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EA Sports announces return of college football game
EA SPORTS is headed back to school.
The video game maker announced on Twitter that a new college football game is coming.
For those who never stopped believing…#EASPORTSCollegeFootball pic.twitter.com/2vDUYnbXEJ
— EA SPORTS (@EASPORTS) February 2, 2021
UNLV announced it will be included in the game.
Yep. Another way to #BEaREBEL coming soon. https://t.co/IM0rCfwFxb
— UNLV Athletics (@UNLVathletics) February 2, 2021
Further details weren’t available. The company last released a college football game, NCAA Football 14, in 2013 when the company announced it would stop making installments in the popular series.
The game was a big hit among players from 2005 to 2013 , but it was discontinued as part of the fallout from a federal antitrust lawsuit brought against the NCAA by former UCLA basketball player and Las Vegas resident Ed O’Bannon.
The NCAA Football video game did not identify players by name, but the game simulated teams and players as they played in real life.
The video game was part of a broad legal challenge and a judge ruled the NCAA had been inappropriately using the names, images and likenesses of college athletes. The NCAA, through its licensing partner, pulled out of the game during the trial. The game stopped being made and fans have been pining for it ever since.
The NCAA is in the process of trying to change its rules to permit athletes to earn money from their names, images and likenesses, but there are hurdles and complications to getting that done — including a case to be heard by the U.S. Supreme Court later this year.
Last month the NCAA put on hold plans to pass legislation to allow NIL payments to athletes from third parties, with some limitations, because of scrutiny from the Department of Justice. Multiple bills have been introduced in Congress that address college athletes and NIL rights, along with the NCAA’s ability to oversee the issue. Plus, numerous states have passed their own NIL bills, some scheduled to go into effect later this year.
The Associated Press contributed to this report. Contact Lukas Eggen at leggen@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0279. Follow @lukaseggen on Twitter.