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Out of the Park Baseball (OOTP)
Out of the Park Baseball (OOTP)

About This Game


Release: Version 14 - Apr. 15, 2013

Publisher: OOTP Developments

Developer: Markus Heinsohn

Forums: OOTP on GM Games

 

Official Download - OOTP Baseball Version 14

Operating Systems:

Windows PC ComputerMacLinux

 

 

 

Out of the Park Baseball Description


 
Out of the Park Baseball ("OOTP") is one of the most sophisticated baseball simulation games on the market. One of the strengths of OOTP is that it offers multiple ways to play the game. You can create your league and simply watch it evolve by simulating long periods of time. Maybe you want to act as a general manager and build your franchise via trades, contract negotiations, or through the first-year player draft. Or you can dive deep into managing and call the strategy for every pitch and at-bat from the dugout. And of course, you can tailor all of this to your individual style of play.
 
No baseball game would be any good without a highly accurate simulation engine. OOTP Developments has created the most advanced and most realistic simulation engine available, incorporating modern statistical analysis and research such as the DIPS theory. The game engine and in-game artificial intelligence form a tandem that produces highly realistic statistical output, both on a micro-level (individual at-bats) and on the macro-level (league-wide statistical totals). OOTP isn't like many console or other baseball games where the league leaders hit 120 home runs, or bat .495.
 
But this is not the only place where OOTP's realism shines. The player development and aging routines have been carefully designed and improved over the years, resulting in very realistic and believable, yet unpredictable player career curves.
 
Out of the Park Baseball puts you in the driver's seat of the franchise of your choice. As the general manager, you're responsible for everything that a real-world GM has to deal with. You assign the scouting budget, make roster moves, sign free agents, offer contract extensions, sign personnel, make trades, handle drafts, and keep an eye on your finances. All modern rules are available, including 40-man rosters, waivers, disabled lists, expanded rosters, and more.
 
These features let you experience what it is like to be a general manager of a big league team. Do you negotiate a contract extension with your salary-arbitration eligible young star? Will you break the bank to sign a top-of-the-rotation starter in free agency? Will you accept a trade offer for one of your favorite players? Who will you pick first in the first-year player draft, and will he sign for a reasonable bonus? Will you let that aging veteran go to free agency? Will you offer him arbitration so that you get a compensation draft pick if he signs somewhere else? Will you keep that young catcher on the roster after Spring Training, or will you send him through waivers, and risk losing him, because he's out of minor league options?
 
OOTP is as easy or as complex as you want it to be. All of these rules and options can be disabled or tweaked to your heart's content. It's your game, play it your way!
 
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Thursday, 18 April 2013 12:00

Review of OOTP 14 Baseball

Written by Brandon Warne
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Our Review of Out of the Park Baseball 14
It's all-encompassing and comprehensive.

April 17th, 2013

 

“It’s not too often you hang an 8 on somebody,” said Terry Ryan earlier this week. Ryan was of course referring to the 2-8 scale scouts use to determine a player’s future impact.

Well, Mr. Ryan hasn’t yet played OOTP 14.

From the beginning it’s easy to see that this is an exhaustive, almost all-inclusive simulation that will appeal to the most hardcore of baseball gamers. I’m not a firm believer in comparing games to each other, whether it’s previous incarnations of the same game or a different game altogether, so don’t expect to see comparisons to OOTP 13 or OOTP 6.5, for what it’s worth.

I mention OOTP 6.5 because I’m an old-schooler who is still playing it, and quite frankly it is hard to believe the game has come this far. Right away you’re tasked with choosing unemployment, or from 17 different leagues ranging from Rookie ball to the major leagues. Just input a name, age (no limit, so you can be your own Billy Heywood if you want!), and you’re ready to go.

In fact, the menus could be a bit daunting for a newbie, which certainly can make ‘cannot be fired’ mode a preferable option until one finds themselves up-to-speed with the game.

From the main screen, click on your name and an utter cavalcade of options come up, as you navigate through your personal email, player and staffing shortlists, and an edit screen where you can -- at this risk of sacrilege -- play God and act as a manager of any other team (as long as you’re in commissioner mode). Stop me if you’ve heard this before, but it’s all-encompassing and comprehensive.

Roll over to opening day, and the rosters are almost perfect. The Twins, for instance, come preloaded with injuries to Tim Wood, Scott Diamond, and Anthony Swarzak. All three players started the season on the DL. In fact, if it weren't for Eric Farris, Anthony Slama and Chris Herrmann, OOTP would have nailed the Twins opening day 25-man roster.

And honestly, it’s pretty difficult to expect perfection in this regard. Another incredible similarity is a game-listed payroll of $81,650,000. The Twins opening day payroll, via Baseball Prospectus, was $82,010,000. That is downright amazing. So too is the finances page, which lists the owner’s name, age, patience, and fiscal personality. For instance, Twins owner Jim Pohlad is listed as patient, and a penny-pincher. That seems to fit what the public feels about him.

All of this is customizable, too. If you prefer a less realistic experience, you can change the budget with which you’re afforded, your owners name, and even your home ballpark (complete with park factors!). Another neat function is that you can see player ratings based on your scout -- in the Twins case, real-life scouting director Deron Johnson -- or OSA, which is the OOTP Scouting Association. Like real-life, it is interesting to see how two different sides look at a player.

