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MLB 15 The Show News Post


We took a look at the National League and some of the most well known home run swings that league has to offer, so I guess it's only fair that we give the American League some publicity as well. After the jump, let's take a look at some dingers and grade some swings.

Read More - MLB 15 The Show: Grading the A.L.'s Signature Home Run Swings

Game: MLB 15 The ShowReader Score: 9/10 - Vote Now
Platform: PS Vita / PS3 / PS4Votes for game: 31 - View All
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Member Comments
# 1 teebee @ 04/15/15 03:27 PM
How about instead of ripping Abreu for not showboating we simply appreciate a Cuban player that for once doesn't whip his dong out and wave it around everytime he does something marginal decent on the diamond?
 
# 2 Schibling @ 04/15/15 03:49 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by teebee
How about instead of ripping Abreu for not showboating we simply appreciate a Cuban player that for once doesn't whip his dong out and wave it around everytime he does something marginal decent on the diamond?
Touchy Touchy. If you hit a home run you should be able to celebrate a little bit. im not saying whip your dong around as you put. I mean the pitchers celebrate during a big strikeout dont they. Not everyone is Barry Sanders my friend.
 
# 3 DieHardYankee26 @ 04/15/15 05:46 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by Schibling
Touchy Touchy. If you hit a home run you should be able to celebrate a little bit. im not saying whip your dong around as you put. I mean the pitchers celebrate during a big strikeout dont they. Not everyone is Barry Sanders my friend.
Most of them don't.
 
# 4 abcabc @ 04/15/15 10:13 PM
why is it scea obviously isn't using live video to transpose or whatever the word i'm looking for is, every batter's swing/followthrough onto the game, accurately.
 
# 5 ChaseB @ 04/15/15 11:29 PM
Quote:
Originally Posted by abcabc
why is it scea obviously isn't using live video to transpose or whatever the word i'm looking for is, every batter's swing/followthrough onto the game, accurately.
Well I can't speak directly for Sony, but I assume motion capture has a lot to do with what they capture, and that's not really how mo-cap works. They can use video for reference material, but still need to actually capture the motions rather than do them by hand.
 
# 6 strawberryshortcake @ 04/16/15 03:54 AM
A lot of these are off to semi-off. Being a life long Athletics fan, and watching Josh Donaldson play for the last three seasons, his leg kick is definitely much higher and much more exaggerated almost as if he is going to fall down. Plus, his upper torso has more lean downwards as well. MLB the Show has him a little too much upright position with the leg kick pretty simple, it may resemble, but it definitely is not replicated well.

Another thing I see for why they look off falls back on player models. The heads are much too small for their bodies. Secondly, the bodies are recycled between players. There seems to only be a handful of "thickness" player model available.


Quote:
Originally Posted by abcabc
why is it scea obviously isn't using live video to transpose or whatever the word i'm looking for is, every batter's swing/followthrough onto the game, accurately.
I have read that using what you are suggesting makes things easier to work with. You don't have to waste time trying to motion capture it.

It would also be more productive because in game real life baseball action on the field (including all sports) has that "adrenaline" factor that will never be present during motion capture sessions. There's no sense of "urgency" suited up in motion capture outfits. The actors will not be able to replicate what happens on the field of play.



Quote:
Originally Posted by ChaseB
Well I can't speak directly for Sony, but I assume motion capture has a lot to do with what they capture, and that's not really how mo-cap works. They can use video for reference material, but still need to actually capture the motions rather than do them by hand.
Two different technology from what I understand. Firstly, as pointed out above, in studio motion capture will never replicate what happens on the field of play. Studio motion capture doesn't capture the "adrenaline" rush that happens during live gameplay.

What abcabc is suggesting is a different form of technology (from what I have briefly read, I think, don't exactly recall) makes the whole video game "animation" better, and essentially lifelike because the developers would literally be taking in game footage and using that as the blueprint to replicate runners' stride length, swing and pitching follow through, the way they circle the base path, etc. The player movement in live game footage will be what you'd see in a video game.

Here's an example. Consider a ball hit to the outfielder at the 295 foot mark, outfielder fields the ball and throws it towards home. With real baseball footage, you would see the power in the fielders hips, arms, whole body throw the ball a couple hundred of feet towards home plate. With in studio motion capture, you don't have the luxury of a 400 foot stadium to work with. In studio, you are limited to a confined space. It'll be extremely difficult for the actor to try to replicate a 295 foot throw in a confined studio space. They may try to replicate it, but it will never look/feel like the real thing.
 
# 7 mrb27 @ 10/21/15 10:14 PM
is there a list of the new signature swings that have been added to the game? or are we supposed to just look through the entire list of batting stances. thats why everyone complains about the game being he same every year. people dont know what to look for . the game should come with a booklet that shows all the new features, player changes, features taken out, added etc
 

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