Ultimate Baseball Online gets Achieveme – er, Trophy Case
Having MyEvents, MyCharacter, and MyNews still isn’t enough to make your Ultimate Baseball Online game your own, so Netamin decided to throw in their version of Xbox Live’s Achievements. Just like any real-world sportsman who MUST have a trophy case to show their friends what a bad-a** they are on the court/field/whatever they play on, you virtual sluggers will get your very own Virtual Trophy Case (of pure, steroids-not-involved pwnage on the diamond).
Accomplishments on the field will unlock “colorful and meaningful” trophies that go up in the case. In addition, prestige awards will also find a cherished home somewhere in that virtual polished oak, such as the prestigious UBO Player of the Year award. In fact, tons of trophies have now been awarded to players to reflect their current performance and statistics.
Your Trophy Case should be visible via your personalized MyUBO page. Call it a visual incentive to actually work on your game, and not resort to, ahem, “performance-enhancing drugs” to strike that 700th home run or something.
Having MyEvents, MyCharacter, and MyNews still isn’t enough to make your Ultimate Baseball Online game your own, so Netamin decided to throw in their version of Xbox Live’s Achievements. Just like any real-world sportsman who MUST have a trophy case to show their friends what a bad-a** they are on the court/field/whatever they play on, you virtual sluggers will get your very own Virtual Trophy Case (of pure, steroids-not-involved pwnage on the diamond).
Accomplishments on the field will unlock “colorful and meaningful” trophies that go up in the case. In addition, prestige awards will also find a cherished home somewhere in that virtual polished oak, such as the prestigious UBO Player of the Year award. In fact, tons of trophies have now been awarded to players to reflect their current performance and statistics.
Your Trophy Case should be visible via your personalized MyUBO page. Call it a visual incentive to actually work on your game, and not resort to, ahem, “performance-enhancing drugs” to strike that 700th home run or something.