{"id":5858,"date":"2026-03-21T10:44:09","date_gmt":"2026-03-21T10:44:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/beteja.com\/index.php\/2026\/03\/21\/mlb-the-show-26-review\/"},"modified":"2026-03-21T10:44:09","modified_gmt":"2026-03-21T10:44:09","slug":"mlb-the-show-26-review","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/beteja.com\/index.php\/2026\/03\/21\/mlb-the-show-26-review\/","title":{"rendered":"MLB The Show 26 Review"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><\/p>\n<p data-cy=\"paragraph\" class=\"paragraph jsx-2269604527\">When I reviewed MLB The Show 20, I praised it as the best baseball simulation around while dinging it for playing too safe, recycling visuals, and leaning on marginal improvements instead of taking real swings. Six years later, I\u2019m getting deja vu. Despite giving MLB The Show 21 a standing ovation for finally starting to mix up the formula in its jump to next-gen (at the time) consoles, I\u2019m now sitting here with MLB The Show 26 struggling to articulate what&#8217;s meaningfully different from the last few years. The iterative additions are better than usual this year \u2014 especially in Franchise mode \u2014 but the foundation hasn&#8217;t moved an inch, and I can\u2019t help but feel like MLB The Show 26 is little more than another full-priced update for the same live service game we\u2019ve been playing since the 2010s.<\/p>\n<p data-cy=\"paragraph\" class=\"paragraph jsx-2269604527\">To its credit, MLB The Show 26 still plays excl o jellent baseball. The core simulation remains the most convincing recreation of the sport in any video game, and developer San Diego Studio hasn&#8217;t regressed the way Madden and NBA 2K have in recent cycles. And if you&#8217;ve never touched MLB The Show before, this is the best entry point the series has ever offered: A streamlined first-time setup walks you through every hitting, pitching, and fielding interface before you throw a single ball. But if you have played before \u2014 even as far back as The Show 21 \u2014 that familiarity has inevitably become the problem. The approachable onboarding is wasted on people like me, those who have been here for years and are still waiting for a reason to feel like they haven&#8217;t.<\/p>\n<h2 data-cy=\"title2\" class=\"title2 jsx-1903782357 jsx-3735650234\">What we said about MLB The Show 25<\/h2>\n<p data-cy=\"paragraph\" class=\"paragraph jsx-2269604527\">MLB The Show remains one of the best sports series around. The new upgrade system  and the amateur portion of your player\u2019s journey have reinvigorated Road To The Show, while the shift away from Sets and Seasons has righted Diamond Dynasty\u2019s biggest wrong. While it\u2019s a bit of a bummer that the Storylines feature isn\u2019t living up to its full potential, it remains a worthwhile and important inclusion that has reach beyond the game of baseball. All the small touches, such as updated infielder reactions and new quick time events like the swim move, have the on-field action in a great place, too. It\u2019s not always easy for an annual franchise to justify the move to a new entry, but in the case of MLB The Show 25, it does more than enough to make me glad it has arrived. &#8211; <em>Justin Koreis, March 20, 2025<\/em><\/p>\n<h2 data-cy=\"title2\" class=\"title2 jsx-1903782357 jsx-3735650234\">Score: 9<\/h2>\n<p data-cy=\"paragraph\" class=\"paragraph jsx-2269604527\">Read the full MLB The Show 25 review.<\/p>\n<p data-cy=\"paragraph\" class=\"paragraph jsx-2269604527\">This year\u2019s gamevplay additions don&#8217;t do much to close that gap. Bear Down Pitching is the headliner, a system that rewards you for consistently throwing strikes and racking up strikeouts by banking special high-accuracy pitches you can deploy in clutch situations. It ties into your pitcher&#8217;s Clutch rating, and in practice it meaningfully tightens your command \u2014 pitching as Seattle&#8217;s Bryan Woo, I could feel the difference when a Bear Down pitch locked inside the zone with an accuracy I wasn&#8217;t getting on standard throws. It&#8217;s the most interesting mechanical addition in years, and the one thing I&#8217;d point to as a genuine reason the on-field game feels at all sharper. Less impressive is Big Zone Hitting, which simplifies the PCI to broader quadrants of the strike zone. I hit more balls into play than I expected, but it trades the surgical precision that made zone hitting rewarding for something flatter. More contact, fewer moments where I earned anything with my swing.