Sony's critically acclaimed baseball simulation helps kick off the 2011
season by taking a page from the competition and throwing gamers a big,
bending curveball -- analog control. MLB 11: The Show lets players
govern hitting, pitching, and fielding using the right analog stick on
their controller. Hitting for solid contact and power requires gamers to
pull back and push forward on the analog stick in a smooth motion, and
players can tweak the stick left or right a bit to handle inside or
outside pitches. The developers at SCE Sand Diego have done away with
computer-generated errors, instead creating a system in which players
fill a throw meter by holding the analog stick in one direction. The
meter is divided into red, yellow, and green sections, with green being
an ideal throw, yellow being generally acceptable, and red potentially
resulting in an error. Pitching in The Show has always used a meter, but
the windup and delivery are now controlled by the analog stick, and for
the first time, gamers who try to quick pitch are vulnerable to being
called for balks. And for all those players who can't handle a changeup,
MLB 11 also includes the option to turn off the new analog
controls.<br><br>Controls aren't the only things getting an
overhaul for the 2011 season, as the popular RPG-like "Road to the Show"
mode returns, with potential aces and five-tool studs beginning with
more present skills, and now earning points for accomplishments such as
inducing easy outs or working a good at-bat. An entirely new co-op mode
lets up to four people team up in offline games or 2-on-2 online play,
and the new "Online Challenge of the Week" is exactly as it sounds: Each
week, gamers will be given the chance to compete in a particular
challenge, with the winners awarded real-world prizes, and unsatisfied
contestants allowed to retry the challenge for a small fee. A variety of
small changes have been made to the presentation of games, including
graphical adjustments to player animations, new stadium camera angles
designed to mimic their real-life counterparts, and while commentators
Matt Vasgersian and Dave Campbell return, tertiary broadcast member Rex
Hudler has been replaced by former National League Rookie of the Year
Eric Karros. MLB 11 also includes a new "Home Run Derby" mode for use
with the PlayStation Move Motion Controller, support for stereoscopic
3D, and a one-button mode designed for disabled gamers.