For those who’ve spent the past year embedded in MLB The Show 21’s bullpen, Sony San Diego Studio’s slight but specific improvements in MLB The Show 22 will be welcome. This is an annual instalment where one of its headline tweaks includes adjustments to trade logic, preventing teams from swapping their star players for relief pitchers. To put it bluntly, while this baseball sim plays better than ever, the lack of meaningful additions will make it a somewhat tough sell for the average MLB fan.
Of course, to say there are no changes would be unfair, but a lot of the headlines here read like patch notes – regardless of how much effort has been invested behind-the-scenes. Flagship features include a new co-op mode, which allows you to squad up online with up to two friends and take on challengers from around the world; in Diamond Dynasty, the series’ wildly popular card collecting mode, you’ll be able to combine your collections of cards, allowing you to create a truly formidable roster, which is an incredibly fun idea.
There are also some pretty major changes to March to October, the franchise’s truncated seasons mode. In past entries, this was a one-and-done campaign, as you picked your favourite team and played key moments throughout the year on your way to World Series glory. Now you’ll be able to oversee multiple seasons, with a really fun fast-paced offseason system enabling you to pick up free agents and personalise your team. It’s a nice addition that adds longevity to the mode, and we actually prefer it to the traditional Franchise mode purely due to its streamlined format.
Not content with being the most generous card collecting mode on the market, Diamond Dynasty also has a new gameplay wrinkle for single players, in the form of Mini Seasons. These allow you to take your custom team, comprised of cards you’ve collected, into a miniature league format, where you can compete for Program XP, upgrade your player Parallels, and cross off missions. This, combined with Conquest, cements the mode as by far the best of its kind – and will give both newcomers and veterans hundreds upon hundreds of hours of fun.
Beyond these headlines, though, MLB The Show 22 begins to bleed into MLB The Show 21. Gameplay feels fantastic, as always, and has been further refreshed with new animations and balance upgrades. One tweak sees the batter’s vision nerfed ever so slightly when swinging for pitches outside the strike zone, and you can also anchor the PCI to different spots. In addition, positional players can now make perfect throws to bases outside of home, building an even greater gap between average fielders and truly outstanding players with sky-high ratings.
The whole package has been streamlined as well. Whereas the previous entry went a bit bonkers with Battle Pass-like Programs in an attempt to unify all of its modes, this year’s game is a little lighter on that front, while still achieving the same core objectives. We’re a little concerned the emphasis on one, overarching Program may result in less rewards for casual players overall, but that’s a difficult thing to judge right now, and something we’ll need to monitor over the course of the coming months. The main thing is that it all feels a little more logical out of the box.
The same is true of Road to the Show, which unfortunately adopts the same old fly-on-the-wall sports documentary format, but is interspersed with fresh podcast segments. While there’s clear effort been invested into these – and they feel a bit more polished and a lot less Microsoft Teams than they did last year – this mode is in desperate need of a spring clean, as it feels crusty compared to what 2K Sports is doing in NBA 2K22. The progression is faster at least, which is great, and you can create multiple Ballplayers – again, good news.
Less positive is the presentation, which has gone another iteration without any real improvements. A bunch of players have received fresh face scans, including cover star and two-way sensation Shohei Ohtani, but all the same drudgy dirt textures return. For a game where you spend an enormous amount of time staring at neatly mowed lawns, MLB The Show 22’s grass looks unbelievably bad – it’s tragic to think this series was far and away the best looking sports game on the PS3 and the PS4 because it’s miles off the pace these days. We can only assume Sony San Diego Studio has big improvements planned for future instalments.
Despite all that, though, the game does play great – and it continues to have a zen-like quality to it, regardless of which mode you play. There are a couple of new difficulty tiers that make the gameplay more manageable for all abilities, and Custom Practice has been given another pass to expand to fielding and even the ability to replay plays. Meanwhile, the new commentary team starring Jon ‘Boog’ Sciambi and Chris Singleton is decent, although with a smaller library of lines to talk through, you will start hearing some repeated phrases sooner than you’d like.
