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NFL on Xbox One thread

RBH

Member
The National Football League added a new feature to its Xbox One app today, allowing users to predict the results of matches in the season for the chance to win prizes.

The Xbox One Playoff Face Off app allows users to answer up to 10 questions that predict upcoming player performances. The questions will be available each Tuesday before every round of live games, which includes the Playoffs, the Pro Bowl and the Super Bowl. Participants will be entered for a chance to win prizes like tickets to the Super Bowl XLVII or Super Bowl XVIX, an Xbox One console, autographed NFL merchandise, copies of Madden 25 for Xbox One and NFLshop.com gift cards. Users will also be able to earn Achievements through participating.
http://www.polygon.com/2014/1/3/527...ace-off-lets-you-predict-nfl-games-for-prizes
 
So three months in - what's the verdict? It doesn't appear to be the game changer many thought it would be.

Are you guys using it? Does it work well?
 

gatisimo

Member
So three months in - what's the verdict? It doesn't appear to be the game changer many thought it would be.

Are you guys using it? Does it work well?

Certainly not a game-changer, but I used it during the fantasy football season and it was very cool. I didn't just have it up there all the time, but I did pop it up during TV shows or quickly during a game of [insert game title].

It adds nothing you can't already get from the NFL.com fantasy mobile app, or visiting their website. It's just a convenient (but a little slow?) front-end for the data you can already get elsewhere. Thumbs up.
 

malfcn

Member
I don't have cable to pass through it, and can't stream games (without a sub?) so it's worth nothing to me. Otherwise I thought it was kind of neat.
 
I don't have cable to pass through it, and can't steam games (without a sub?) so it's worth nothing to me. Otherwise I thought it was kind of neat.


You summed up the problem with xbone and why it isn't appealing to customers the way MS thought it would
 

RBH

Member
If you're a football fan, Microsoft wants to make an Xbox One integral to your gameday experience. A new version of the NFL app for Xbox One, coming out later this month, is how the company plans to do it.

It starts with videos. Lots of videos. The app is centered around NFL Now, the personalized highlight and analysis channel that's tailored for your favorite teams and your fantasy leagues. Those who upgrade to a premium subscription will be able to stream classic games and other programming like documentaries and shows from the NFL Films "vault."

That's not all: if you have a cable subscription to NFL Network and NFL RedZone, you'll be able to stream those on the console, and DirecTV Sunday Ticket subscribers will get full access through their consoles as well. If you sign up for Sunday Ticket's full online subscription, you'll get access to DirecTV's own Red Zone and new Fantasy Zone channels as well — the latter highlights your fantasy players as they get close to scoring.

But it's not just video content. Fantasy football tracking is a huge part of the new experience. Building on the Xbox One app from last season, the new version has an updated Snap mode that shows a stream of plays made by your fantasy players. And instead of navigating menus to play highlights, you'll be able to set global Xbox One notifications for when fantasy players make big plays. Just hold the Xbox button and a replay will Snap to the side of the screen alongside whatever you're doing. Perhaps most importantly, the new app will work with more fantasy football leagues beyond NFL.com. Microsoft representatives confirmed to Polygon that ESPN is on board, and work is underway to bring Yahoo and CBS into the fold.

The new app is the latest fruit from NFL and Microsoft's $400 million, multi-year partnership. It's worth noting that you won't have to buy an Xbox One to get most of these features — the NFL app will be one of the very first "universal" apps on the console. That means the same app will work both on Xbox Ones and Windows 8 PCs — a feat made possible by the fact that the game console partially runs on Windows. Of course, the advantage of having an Xbox is that you can pass your cable feed directly through the console and use the NFL app side-by-side with live games.

What really matters for Microsoft, though, is if its high-profile NFL partnership will convince fans to buy an Xbox One. After heavily focusing on the console's TV and entertainment chops at launch, Microsoft has refocused on gaming as it's struggled to go toe-to-toe with Sony's PlayStation 4 sales numbers. The company has already abandoned its ambitious Xbox Entertainment Studios programming — perhaps a one-of-a-kind NFL app will make more of a difference.
http://www.theverge.com/2014/8/3/5964489/nfl-app-for-xbox-one-has-sunday-ticket-and-fantasy-football



xbox-fantasy-football-3.jpg


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xbox-fantasy-football-5.jpg
 

m@cross

Member
Have to say this is a killer feature for XB1, bit jealous of you guys. Of course even if I had xb1, I don't pay for cable tv anymore, so pretty sure I'd be out of luck.
 

RBH

Member
DirecTV announced on its website the introduction of NFLSundayTicket.tv, which allows subscribers to stream live, out-of-market games without requiring a dish. Fans can stream the contests on laptops, tablets, smartphones or using a gaming console.

Packages range from $199.99 for laptop, computer and phone services (with a student discount available) to $329.99 for the full package on all compatible devices and gaming consoles, including DirecTV's Red Zone Channel and new Fantasy Zone channel.

Of course, there are restrictions.

The service is only available to those who: 1) live in apartment buildings where DirecTV service is unavailable; 2) live in metro New York, Philadelphia or San Francisco; or 3) attend college at Michigan (Ann Arbor), Alabama, Washington, Texas (Austin), USC, Florida, Colorado (Boulder), Syracuse, Ohio State or Harvard.


While some residing outside those restricted areas will still bemoan having to pay for DirecTV in order to utilize Sunday Ticket, it's a game changer for those in urban areas unable to partake due to regulations.
http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap20...-to-offer-nfl-sunday-ticket-streaming-options

https://nflst.directv.com/DTVAPP/nflws/index.jsp



nflsundayjpg-8dd2b0_640w.jpg


nfl_sunday_ticket.jpg
 

RBH

Member
The app will also feature NFL Now, the personalized streaming service announced prior to the Super Bowl. The free, ad-supported version will bring you a stream of news, highlights, and analysis of your favorite teams and players. A paid subscription will additionally grant you access to the full NFL video vault, streamed in HD to your TV.

Users paying for the various integrated subscriptions will be able to get the most out of the app, but even without cable you will be able to view all the highlights, scores, and statistics that the NFL publishes on their website.
http://www.digitaltrends.com/gaming...y-ticket-fantasy-leagues-2014-season/#!bEFxYr
 

RBH

Member
Microsoft has announced it is spicing up the live football coverage available through its Xbox One NFL Network app by offering something that current cable and satellite boxes simply can’t: sports delivered at 60 frames per second. Thanks to a new partnership with the online streaming specialists at Neulion, Microsoft will be able to increase the frame rate of its live football app content to up to double the frame rate of broadcast TV.

According to CED Magazine, Neulion has struck a multi-year deal with Microsoft to deliver 24/7 live sports programming, on demand coverage, and a host of live stats updates, such as those necessary for the app’s Fantasy Football monitoring system.

The streams will be provided at seven different tiers, ranging from the top stream of 720p HD resolution at 60fps (bout 6 Mbps), to below SD resolution at 30fps (about 600 kbps). The frame rate and pixel resolution will depend upon a viewer’s bandwidth and network conditions. No word was given as to whether the app will be scaled up to full 1080p HD resolution, but the faster frame rate could make it worth sacrificing a few pixels. According to CED, sports networks, including ESPN, have said time and again that frame rate trumps resolution if given a choice between one or the other.
http://www.digitaltrends.com/home-theater/microsoft-announces-xbox-one-will-provide-nfl-games-60fps/
 
In one yahoo league and one espn. Feed me the apps Microsoft! Stat tracker on my ipad is great, but I'd rather be watching the tv. Hope the stat updates aren't too delayed.
 

Shady859

Member
Wonder why they give the discount to only a small handful of college students and not all students.
-Not on list, not amused.

