Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. Legacy Archives

Madden NFL 15 Preview: EA makes playing defense fun again

Add as a preferred source on Google

Read our full Madden NFL 15 review.

Madden is more than just a franchise: It’s a 26-year-old institution. Sure, there are older brands out there — the Marios and the Zeldas of the world. The difference is, those others need to constantly reinvent. Madden is all about iteration. Football doesn’t change dramatically from year to year, but technology certainly does. So when we’re looking at a game like Madden NFL 15 for the first time, we’re not asking ourselves, “What does this game do that’s genuinely original?” We’re asking, “What does this game do that’s better than those that came before it?”

Recommended Videos

A purely casual observer might answer “not much.” On the presentation side of things, there are new pre-game introductions featuring refreshed stadium exteriors and a new QB runout sequence. There’s a new halftime highlight reel accompanied by contextual commentary informed by the goings-on in the first half. There’s also a new approach to controlling your view of the action during a game, with D-pad commands for switching your view at the line of scrimmage. Planning a run down the middle? You’ll want to zoom in tight on the snap. Passing it downfield? Pull back for a wider view of what’s happening. Simple.

New intros, improved halftime, and more camera perspectives — just the sort of bullet-points that we’ll often laugh at with any new annual release, poking fun at the creatively bankrupt situation that must exist behind the scenes. These are meaningful additions for a diehard football fan that craves a new Madden fix year after year, but there’s still something comical about the idea of pimping out “new cameras!” on a press release.

But dig a little deeper — and let’s be clear: this is a series that’s always rewarded those willing to invest — and you’ll find a host of very smart functional changes. Inspired by the success of Madden 25‘s Xbox One exclusive CoachGlass, which beamed statistical information to a second screen device in an attempt to make defensive play more satisfying, the EA Tiburon team integrated that same functionality into the game. No need for a second screen anymore; all the info you want is right there on your TV.

 

The play calling screen has been completely remixed so that it now pulls in data from the real world to give you a sense of how often your team uses certain plays and how effective they are, all gauged situationally based on what’s happening at that precise moment in your game. The feature depends on being able to download data; it’s of an inconsequential size, but it’s worth noting that you’ll need to at least be connected when you first fire up the game if you want to see the extra info.

EA Tiburon also continued its long look at the defensive side of the game. CoachGlass last year was an attempt to remedy the fact that playing on defense isn’t really all that enjoyable. Most just pick their plays, assume control of a linebacker, and trust in the AI to handle any pass disruption. We’re back to cameras for a moment, as the devs brought over NCAA Football’s (R.I.P.) two-piece defensive camera that locks to a player and allows you to monitor the action from both sides of the line of scrimmage.

Defensive players at the line are also agile in a way that’s more true to life than it has been before. Now, if a linebacker is in the midst of a block as a running back starts to trot by, you can use the left stick to steer the block and even reach out for a tackle. There’s also an all-new “Tackle Cone” that pops up as a defensive player moves in for the kill. The cone that appears communicates the player’s range; just get your target inside the cone and hit the appropriate button for one of several different tackles.

That’s just a sampling of what our presentation touched on. One-button switch to pass defenders, a timing-based minigame off the snap that give the offense a slight advantage when rushing the ball, the new Coach Stick (for quickly checking stats in-game before the snap), and more. Our brief hands-on was enough to confirm that the game feels like Madden should, but all of the new enhancements are going to require more time and attention … which is just how EA Tiburon’s always liked it.

Adam Rosenberg
Former Gaming/Movies Editor
Previously, Adam worked in the games press as a freelance writer and critic for a range of outlets, including Digital Trends…
Topics
A Nintendo Super Mario Bros. copy just sold for a staggering $3 million
This rare Super Mario Bros. copy is now the most expensive video game ever sold
Super Mario Bros Sealed Copy

A sealed copy of Super Mario Bros. for the NES just sold for $3 million, which is a historic moment for video game collecting. The sale happened on June 12 during Heritage Auctions’ Video Games Signature Auction. According to Heritage, the copy is the highest-graded example of the earliest sealed edition of Super Mario Bros. and beat the previous video game record by $1 million. That earlier record was a $2 million private sale in 2021, also for a copy of Super Mario Bros.

Why this isn't just any other Mario cartridge

Read more
I tried ASUS’ ROG Xbox Ally X20, and the 171-inch screen changes everything
Asus made a handheld gaming bundle that thinks it’s a home theater
ASUS ROG Xbox Ally X20 Bundle with XREAL R1 20th Anniversary Edition

Gaming handhelds are great because they are portable (basically small). But that is also one of its biggest weaknesses. I was reminded of that while trying Asus’ new ROG Xbox Ally X20 bundle at Computex 2026. On its own, the Ally X20 is already a more polished version of the ROG Xbox Ally X. It arrives with nice updates that sound minor on paper but make a device feel more complete in your hands. The real surprise, though, was the bundled ROG XREAL R1 Edition 20 Gaming AR Glasses.

I walked in to try the 20th anniversary edition of ASUS' handheld console, but the massive 171-inch screen trick surprisingly stole the show.

Read more
From Handhelds to Monitors, these were the biggest glow-ups at Computex 2026
I walked into Taipei expecting spec bumps and walked away convinced four entire categories had levelled up.
Biggest Glowups at Computex 2026

Every year, Computex promises the next big thing. Sometimes that means another processor with a few extra cores, a laptop that's 200 grams lighter, or a monitor that's somehow even faster than the one before it. But every now and then, a trade show surprises you not with a single product, but with an entire category that suddenly feels new again. That's exactly how Computex 2026 felt to me.

After spending days walking the show floor, trying products, talking to engineers, and inevitably getting lost between booths more times than I'd like to admit, one thing became crystal clear. The biggest stories weren't about incremental upgrades. They were about categories, finally shedding old compromises. Monitors became smarter, handhelds became more mature, creator laptops became more versatile, and ARM processors started looking like genuine powerhouses instead of niche alternatives.

Read more