Quote:
Originally Posted by Lzen
I completely understand what you mean. However, I just assume that I'm gonna have an adjustment period anytime I buy a new game. I can't stand playing and the CPU is kicking my ass when I know it shouldn't be happening (i.e. your Western Michigan game). Same thing goes if I'm dominating the CPU. I want to make the game to where there's a chance that I lost but at the same time not make it to where I'm losing to teams I should beat all the time. It's just a matter of balancing. I would recommend only adjusting one notch at a time unless something is really out of whack.
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I find it hard to do it in the season, unless the teams are evenly matched... or else it ends up that what's okay for Western Michigan is overdone for Georgia. OTOH, with so many things affecting the game -- home field advantage (which I found you can turn off), hot/cold streaks, impact players, being in the zone -- it's hard to determine what's going on even when you have equal teams.
EA has gotten much better with sliders... in previous years on other games I got so tired of the sliders not responding that if something wasn't working at 50%, I'd set it to 0 or 100 and tweak from there. The sliders themselves still aren't set well (if my RB ability was set at 50%, I could probably run for 4,000 yards), but at least they're responsive to change.