Netcode seems relatively sturdy – especially for a franchise that has a rich history of its servers collapsing during release week. All of the crossplay functionality, which extends to cross-saves, can be a bit fiddly to setup, but it's impressive once you've got it working – and with the addition of Nintendo Switch, it means you can take your progress on the move for the first time since MLB 15: The Show on PS Vita.
Conclusion
It’d probably be reductive to describe many of MLB The Show 22’s improvements as the kind of thing you’d expect to find in patch notes, but it’s still somewhat true. The gameplay feels great as always, and we really like the additions to March to October as well as the Mini Seasons mode in Diamond Dynasty. But while this is undoubtedly a streamlined, enhanced version of the already excellent MLB The Show 21, casual players will struggle to spot the difference – and, frankly, some aspects of the series are really beginning to tire.
Comments 36
I will update later in the week when I've had a better opportunity to test the online servers beyond the release day rush, but if you have any questions then you know where I am.
First question: will the Mets win the World Series this season? The answer, of course, is yes.
Next!
Is PS4/5 getting Pro Yakyuu baseball?
I know 2021 is on Switch, but it's not gonna compare to a PS version.
So it's baseball.
But 🧚 ✨again✨🧚
Lots of Kirbys in here!
Honestly seen quite a bit of pushback from the community over this game too. Seems to be a rare misstep for them.
@HotGoomba One of the negatives for the review is that it's baseball, but a positive is that it's not actual baseball.
It’s hard for a sports game to add year from year new and unique features. They need to stop numbering the games and make them biannual releases. But, they obviously won’t because they make too much money reskinning practically a similar game.
@nessisonett Maybe they are distracted by developing the game across platforms? Anyway, all of these annualized sports games should be service games really.
Pretty much the same review remarks every single year: a solid game with incremental improvements and tweaks. I'm not saying that San Diego Studios needs to blow everything up and start from scratch, but MLB: The Show came to share very similar problems with Madden years ago: with no real competition due to control of the MLB license there's really no incentive for them to go out of their way to make substantial improvements or changes. Not even with the grass textures the article mentioned with the franchise now a full extra year into a new console generation.
"We can only assume Sony San Diego Studio has big improvements planned for future instalments." Not until MLB: The Show has genuine competition with the MLB license on consoles, I would wager, the way World Series Baseball used to go head-to-head with the likes of MLB back during the PSX/Saturn and PS2/XBox eras.
One of the very WORST things that's happened to videogames has been licensing issues, whether monopolized by a single company, expiring rights (the Forza Horizon series disappearing regularly as music license rights expire), and IPs being tied up by ownership tug-of-wars (Ms. Pac-Man, Marvel Vs. Capcom, etc.). Sadly, I don't see a way for gamers to do much about the situation.
@CWill97 That's fair, but some of the headline "improvements" here are ridiculously teensy. Does the game play better? Well, yes, but very few will even notice.
The main thing I was looking for in the second year on PS5 was graphical improvements, as this used to be the best looking sports series on console. But nope!
It's still a good game, though. The core baseball gameplay is really strong and will carry it through this year I feel.
@AtlanteanMan I do think we have to cut San Diego a teensy bit of slack for another year. The reason being... They added a ton of new platforms during a pandemic.
Obviously, with Nintendo Switch now released and the pandemic issues reducing they won't have the same excuses moving forward, so lets see what they deliver.
I do think the new things they did add, small as they may be, are great — like the Mini Seasons mode, which comfortably establishes Diamond Dynasty as the best card collecting mode in my opinion. (And to be fair, it already was the best!)
But yeah, you're not entirely wrong! I don't think we're quite at Madden NFL 21 with this series yet — no where near!
You forgot to include not being offered as part of a subscription as one of the negatives
@DualWielding Well that's unsustainable according to Jim Ryan. We'll probably find out putting this series in a subscription two years in a row has bankrupt them. 🙃
Poor sports gamers. They've really not been well fed with good games for years now.
Sports games like this shine best on a subscription service (I didn't mention any names 🙂) where subscribers will get the newest entry every year without having to fork out 70+ for incremental updates.
Although I do think all sports games should be F2P with just one game for each franchise being constantly updated with roster changes, tweeks, etc.
