Skip to main content

Too real: John Oliver’s March Sadness 2015 is the scathing NCAA game we deserve

Last Week Tonight with John Oliver: The NCAA (HBO)
March Sadness 2015 is a fictional college basketball video game advertised in the most recent episode of Last Week Tonight with John Oliver on HBO. The trailer capped off a scathing segment on the exploitative working conditions of college athletes, casting a serious pall on the March Madness tournament that kicks off this week.

Billed as “the most authentic college basketball game of all time,” March Sadness 2015 realistically simulates the deplorable working conditions of most high-level collegiate athletes in the 98 percent of their life that is not on the court. Highlights include drowsing through offensively encouraged joke courses like Swahili, getting viciously yelled at by middle-aged, white, millionaire coaches, and living in constant fear of losing one’s scholarship because of a debilitating injury.

Despite the firm position held by school officials in the segment that compensating student athletes with anything more than their education is anathema to the entire enterprise, popular questioning of the practice and whether it is exploitative has gained serious momentum in the past year. In mid-2014, EA settled with a group of athletes seeking compensation for their images being used without permission in NCAA video games since 2003. Former UCLA basketball player Ed O’Bannon led the charge with a 2009 lawsuit after being shown his own likeness in one of EA Sports’ games. O’Bannon appears in the segment, alongside other former athletes involved in the lawsuit who confirm March Sadness‘ veracity.

Later in 2014, a U.S. District Court ruled that the NCAA was violating antitrust laws for its policies that prevent athletes from earning any share of the massive revenues that their names and likenesses generate through licensing deals. Judge Claudia Wilken issued a permanent injunction on “any rules or bylaws that would prohibit [the NCAA’s] member schools and conferences from offering their FBS football or Division I basketball recruits a limited share of the revenues” from licensing. This will have a major impact on future negotiations between the NCAA and prospective video game publishers like EA Sports.

Perhaps Oliver’s March Sadness game will help shape those decisions as much as he did the debate over Net Neutrality.

Will Fulton
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Will Fulton is a New York-based writer and theater-maker. In 2011 he co-founded mythic theater company AntiMatter Collective…
Helldivers 2 just showed the highs and lows of live service in one chaotic weekend
A soldier in silhouette in Helldivers 2.

Helldivers 2 was on top of the world. Released in February to surprise acclaim, PlayStation and Arrowhead's co-op shooter quickly became the kind of success story that any gaming company would want to emulate. In a world of live service risks, this one was paying off thanks to a dedicated community whose commitment to democracy showed no signs of slowing down.

Then it all came crashing down in an instant.

Read more
The wait is over: Hades 2 is out now in early access on Steam
Hades 2 key art from its first trailer.

Hades 2 -- the highly anticipated sequel to a roguelike that Digital Trends considers to be one of the best games of all time -- is out now.

Developer Supergiant Games surprise released the game at 10 a.m. PT on Monday following a positively received Technical Test in April. It costs $30, a price that Supergiant Games says it "may raise" in the future depending on the scope of content added between now and Hades 2's full launch. As for how long that will take, the Steam page says that thegame will "be in Early Access development at least through the end of 2024." Supergiant Games isn't committing to a specific 1.0 launch date at this time.

Read more
Do you need a PSN account to play Helldivers 2?
A scene from Helldiver 2's opening cutscene.

Helldivers 2 has been a huge hit this yea,r with a consistent player base since its launch in February and a peak of over 450,000 players. Fighting for Super Earth, players have been waging war against monstrous insects and deadly robots and laying down their lives for democracy. But the game's reputation took a hit recently when it was announced that PC players would have to register for a PlayStation Network account to continue playing the game — a move that would have left players in parts of the world with no PSN support high and dry.

In  response, there was a major outcry (and review bombing of the game on Steam) in response, which led Sony and Arrowhead Game Studios to swiftly alter their policies to appease the player base. The entire ordeal has been a bit of a whirlwind, so it's OK if you're a little lost. Here's what you need to know.
Do you need a PSN account to play Helldivers 2?
No, you don't need a PSN account to play Helldivers 2 right now.

Read more