s controls and game modes is broken down for you into convenient tutorial cards until you deem them no longer useful and decide to turn them off or switch to a harder difficulty mode.
The better you get at playing in Simulation Mode, the more likely you’ll strike hitters out.The advantage of graduating to the tougher Simulation mode is that it makes AI more challenging and you can play with things like super-precise, zone-based hitting that lets you take more control over your swings, and a brand-new Pinpoint Pitching feature. It’s a much more challenging pitching mode wherein you use your thumbsticks to manually wind up the pitch, giving you maximum control of your precision on the plate. Likewise, the better you get at playing this way, the more likely you’ll strike hitters out once you master the controls.
On the other hand, the graphics aren’t quite as revolutionary, which is kind of a letdown from the first iteration of a Sony-developed game appearing on the PlayStation 5. The field looks as good as always, but there’s really nothing much about this that jumps off the screen if you’ve played any of the other recent MLB The Show games on a PS4 Pro. Player models are well beyond showing their age, and most textures still look like they were picked directly out of the previous games. This problem extends to reused animations and even voiced lines as well. Granted, that’s fairly typical of an annualized sports series; I don’t expect a full do-over every year but the launch of a new console generation demands substantial improvements, and MLB The Show 21 has not kept up.
One of the most noticeable graphical issues is the uncanny valley vibe when a character is speaking during a close-up shot. Heidi Watney looks just as much like a mannequin as she did in MLB The Show 20 on the PS4 Pro. When you compare this to other recent Sony-developed games like Spider-Man: Miles Morales or The Last of Us Part 2 it leaves much to be desired.
It’s also notable that, when playing on PlayStation 5, there doesn’t appear to be an option between performance or graphics modes, meaning that you are locked to 60 frames per second at 4K without an option for 120 frames per second. This is disappointing, given that 120fps is one of the marquee features of the PS5 and Series X for those with TVs that support it.
MLB The Show 21 does a great job of opening its pristine baseball simulator to a brand-new group of players as it arrives on Xbox for the first time. Much like MLB The Show 20 before it, it still plays a bit too safe in most instances, only offering marginal gains over its predecessor with things like menu organization and improved customization. N...
- Gabriel Moss
Apr 29, 2021 · But this year it finally comes to Xbox One and Xbox Series X and S consoles, and it is even included for Xbox Game Pass members and on Xbox Cloud Gaming, too. For MLB fans like myself, this is a dream come true. There are many things that MLB the Show does so well that other baseball games can’t.
Apr 6, 2021 · MLB The Show 21 is finally coming to Xbox, and Microsoft confirmed on April 2 that the next installment of the long-running baseball game franchise would be on Xbox Game Pass on launch...
- Tomas Franzese
Apr 21, 2021 · For The Show, much of the focus is expediency, on how to slice through the dead air that permeates the game’s natural tension. The most prominent example of this is March to October mode, where...
- Matt Paprocki
Jun 10, 2021 · The biggest Xbox Game Pass bombshell of the year so far has undoubtedly been the addition of Sony's MLB The Show 21 at launch back in April, and Microsoft has confirmed today that the release was a massive success all around.
Apr 16, 2021 · MLB The Show 21 isn't as flashy as its cover star. Lacking many overhauls to its modes, this year's game focuses on a decent laissez-faire story mode, a cool new Stadium Creator, and more of the superb baseball sim gameplay that has earned the series its reputation as one of the best Sony exclusives.
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