<\/p>\n<p data-cy=\"paragraph\" class=\"paragraph jsx-2269604527\">There&#8217;s also a depth-of-field toggle that blurs the b ackground while batting, and PitchComm, which pushes pitch call audio through the DualSense controller speaker when playing on PS5 \u2014 a nifty trick that doesn&#8217;t actually move the needle. The under-the-hood models now incorporate real-world pitch usage rates, meaning your pitcher&#8217;s less-frequently-thrown offerings are harder to locate. That one&#8217;s subtle and good. But the list of new mid-match stuff doesn\u2019t stretch much further than that, and two smart tweaks alongside a handful of toggles is not a $70 leap from last year. It&#8217;s a patch.<\/p>\n<p>Road to the Show has received the most visible additions, but the college experience is still thin.<span class=\"stack jsx-2959124702 jsx-326843967\"><span>\u201c<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p data-cy=\"paragraph\" class=\"paragraph jsx-2269604527\">Road to the Show has received the most visible additions, though &#8220;visible&#8221; is doing some heavy lifting here. The addition of 11 new colleges and the officially licensed NCAA College World Series gives the early career arc more texture than it&#8217;s ever had. Smart Sim \u2014 which lets your OVR rating drive simulated stats so you can skip games without torpedoing your career \u2014 respects your time in a way previous entries didn&#8217;t, and getting automatically pulled back in before a big moment is the kind of attention the mode has needed for years.<\/p>\n<p data-cy=\"paragraph\" class=\"paragraph jsx-2269604527\">That said, the college experience is still thin. Rather than playing through multiple seasons, you skip straight to your junior year and are dropped right into the College World Series. It&#8217;s a prologue dressed up as a chapter. And while Road to the Show has never been better at keeping you moving forward, the story surrounding that progression is still functionally nonexistent. You&#8217;ll see text boxes. You&#8217;ll click &#8220;Yes, coach.&#8221; The animations during conversations are stiff. I said this in my Show 20 review, and I&#8217;m saying it again now: there is no narrative here, and at this point I don&#8217;t think there ever will be.<\/p>\n<p><span data-cy=\"poll-view-trigger\"><\/span><\/p>\n<p data-cy=\"paragraph\" class=\"paragraph jsx-2269604527\">Diamond Dynasty launches with a ton of content, as it has in previous years. The World Baseball Classic integration delivers WBC-themed cards across multiple programs, a WBC Conquest map, and a tournament bracket that ties Diamond Dynasty&#8217;s card-building directly into the international event, just to scratch the surface. If content volume is your metric, it&#8217;s here. But volume has never been Diamond Dynasty&#8217;s problem; the grind that makes all that content feel like a treadmill has.<\/p>\n<p data-cy=\"paragraph\" class=\"paragraph jsx-2269604527\">The Deluxe Edition, for its part, undercuts the mode&#8217;s competitive balance right out of the gate. Because we were sent the Digital Deluxe version for this review, I started with Aaron Judge, Shohei Ohtani, and other top-tier cards already in my lineup \u2014 a signifi cant head start that Standard Edition buyers don&#8217;t get. Diamond Dynasty challenges also prevent duplicate players from appearing on both sides, which is fine in theory, but in practice it means whoever has the better roster and hosts the match claims the top cards first. In a cross-play challenge with my friend, she couldn&#8217;t field players I was already using, and because the Deluxe Edition had front-loaded my lineup with the best options in the game, that restriction fell entirely on her. <\/p>\n<p data-cy=\"paragraph\" class=\"paragraph jsx-2269604527\">Team Affinity has been restructured to two programs per team for the full year, with every franchise offering a hitter captain and pitcher captain from launch, and the Parallel Mod system \u2014 where you choose which attributes to specialize as you level a card \u2014 adds genuine roster-building decisions. These are real improvements. They&#8217;d be easier to celebrate if the mode&#8217;s entry point wasn&#8217;t already tilted toward whoever spent more at checkout.