You can scan your face again too, which still results in some abominable freaks unless you happen to live in a well-lit studio.ĭespite a take it or leave it tacked-on narrative prelude, M圜areer is still compelling, as you strive to keep your coach happy and put in a consistent performance on the court. It's every bit as meaty and involving as its always been, and as you progress, you'll improve your MyPlayer from game to game. Here you'll make connections with fellow players, win fans, sift through social media tripe and win lucrative endorsements from various brands.
Once the story runs its course, you'll be glad to see the back of Vic and Cee-Cee, free to sink your teeth into M圜areer proper, without the interminable cut-scenes and ham-fisted, shouty emotional scenes. As you carve out a career for 'Freq', you'll get to enjoy all of the bickering from friends and relatives over the fortune you've amassed, making each of them unlikeable in their own unique way.
You fulfil the role of the stupidly named 'Frequency Vibrations', a basketball prodigy rising out of the Harlem projects, from high school basketball to college ball and into the NBA draft. M圜areer is once again the beating heart of the NBA 2K experience, with Spike Lee's 'Livin' Da Dream' essentially a narrative-driven experience that precedes the usual, conventional M圜areer shenanigans. Yet again, it's massive, but perhaps best of all, the 2K servers seem to actually work properly this year (mostly), which in itself is a big step forward. It's the big banner feature in yet another expansive instalment that comes with all of the stuff you'd normally expect to find in a NBA 2K title. NBA 2K16 is 'A Spike Lee Joint' this year, meaning the famed director has lent his name to the basketball game's M圜areer mode.