Posted by franklynne on 8/27/2019 2:42:00 PM (view original):
" This was an important goal of the update, as we wanted to more closely resemble real life."
imho, i believe this statement is true..we're dealing with 18 y/o just out of high school youths here..if you as a coach believe that a recruit knows exactly what he wants at that age you're kidding yourself. i also think that if you believe every 4-5* recruit would prefer playing for a duke or kentucky, you just aren't in the real world. this is why i refuse to call these % win/loss odds as 'dice rolls'. being from akron oh & witnessing lebron's decision to go to miami to win championships after "promising" to remain at cleveland.. the cavs hiring the coach he wanted to help keep him there..also living thru the akron zip basketball rise to d1 status, when there was just 2 divs..major & small. back then as a small div school, akron had several player who could have played for a major university..some want to be a 'big fish in a small pond'..all this said i have 7 hd teams in 3.0..if 2.0 still existed i'd have maybe 2 'cause you vet coaches got whatever you wanted in recruiting (& wins)..at least i have a shot at competing today..rant over..
You obviously enjoy the new game and that's great, some people do. Whether the new version is more fun, better, or successful is debatable (well not the last one) but whether it is more realistic, is not.
I have no idea what Lebron James has to do with HD or college basketball in general.
The big fish in little pond theory is so overplayed around here it's hilarious. Do I know what all teenagers are thinking? Of course not. But do I know that they'd rather play D1 ball than D3 ball? Yes, I do.
It's because that's what happens in real life. Realism means it represents reality. In what reality does a teenager come to a 50/50 decision on whether they want to play at Purdue or Chestnut Hill? It just simply doesn't happen in real life with any sort of regularity to be considered "realistic".
D2/D3s battling D1s for recruits (and winning) simply makes this the most unrealistic version of a college basketball simulator possible.