I've had season pass 3 years in a row. Last years Madden bundle was epic value.
 

RBH

Member
More than 40 million Americans play fantasy football. They play it on their computers at work, on their laptops at home, and on their tablets on the couch. And, yes, some even check their teams on their mobile phones while on the toilet.

Microsoft gets that. And the maker of the Xbox One wants you to do all of this on your other throne — the living room recliner — while watching the NFL and playing fantasy football on your video game console.

For the 2014 season, Microsoft has a slew of new fantasy football and viewing options in store for its NFL app. It intends to make the Xbox One a more attractive option for watching highlights, getting updates, and keeping with news on the nation’s most popular sport. This includes live coverage that it says you won’t get anywhere else, fantasy football scoring alerts tailored to your preferences, live NFL Network programming, DirectTV’s premium Sunday Ticket for people who live in areas that can’t get the satellite service, and the cherished NFL Films vault, which contains decades of coverage of what’s become “America’s game.”

“People that are big NFL fans, and having the NFL Films library at your fingertips and be able to go through and find the content you want to watch in a single destination, we think it’s going to have a lot of value for fans this year,” said David Jurenka, the executive producer for Xbox Sports in a recent interview at Microsoft’s South of Market lounge in San Francisco.

The app updates will come right before the season begins, Jurenka said — Aug. 28.

Making a play for the fantasy football crowd on a video game console may not seem logical to some, but many of the demographics between people who dig spreadsheet pigskin and video games are the same, as stats show from the Fantasy Sports Trade Association and the Entertainment Software Association.

And the most interesting of the Xbox One’s new offerings might be DirectTV’s new take on its Red Zone, which is a channel that shows when teams are about to score. This new thing is Fantasy Zone, and it follows when fantasy-relevant players are in potential scoring situations.

“They are [whipping] around doping live look-ins. Instead of focusing on the score, they focus on fantasy,” Jurenka said, “… tracking more closely what’s going on in the fantasy world and bringing that front-and-center.”

Red Zone sometimes showed fantasy stuff, but Jurenka said it was just a “flash about what’s going on in fantasy.”

This changes with Fantasy Zone. But instead of just tracking the a half-dozen games (sometimes more) at a time, this new “zone” watches a few fantasy-relevant players from each team playing (well, maybe no one from the sad-sack Jacksonville Jaguars). It poses quite a challenge.

“I think they’re asking some of the same questions,” Jurenka said. “I think this is what they will likely do: There are players that lots of players have [that they will track], and they will start with that approach, and then there will be people who break out in Week 6 and score 40 points, and they’ll go deep into that angle.”

The Fantasy Zone will also discuss how these breakout players influence the waiver wire, injury updates, and lineup changes. Jurenka, however, said he wasn’t sure if the Fantasy Zone would have the same coverage as the NFL Network does during the season.

Microsoft is also in talks to add more fantasy football league providers to the NFL app. Right now, it just has the NFL.com. “They are ones you would expect,” Jurenka said about the potential new partners. I scribbled down “Yahoo,” one of the big three fantasy football options, on the back of my notebook and flashed it to him, and he and Microsoft Xbox and Surface PC manager guffawed. “The big leagues you expect, the one you wrote down, the one you just mentioned [ESPN], another big one as well — we’re working hard to bring those to Xbox this year. We’ll see how hard we get.”

That other big one is likely CBS.com, one of the big three in fantasy football.


You’re watching a football game on your Xbox One (I saw a rerun of the New England Patriots and the New York Jets). You can now get notifications at the bottom of screen when one of your fantasy players score. You can click on it with the controller (or mouse on a Windows PC or with a touch on a tablet, as the NFL app works on those platforms, too) or use the console’s Kinect-enabled voice commands to “snap” it to the right top-corner of the screen. This happens while the Pats-Jets game continues in the main screen. Jurenka said these highlights are exclusive to Microsoft (though I wonder how exclusive this really is, as a scoring highlight from CBS, NBC, Fox, or ESPN is going to be plastered on anything that shows what’s going on in the NFL).

