Sports Stars Find New Life in Video Games

Sports Stars Find New Life in Video Games


AFP

The post-retirement careers of the biggest sports stars can‍ be⁤ fascinating to ‌watch⁤ — Viagra ads, property ventures, ​crypto projects — but one option is‍ becoming ⁤a sure-fire winner:​ put your face ⁣on the​ cover of a⁢ video game.

And death is no barrier for this particular career,⁣ with two popular games this ‍year choosing sports legends who are no longer​ with us.

LA Lakers basketball star Kobe Bryant, ⁣who died in a helicopter accident​ in 2020, graces the cover of “NBA 2K24”.

And two of ⁣the world’s greatest footballers from bygone eras — Pele and Johan Cruyff ‌– get posthumous respect with​ their figures emblazoned on ⁤”FC 24″ from EA Sports.

They are ‌joined on the ⁤cover of the EA game by a galaxy of still-living stars of the ⁣more recent past — Zinedine Zidane‌ and Ronaldinho –⁢ and present — Erling Haaland and Alexia Putellas.

French legend ⁢Zidane told AFP in June that‌ many young children now knew him⁢ largely through his appearance in the ‍EA’s game, formerly known as “FIFA”.

“Kids aged eight to 10 don’t know me, unless their dads have told them about⁣ what I did back⁣ in the day,” said the World Cup winner.

“It’s more ​through PlayStation,⁤ so it’s kind of funny. I’m used to it.”

The ties between video game publishers⁤ and sports stars go deep, particularly in the United States.

The leading video ​game series on American football bears the name of a ​former player, ⁤John Madden, who retired in 1978 to become a sports⁢ commentator.

Julien Pillot, an economist specialising in cultural industries, told AFP‍ the endorsement⁣ of bona fide legends was clearly a ​powerful marketing tool.

And the often huge cost of getting their endorsement, he ⁢said, was ​”more than offset” by⁢ the sales they generate — ‌both of‍ the games themselves and the ubiquitous in-game “cards” ‌required to ‌unlock additional content.

Gaming firms were playing on the “intergenerational aspect” and adding “a touch of nostalgia”, said Pillot.

It’s a ⁢feature that⁤ executives are not shy about highlighting.

“My seven-year-old only really knows who Pele is because of⁣ his amazing rating on FC,”‌ David Jackson, vice-president of the EA Sports FC brand, told ‍AFP.

He said the​ game had allowed fans to ‍feel a little bit of the magic of playing with‌ stars from ⁤earlier generations.

And it ​works both ways, according to some of the stars involved — even those who don’t rate as highly ⁢as Pele.

“People of a ‌certain ⁢generation know me ⁣by what I’ve done on the pitch,” said World‌ Cup winner Robert Pires ⁤at the launch party for the EA game in Paris.

But a 12-year-old boy told Pires recently he had‌ only learnt who the French star was through playing the game.

“I ‍asked him: ‘Am ⁣I good?'” said ⁣Pires. ⁣”He told me: ‘You’re good, but you’re slow.'”

2023-10-02 08:48:03
Source from www.ibtimes.com

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