But now it’s time to hit the play button.

Single games can be simulated, or played through by using command keys to dictate how you want to work your strategy. This includes pitching around a guy, pitching to contact, hitting the batter intentionally, and pretty much anything else you can think of. And if you get tired of going batter by batter, you can skip to specific innings with one simple click. At the end of the game, you can even write a postgame recap if you have any sportswriter tendencies (which shows up in your email the next day, with all kinds of news and computer-generated press releases).

This isn’t a game for someone who wants to blow through it quickly, however. Indeed, one can simulate a day, week, month, or year at a time, but the game will frequently update the player on injury updates, such as activating a pitcher from the DL in Double-A, or something of the like. It could almost come across as annoying to someone trying to simulate to a specific day, like 5/7 when the draft list is published, or 7/1 when the international free agency period begins. In fact, in the first month I played, I had 15 players go on the DL in my organization, and had something like 10 or 12 email interruptions. Again, details details details!

In terms of in-game stuff, almost nothing seems off. The first trade proposal was from the Mariners, and featured Dustin Ackley for Byron Buxton and an organizational arm. Not a trade which would happen in real life, but a much more realistic jumping off point than I’ve seen in many other simulations (such as Scott Baker for Stephen Strasburg). The second was an odd one, as the A’s offered Hiroyuki Nakajima -- in the midst of a 56 OPS+ season -- for closer Glen Perkins (95 ERA+ at the time) and Buxton (108 OPS+ at Cedar Rapids, but a top prospect). The toughest part of determining the realism to me when it comes to trade offers is that nobody really knows what those look like in real life. Obviously they aren’t sent as jokes, and that last one sort of comes across that way, but all-told one weird trade offer doesn’t take away from the overall gaming experience for me.

 

OOTP14 Baseball - In Game

OOTP14 In Game View

 


The draft is a tremendously detailed part of the game, diving into slot bonus baselines -- to make sure you don’t spend too much on your top picks -- as well the ability to negotiate bonuses, with compensation picks coming in for unsigned players just like in the big leagues. The international signing period -- like how the Twins signed Miguel Sano -- also has a cash cap in place, like real life, to keep you from overspending. If you do that, you will be penalized, ranging from less money available to fewer contracts you can offer.
 

 

OOTP14 Baseball - Draft Day

Welcome to Draft Day


In essence, one would do well to bone up on the rule book before cracking open the game!

The rest of the game experience is as you’d expect. All-encompassing from the beginning, to the midsummer classic, to expanded rosters, to the postseason. And then it all starts again.

Good luck putting this one down.

Pros:

*The customization up front (name, birth date, modes [commish mode, gm only, can’t be fired, start w/ team or unemployed])

*17 different leagues (4 Rookie Leagues, 2 short season A, 5 High-A, 3 AA, 2 AAA, ML)

*Velocity readings on individual pitches.

*The statistical interface is pretty much all-encompassing.

*The email system (scouting reports, news, and more)

*The financial system (complete with international spending limits, etc.)

 

* Intricacies (owners can pass away, international scouting and leagues, an incredible number of statistics including WAR, wOBA, and OPS+)

Cons:

*Menus do run a *little* on the slow side.
*The interfacing is a little overwhelming/complicated.
* Trade proposals can -- at times -- be a little weird.

 

Overall, there's almost a cautionary tale to be had here: Buy it, you'll like it. But you might like it too much.

 

Official Download - OOTP Baseball Version 14

Operating Systems:

Windows PC ComputerMacLinux

 

 

 

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GM Rating

 

Total score out of 10

Gameplay

The game is whatever you make it. Literally. It can be as detailed or as simple as you wish, and if it's on your laptop, it can go with you wherever. That's incredible.

10.0

Customization
It quite literally deserves an 11 here. There's almost nothing one couldn't change on this game if they felt like it.

10.0

Replayability

Bradley Woodrum of Fangraphs said it best: "The game keeps itself fresh, constantly. Loved ones will be neglected."

10.0

Online
The only drawback here might be finding enough people that are as into the game as you. Also, 40-man rosters and Rule-5 stuff can be extremely difficult to keep up with among mixed company. None of this is the game's fault, though.

10.0

Presentation
The only thing that has to happen is to find a way to make the menus less busy, or maybe searchable. Still, after a short learning curve it gets easier. And harder, that is, to put the game down. Also: Online updates. Keep an eye out for them.

9.0

Overall GM Games Score

9.8


Discuss OOTP14 Baseball in Forums

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Published in Out of the Park Baseball (OOTP)
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  • Brandon Warne
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  • OOTP
  • Markus Heinsohn
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Screenshots for Out of the Park Baseball 14

New Features for Out of the Park Baseball 14

Out of the Park Baseball 13 Released

OOTP Version 12 Released

 

 

Rating Amazing 9.8

 

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  • Review of OOTP 14 Baseball

    Review of OOTP 14 Baseball Our Review of Out of the Park Baseball 14 It's all-encompassing and comprehensive. April 17th, 2013   “It’s not too often you hang an 8…






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