
So all the football I've been watching for 35 years, all the strategy I've picked up from watching pro coaches and players for 35 years is moot in this game? From the discussion it basically seems that the defense in the game is not realistic and if I'm getting advice to go almost exclusively nickel (NFL teams I looked up average about 27% in base formations). While it does make sense that base defenses are easier to pass on, this does seem extreme. It just seems to me that the advice I'm getting on how to set up my defensive playbook and game plan, should not work. In a different league I noticed even the best defensive teams have few defensive players above 65 OVR.
I understand the dev team is limited and programming AI to act like real life is extremely difficult. The Madden game is 30+ years old with a huge team of programmers and practically unlimited budget and they can't even get it to work. This game is despite its issues still has a very bright future ahead and is ahead of Madden in many respects. I've already purchased pre-access for the College game and plan to for Pro 24. But I'll be honest it does suck a LITTLE of the enjoyment out if I'm feeling like I'm learning how to beat the game rather than play defense. But I'd like to ask a few questions from the devs: Do you think this is a fair assessment? What is the general attitude is in terms of how much priority is given to realism. How much does the game's internal AI try to replicate real situations? For example, if I run successfully does that truly open up the pass? Should 4-3 at least work against the run? What do you say to the advice I'm getting that real football logic doesn't really matter?