You can also customize these notifications among the fantasy teams you’re tracking (up to eight), but you can’t for your players on those teams (well, as for now). The NFL app also has a carousel that updates in real time, scrolling through what’s going on in the NFL or your fantasy teams. This plays when you’re watching TV on your Xbox One, streaming Netflix or other services, or playing a video game (though I imagine it gets pretty meta if you’re playing Madden while watching NFL highlights). “You see a TD here, an INT there. It feels like a Twitter stream of content,” Jurenka said.


This idea behind this is a streamlined experience. But isn’t someone who’s watching football on an Xbox One going to be pretty hardcore into sports and games?

“As we go forward and sell more boxes, we’re going to have a more mainstream audience, and we’re trying to create more ‘lean back’ scenarios to for that want to watch TV and have this experience come up,” Jurenka. “We feel it’s very different from the ‘lean forward’ that you get on your phone. We’re trying to entertain you without you being the person that drives the entertainment.”

And this appears to be the intent here — not to cater exclusively to hardcore fans, but to get people to set down their so-called second screens and focus on the big TV.

“We’re trying to create this hub-like experience that will dynamically update based on what’s going on around the NFL and your NFL team and you’re doing less work and we’re doing it all on your behalf,” Jurenka said. “Last year, you were able to look at the basics that you would want as any fantasy fan, look at the matchups, look at my team, do basic team management here. If I see I want to put Torry Smith or Randall Cobb, I can do all of that basic management here instead of pulling out a separate device and making all of that happen.”

After all, the last thing you want to do is put more effort following fantasy football than getting off the recliner to get a beer.
http://venturebeat.com/2014/08/03/h...destination-for-the-nfl-and-fantasy-football/
 

RBH

Member
If you’re one of the 25 million people in North America that play fantasy football, we have some great news for you, too. The NFL app is now connected to NFL.com and CBS Sports.com fantasy leagues, so no matter where you battle your friends for fantasy bragging rights, you can conveniently keep tabs on your teams with Xbox One.

We know how important it is for you to follow and track your fantasy teams and player performances in real-time, and the NFL app on Xbox One makes that experience seamless, delivering content that’s important to you to the best screen in your home. The NFL app’s customizable, fan-friendly user interface, combined with real-time scoring updates and unparalleled content via our partnership with the NFL, means only Xbox One can deliver the definitive fantasy football experience to your television.

Also beginning today, fans who participate in ESPN Fantasy Football – the industry’s most popular fantasy football game – will be able to track their leagues through the official ESPN app on Xbox One. The new feature allows users to view their team match-ups, standings and scoreboards in real time. Updates will also be viewable via Snap Mode, allowing users to multitask by snapping updates of their fantasy football team onto the right side of the screen while continuing to play their favorite game or watch Live TV.
http://news.xbox.com/2014/09/ent-nfl-on-xbox-one-2014
 

Drey1082

Member
This NFL app is crap today. Game center isn't working, and it looks like people who have sunday ticket are reporting that isn't working either.
 

BizzyBum

Member
I tried this app for the first time today.

It's unbelievably slow and doesn't support Yahoo FF.

Never using it again.
 

Bgamer90

Banned
So, the Xbox One NFL app is working fine for me now. I did have to download an update though (surprisingly -- MS sent that out fast).
 
Finally had the chance to use the app this afternoon. Being able to link your cable sub for Redzone was awesome, but the video feed quality wasn't up to my liking.

Regardless, the idea of the app is cool but considering the video quality, I'm not exactly willing to have an entire other box on during Sunday football. Same reason I unplugged the TV from the Xbox in the first place, really.
 

Ape

Banned
The app was pretty spotty for me today. Hope it works better next week. When it did work I really liked it.
 
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