<\/p>\n<h2 data-cy=\"title2\" class=\"title2 jsx-1903782357 jsx-3735650234\"><strong>Microtransaction Reaction<\/strong><\/h2>\n<p data-cy=\"paragraph\" class=\"paragraph jsx-2269604527\">MLB The Show 26&#8217;s microtransaction store is unchanged from previous years: 1,000 Stubs costs a dollar, scaling up to 150,000 Stubs for $100, with limited-time bundles at various price points. You can still earn everything through gameplay by completing challenges, grinding Programs, and selling cards on the community market. But what&#8217;s changed, and not for the better, is a quietly introduced 20-card ownership limit that wasn&#8217;t disclosed before launch. If you relied on card flipping and roster-update investing as part of the free-to-play grind \u2014 one of the most accessible paths to building a competitive team without spending \u2014 this directly undermines your strategy. The lack of transparency around it is a bad look, and it&#8217;s hard not to read it as a nudge toward spending real money.<\/p>\n<p data-cy=\"paragraph\" class=\"paragraph jsx-2269604527\">The Franchise mode Trade Hub is the single best addition in MLB The Show 26. Everything trade-related now lives in one centralized interface: Rumors, pending offers, player valuations, and deal pursuit. You can shop players around, set untouchables, track what other GMs are doing, and participate in bidding wars. Running the Mariners, I invested in Bryan Woo and Randy Arozarena as cornerstones and monitored which teams were shopping their assets \u2014 and it felt more like an RPG bartering system than the spreadsheet it used to be.<\/p>\n<p data-cy=\"paragraph\" class=\"paragraph jsx-2269604527\">The trade-off is that March to October is gone, replaced by a streamlined experience that doesn&#8217;t fully cover the same ground. Franchise still doesn&#8217;t offer a manager-only or GM-only option, and there&#8217;s no spectate or one-pitch mode for players who want the management without the at-bats. There&#8217;s also no way to transfer Road to the Show or Franchise saves from past entries \u2014 the same issue I flagged in my The Show 21 review \u2014 and any custom stadiums you built in previous games don&#8217;t carry over either. The Stadium Creator itself feels basically unchanged from when it debuted in The Show 21, which means the same clunky controls and the same limitations I noted then are still here now. At least the Trade Hub is useful and convenient now. Everything else about Franchise is the same game I&#8217;ve been playing since 2020, minus a few things it used to have.<\/p>\n<p>My created character has my bone structure the way a police sketch might.<span class=\"stack jsx-2959124702 jsx-326843967\"><span>\u201c<\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p data-cy=\"paragraph\" class=\"paragraph jsx-2269604527\">Visually, MLB The Show 26 looks the same as it has for years. Player models, stadiums, and animations are broadly identical to what I played on PS4 Pro when I reviewed The Show 20. Jersey physics are nice, and stadium lighting has seen marginal improvement, but aliasing is still visible, crowd detail lags behind other current-gen sports titles, and there are no PS5 Pro enhancements \u2014 a strange omission for a first-party PlayStation game in 2026.<\/p>\n<p data-cy=\"paragraph\" class=\"paragraph jsx-2269604527\">My created character in Road to the Show is technically supposed to be me. He has my bone structure the way a police sketch has a suspect&#8217;s bone structure \u2014 close enough to be unsettling, but far from close enough to be accurate. The face scanning technology in MLB The Show 26 still looks like it belongs in the PS3 era, and the result on my end was an amorphous blob that wears my jersey number and runs bases for me. Use it at your own discretion.<\/p>\n<p data-cy=\"paragraph\" class=\"paragraph jsx-2269604527\">Cross-play multiplayer between my PS5 and my friend&#8217;s Series X worked, but with caveats. