The Province

At long last, the CFL has its own video game — sort of. Because the game’s developers don’t have licences with the league or players, no teams or players appear in the game, available on Xbox One and Steam

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EDMONTON — Fans of the Canadian Football League finally have the video game they’ve always wanted. Kind of ... Oh, it’s all there. From three downs and 110 yards to the waggle and, yes, even the ability to pull off a kick-it-in/ kick-it-out of the end zone, should the scenario arise.

Nine teams from stadiums in their proper Canadian cities, with players represente­d by threedimen­sional graphics created through motion-capture technology. What more could joystick jockeys looking to get their fix of the Canadian gridiron game want?

Well, besides the actual teams and players, that is. Canadian Football 2017 dropped on Wednesday morning on Xbox Live and Steam, putting the three-down circuit into the hands of fans on a major console for the first time.

For indie publisher David Winter, president of Canuck Play, based out of Peterborou­gh, Ont., it’s his first time releasing a Canadian football game since

CFL Football ’99 for PC. “Consoles, up until very recently, were extraordin­arily expensive to create games for,” Winter said. “You needed a big publisher, you had to be spending millions of dollars. It was really outside the realm of possibilit­y to do a console title. But Canuck Play solved that by getting a publishing deal with Microsoft, so that put us on the Xbox One. Here we are now, publishing the very first Canadian football game on a major console, and we’re also launching a PC desktop port of that game.”

The move couldn’t come soon enough, as attendance is down in many markets as it becomes more and more difficult to capture the attention of younger audiences with the world at their fingertips.

“I’m a firm believer that one of the reasons that the National Football League has become so popular is because kids can jump on to Madden at any point in time to run around as Tom Brady and be Tom Brady,” Winter said.

“And then they’re watching Tom Brady on the television, so that name is constantly engraved in their skull. I know people that don’t actually watch the NFL, but they know the NFL purely from football video games.

“So if you’re trying to grow your brand and you’re trying to grow the sport in general, not everybody has the physical gifts to actually be out on the field playing,” said Winter, who played football growing up and whose sister was a cheerleade­r for the Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s in the 1980s.

“For me, personally, this is how I stay involved in the sport. I’m 5-foot8, 150, and my zero-to-60 is about three days.”

Only the CFL has not got behind the project. So, instead of the Edmonton Eskimos playing at Commonweal­th Stadium, for instance, Canadian Football 2017 features a team in green and gold called the Edmonton Rhinos, who play in a kind of familiar setting. “Canadian Football ’17 is not licenced, there’s no league licence, there’s no Players Associatio­n licence. The Players Associatio­n never even returned our call,” said Winter, who approached the CFL with a budget of $500,000 in private funding, matched by an equal amount of government grants and tax incentives. “Our developmen­t budget with a licence was about a million dollars.”

It’s a fraction of that without the licence.

The CFL did not respond to interview requests on the topic of video games.

Winter said he was told the league was looking for a developer who would pay for both developmen­t and marketing, as well as a royalty to the CFL on top.

“The math doesn’t work,” he said. “They’re asking a developer to spend more money on the game than they could ever possibly recoup. They’re looking for somebody to just gift them a game. They don’t want to invest anything into it.”

While there is no built-in player or team editor on the Xbox version, the rosters on PC are open-source and anyone with a little knowhow can open the various files in Notepad and change all the logos, uniforms and player and team names, if they want to do so.

“I don’t want to hear about it, but you can do what you want to do,” Winter said. “The console is a little more restrictiv­e. For 2018, we’re going to try and address those things.”

They’ll also address online play, which isn’t available in this inaugural edition of the game, said Winter, who spent five years as EA Sports’ online producer providing the online features sets to all the different sports titles, including EA Sports Hockey League. Canadian Football 2017 retails for $15.99 US, or around $21 CND and is rated E for everyone.

 ?? HANDOUT PHOTOS ?? It’s a thrilling scoreless tie between the Saskatchew­an Knights and Ottawa Lumberjack­s in Canadian Football 2017, a new game being released today. The game, developed by Peterborou­gh, Ont.-based David Winter, has everything you love about three-down...
HANDOUT PHOTOS It’s a thrilling scoreless tie between the Saskatchew­an Knights and Ottawa Lumberjack­s in Canadian Football 2017, a new game being released today. The game, developed by Peterborou­gh, Ont.-based David Winter, has everything you love about three-down...
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