There was a neat "play at the same time as your opponent" feature, with what looked like some cool features like "see your opponent if he's not in your way" and "view the course if your opponent isn't done with the hold yet", however these features worked about 10% of the time, other times my opponent would be flickering in and out of existence, and the waiting camera angles are terrible, can't see anything. Other gripes: While I would never buy this game for online capability I played with a friend a few times. Gameplay: I think this is where it shines, it's pretty easy to just pick it up and play, plenty of options for play styles. Unfortunately the scenery glitches out somewhere at least once a hole which really brings you out of the moment, or rather never lets you actually enjoy it. Graphics: I haven't played a PGA game in a while, so I was happy with how the game could look. Graphics: I haven't played a PGA game in a while, so I was happy with how the game The game is enjoyable, but has quite a few problems. The game is enjoyable, but has quite a few problems. Andrews provides more bounce and roll, while softer courses such as TPC Sawgrass have less bounce and be more receptive to spin. Courses themselves also affect how your shots are played, as firmer, links-style courses like St. Fans can also mix and match all three settings to create their own custom gameplay style. When playing with Tour controls, the length of your backswing and speed of your follow through determine power, while the club path through the ball will be the most important factor in accounting for accuracy. Those looking for an extra challenge can turn on Tour settings. In addition to the arcade controls, the return of 3-Click swings appeals to nostalgic gamers who prefer to set power and accuracy by tapping a button rather than moving a thumbstick. In addition to the arcade controls, the return of 3-Click swings appeals to nostalgic gamers who Gameplay offers multiple ways to play, including arcade controls where the left stick is used to control power and accuracy, with the ability to add spin to the shot while the ball is in the air. Summary: Gameplay offers multiple ways to play, including arcade controls where the left stick is used to control power and accuracy, with the ability to add spin to the shot while the ball is in the air.Needs more courses, more game modes, and IMO, it needs them much sooner than the March timeline EA is apparently trying to follow here. I like the game, it looks good, commentary is nice, the celebrations are terribly done, it plays like you'd expect an EA golf game to play, but to be honest, it's lacking substance still. I'd get EA Access, even if just for one month to play the 10 hour trial. This very thread talks about what EA plans to continue to add as DLC.īottom line to me.
The two courses they've released as free DLC, have both been incorporated into the career mode schedule, without having to restart your career, which is a big plus. I forget the number, but there's like 15-20 tournaments I think on the schedule that you play through. I really wish it had a calendar so you can see what's coming up, but it doesn't. It's still pretty bare though to be honest. They fixed up some bugs, they've added two courses at this point, so that's nice. To be honest, I don't feel it's changed too much since release. In my opinion, it plays just like the last gen tiger games. I am just wondering how much has the game improved since it first came out? How does it play compared to tiger last gen? Also how is career mode compared to last gen tiger? Any talk about career mode getting some free DLC or any thing? I may get the game latter when it is cheaper and if they added enough things. I was maybe going to get this game but it sounded like it was kind of like NHL 15 in that it had a lot of things missing in the game. The last EA golf game I got was like tiger woods 11 or something.