NBA Live 18 review for PS4, Xbox One

Platform: PS4
Also On: Xbox One
Publisher: EA
Developer: EA Tiburon
Medium: Digital/Disc
Players: 1-10
Online: Yes
ESRB: E

Grading NBA Live 18 is all a matter of perspective.

In an objective sense, judged against the entirety of, say, every current gen basketball game, itโ€™s a little above average. It doesnโ€™t do anything incredibly well, but itโ€™s significantly better than NBA Live 16. There are obvious areas where it could improve, but mostly in terms of minor tweaks, rather than huge overhauls. In this sense, itโ€™s a good-but-not-great game.

In a more narrow sense, however, thereโ€™s an argument to be made that NBA Live 18 is a Game of the Year contender. This sense, of course, requires looking strictly at the yearโ€™s basketball games โ€” and seeing as NBA 2K18 was a pay-to-win abomination, if youโ€™re trying to decide between the two, the choice couldnโ€™t be clearer. For the first time in years (possibly even forever), in the battle between EA and 2K Sports, EA is the clear winner.

To be clear, a big part of why NBA Live 18 is so good, relatively speaking, is that itโ€™s simply not NBA 2K18. It doesnโ€™t seize every opportunity to gouge you for money, and itโ€™s possible to improve your created player without having to either dip into your real-world wallet or grind through hours upon hours upon hours of practice. Thatโ€™s not to say that NBA Live 18 doesnโ€™t want players to spend money โ€” you can buy plenty of shirts and shoes and shooting styles here โ€” but the way itโ€™s implemented here is far less obnoxiously intrusive.

But NBA Live 18 also succeeds, to a certain extent, on its own merits. The game has a proper story mode, told via text messages and TV talking heads. Admittedly, the talking heads are a little annoying, seeing as they give Stephen A. Smith screen time, but nonetheless: thereโ€™s a solidly engaging single-player story here.

Likewise, the gameplay itself does the job. The players donโ€™t seem as graceful as they do in 2K18, and it occasionally feels like youโ€™re fighting the camera, but on the whole, itโ€™s a solid basketball experience.

Normally, of course, โ€œsolidโ€ wouldnโ€™t be a descriptor youโ€™d apply to the best basketball game of the year. But when the alternative is the hot steaming garbage that is NBA 2K18, solid will more than do. It may be a tainted victory for NBA Live 18, but after years of being second-best, they deserve applause for eking out a win this time around.

Grade: B
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