MVP Baseball 2003 is a baseballvideo game developed by EA Canada and published by EA Sports for Xbox, PlayStation 2, and Microsoft Windows in 2003. It is the first installment of the MVP Baseball series, and was released as a successor to EA's Triple Play games, though it bore little more than a graphical similarity to its predecessors, which had been heavily maligned by critics in the series' final years. The PlayStation 2 version was ported to Japan for release on June 5, 2003.[2]
The 2003 game is the last game that uses a points system for player's salary; starting with the 2004 game an actual dollar amount is used for salaries. The 2003 game does not penalize a user for releasing a player during the season in franchise mode, whereas the 2004 and 2005 games invoke a salary penalty for releasing a player under contract.
The game received "favorable" reviews on all platforms according to the review aggregation website Metacritic.[3][4][5]GamePro said of the PlayStation 2 and Xbox versions, "Bottom line, MVP earns props for looking good and trying something new while delivering solid baseball. High Heat is a much better playing ballgame, but MVP will appeal to baseball fans intrigued by its individuality."[29][b]
Notes
^Three critics of Electronic Gaming Monthly gave the PlayStation 2 version each a score of 7/10, 8.5/10, and 7.5/10.
^GamePro gave the PlayStation 2 and Xbox versions each 5/5 for graphics, and three 4/5 scores for sound, control, and fun factor.
References
^ abVaranini, Giancarlo (March 11, 2003). "Ships ahoy". GameSpot. Fandom. Archived from the original on March 13, 2025. Retrieved March 13, 2025.