Home-field advantage
The main focus of NCAA Football 2005 is home-field advantage. While playing at home is an advantage in any sport, amateur or professional (especially in the playoffs), some say the concept of home-field advantage matters most in college football. Hence, the major addition to the 2005 game is the "Top 25 Toughest Places to Play," compiled by EA Sports. These rankings are based on home winning percentage, average attendance, and "atmosphere" (i.e., fan rowdiness and noise).
Players with the home field advantage on defense can increase the crowd's volume before the snap by repeatedly pressing a certain button on the controller, depending on the system. Likewise, the player with the home field advantage on offense can quiet the crowd with one press of the same button. Crowd noise may affect the quarterback's ability to get an audible across to his other players. If the noise is sufficient, when the quarterback tries to call an audible, one of his teammates will come down to him and gesture that he can't understand him.
Features
- Authentic College Stadiums and uniforms
- Deeper dynasty mode
- Home field advantage
- Toughest places to play
- NEW Agile running system
- NEW create a sign Feature
- NEW match-up stick
- NEW stadium pulse
- Pontiac College Classics
- NEW custom PlayBooks including offensive schemes and defensive schemes like the 4-2-5 and 3-3-5 stack