The gameplay within
MLB 07: The Show is extremely deep. In fact, it almost redefines baseball because the developers are really going all out to find fun things for players to do when they’ve finished playing a few games (or even a few seasons).
In a nutshell, it is possible to play a quick game, either solo or with a friend, take over the dugout as the manager of your team, become a stat geek against your friend in Rivalry Mode, go online to play up to 30 other people in online play, play through an entire career (shouldn’t you be doing your homework?), run the franchise as its General Manager, or even take part in mini-games like Home Run Derby and King of the Diamond.
Even active players would agree that’s more than even they can handle.
But the game’s Career Mode, called the Road to the Show, is where it’s at in MLB 07: The Show. It is literally as fulfilling as taking Randy Johnson deep with the bases loaded. You can play the game as any position player, but in this case, you’re trying to keep up with the game within the game, that is, the situational strategies mandated by your manager and the other coaches. For example, you might need to move a runner on second to third by hitting to the right side of the infield … in effect sacrificing without bunting. Or the boss might call for the sacrifice fly or even for you to lay down a suicide squeeze to plate the fateful runner. In this mode you move up by pleasing the manager, but failure is equally absolute -- you drop like a stone and wind up cleaning up everyone else's old chaws and spent sunflower seeds after the game (a slight exaggeration, I admit, but you get the picture). How does it feel to be riding the pine with the Toledo Mudhens … eh, slugger?
MLB 07: The Show even has depth as an online experience. Leagues can include up to 30 separate teams and such teams can play all the way through a season and beyond, into the playoffs. And in order to help people playing online and without any physical contact, the game has something called the Online Player Card, a gizmo that helps players to measure whether the opposition, (aka: the person on the other side of the screen), is a burly Kirk Gibson type, a spindly rabbit like Steve Finley, or a complete goof like John Kruk. The Online Player Card shows you such things as whether an opposing player likes to disconnect if he falls behind by a number of runs late in the game, or what difficulty rating they like to play with. Good to know such stuff before you say yes to a game!