I did not think this was a "The Show" review when I saw that thumbnail lol.
I'll give it a spin on Game Pass... But Sony/SDS ain't getting a dime until they actually make upgrades worthy of a yearly purchase.
How far can they go improving a excellent video game....sometimes things are best left alone...of course that won't satisfy froth mouthed annual thrill seeker....as you were soldier 🎖
@Number09
I would say the game needs a new engine.
The graphics are pretty dated. Madden suffers the same problem.
NBA 2K is pretty much the only sports title that looks “good” these days from a visual standpoint.
@Juanalf I just would like to know who is gonna pay to get the big names the sure as hell wont do it for free.
@TheRedComet NBA 2K is the Nutz graphic wise
It is a MLB game. It need fans favorite teams, stadium, players etc and play "like a baseball game"
The only "update" I need is a PC version that works on SteamDeck.
I am a fan of the series from the PS3 days, but haven’t played a new one since ‘19. Since I haven’t touched a new game in three years, it feels very much improved. I am having a blast with it. They have added a lot since ‘19.
The problem with yearly sports games is that it’s hard to innovate year after year. It’s my favorite genre, and I’ve been playing them for 30 years now. They should be released every two to three years, with roster updates and other tweaks in between.
rounders, the video game...
Played it for free on Game Pass yesterday, only played 3.5 innings, got bored, a real snoozefest, and went straight back to GT7 and Returnal. And I'll probably just delete it today, despite having ample storage space. lol. Other than the 60fps, not much different between this and MLB 18, the last game I purchased, and still the same stale graphics engine & animations from the PS3, two generations ago.
"Meanwhile, the new commentary team starring Jon ‘Boog’ Sciambi and Chris Singleton is decent, although with a smaller library of lines to talk through, you will start hearing some repeated phrases sooner than you’d like."
Wasn't it just a few weeks ago there was an article here covering Sony promoting the big enhancement of so much more dialogue to keep it repeating less? How did this go from a big feature being expanded dialogue to there being less dialogue variety than previous games?
@get2sammyb This is spot on. I feel like they are using same artwork from ps2 just upscaled several times (e.g. for high def). Look at images of water in the game and compare them to, say, water in GTA V (which is now 9 years old). It's a complete joke. This was one of my favs but I am down to buying it every 3 years. This is my first on Ps5, and graphically speaking, this isn't a next gen game. And on top of it, I can't play a custom walk up song, but I could if I was playing on the four. F off Sony....
@NEStalgia I think it's because the commentary builds up over multiple games, so they had a lot of dialogue in MLB The Show 21 (even though a lot of it was recycled from past games). When they introduce a new commentary team they're basically starting from scratch.
They did a MUCH better job than FIFA et al, but phrases do begin to repeat quite quickly.
@get2sammyb Oof, that's rough. I thought they were advertising that it had even more dialog variety. 21 got repetitive enough, I'm not sure I'm ready for a step back! Maybe better than EA Sports, but I ignore that for a reason
@eagletrippin
You know Microsoft does not pay in marbles right?
! Bring back R.B.I.!
I score this game 3 no balls and a strike.
I was considering the Switch version since it’d be nice to have baseball on the go/handheld. Seeing as the PS version sounds much like one I bought years ago, Nintendo sounds the way to go.
Yeah, I think I'll stick to football for my sports games.
I’ve played enough now to notice a few things I like and a few things I don’t. I skipped 2021 so this feels like an advance. Yes, the animations are largely the same, but the most well-known players are more detailed facially. The gameplay is smoother, and the use of the DualSense is extremely satisfying. Still need to try RTTS, but Franchise mode (as the Astros as I’ve abandoned the “Guardians” as my team) is fun so far. The commentary is inane, though I did hear one somewhat funny joke. Repetition is rampant in the phrases they say, so I’ll most likely turn it off sooner than I usually do. But thus far I like it and don’t regret the purchase.
@get2sammyb may I ask Sammy, why have I been IP banned? What did I do? I'll delete this off-topic question when you answer. Sorry to ask, I don't have a twitter account.
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