The holy grail of football video games is undoubtedly theMaddenfranchise.It is always the highest-sellingand often the best-reviewed football game on the market. And that was before EA Sports scored the official NFL license to become the only game out there featuring teams and players from the real league. It made them the only true game in town.

RELATED:Madden 20: 5 Players Whose Ratings Have Skyrocketed (& 5 That Have Dropped)

Article image

The vast majority of football video games fall into the category of being worse thanMaddenthroughout history. However, there are also some that we feel are superior. To help sort everything out, we’re ranking 5 football games that were better thanMaddenand 5 that are worse.

10Worse: Arena Football

`

Considering this was made by EA Sports, the team behindMadden, you’d think they would be similar. In more than a few ways, they were. And that was the problem. Arena Football is fun because it is a wilder, ramped-up version of the NFL. From the shorter field to the field goal rebounds, it is unique and a blast.

Article image

TheArena Footballvideo game was a bit too much likeMaddenand the NFL. Some reviews claimed it didn’t know if it wanted to be an arcade-style game or a realistic simulation. It was also panned for not having much depth. Season Mode was considered shallow and there wasn’t much else to offer.

9Better: NFL Blitz

Unlike the previous entry,NFL Blitzwas a series that knew exactly what it wanted to be. Created by Midway, a developer known for the over the top madness ofMortal Kombat, this game took that concept and applied it to the NFL. It encouraged huge hits and bent the rules on things like roughing the quarterback and pass interference.

Reviewers praised this series for being an adrenaline rush. It is widely considered to be one of, if not the most fun football game ever released. To this day,NFL Blitzis a hit at retro arcades. The Nintendo 64 version that was released in 1998 was called “the best football game ever made” by GameSpot.

Article image

8Worse: NFL Gameday

Before 2K Sports came around, it was 989 Sports that ranked as the biggest rival to EA Sports. They hadNFL Gamedayand it was a PlayStation exclusive. The series ran from 1995 until 1999, ending as new consoles like the PlayStation 2 arrived. To be honest, this wasn’t at all a bad set of games.

Every edition ofNFL Gamedaywas positively reviewed. In fact, it beatMaddenin a few years of its run. While the gameplay was solid and realistic, it lacked the special features and modes that ultimately made the EA Sports game a juggernaut. It also didn’t move on with the times, which hurt it.

Article image

7Better: NFL Street

You aren’t going to beatMaddenat what they do best. Their simulation style of sports games was only matched by theNFL 2Kfranchise for a few years. EA Sports still wanted to do more with their NFL license, which is whereNFL Streetcame into play. Based on the popularNBA Streetseries, it took the NFL game to the playground.

RELATED:10 Things We Wish We Knew Before Starting Madden 20

The wide-open seven on seven games allowed players an added level of freedom. Not wearing traditional jerseys or helmets helped differentiate this from other football games available. There was also the fun aspect of style points, given out for pulling off flashy moves.

6Worse: All-Pro Football 2K8

The biggest rival to theMaddenfranchise was the series of football games crafted by 2K Sports. To help win the war, EA Sports struck a deal with the NFL for the exclusive rights to use their players and teams. That left 2K Sports to scramble and they came up with a pretty good idea.

All-Pro Football 2K8saw 2K Sports sign over 240 retired NFL players. John Elway, Jerry Rice, and Barry Sanders were among the rosters in this fictional league. While responses to the game were mostly positive, it wasn’t up to par withMadden 2008or the previous games made by this company.

Article image

5Better: NFL 2K

When theNFL 2Kfranchise got started, it didn’t seem like it had a chance at standing out.Maddendominated the genre for a reason. But around the release ofNFL 2K2, things turned around. Suddenly, this series wasn’t just competition forMadden. A lot of reviewers believed it was better.

NFL 2K3continued the good run, withESPN NFL FootballandESPN NFL 2K5solidifying it as the best. It was lauded for the ESPN led presentation and the strong gameplay elements. This series also tied impressive new things like the innovative first-person mode. The only reason this didn’t continue to put pressure onMaddenwas the deal between EA Sports and the NFL.

nfl 2k return

4Worse: NFL Fever

Microsoft came out with the Xbox at the tail end of 2001. As part of their launch, they released a slew of sports games likeNBA Inside DriveandNFL Fever. This series ran for three installments and always featured Peyton Manning as the cover athlete. Unfortunately, it didn’t perform as well as Peyton.

NFL Feverwas another football series that never did anything to separate itself from the pack. The only unique bit about it was that it was exclusive to the Xbox console. Everything else was stuff you could find in other NFL titles and reviews usually capped out at just above average.

Article image

3Better: Tecmo Super Bowl

Alright, we understand that playingTecmo Super Bowlnext to any edition ofMaddenfrom the past decade would make it look obsolete. But 1991’sTecmo Super Bowlwill always be one of the greatest football games to ever exist. The original 1989 release was the first console game to include real NFL players.

RELATED:Madden 20: 5 Player Ratings We Love (& 5 That Make No Sense)

Article image

Nearly three decades later andTecmo Super Bowlis still considered to arguably be the best of the best. It also became a wildly popular game that shined on the Super Nintendo system. Several publications and websites have ranked this among the best games in history, regardless of genre.

2Worse: NFL Quarterback Club

TheNFL Quarterback Clubseries lasted a lot longer than you might remember. Made by Acclaim, it debuted in 1996 and ran through annually until 2002. Cover athletes included the likes of Dan Marino, Brett Favre, and Steve Young. For most of the installments, reviews were positive.

However, they weren’t overwhelmingly good the way thatMaddenoften received. It was the kind of game that never seemed willing to branch out to do or try anything new. It featured the most basic modes and gameplay features, never fully shining in any of those aspects.

Article image

1Better: NCAA Football

Another EA Sports game, you would think thatNCAA Footballwas justMaddenwith college teams. And on the surface, that was true. Except that most years,NCAA Footballwas a much more polished version ofMadden. The freedom to pull off plays that typically only work in college like the read option was a blast.

But it went beyond the gameplay. This was also a series that tried interesting things. The Road to Glory mode was a hit, allowing gamers to create a player and take them through a collegiate career before porting over into an NFL career inMadden. Fans post their desire for a new installment in this series almost every day on social media.

Article image

NEXT:Madden 20: 10 Colleges That Should Have Been Selectable In QB1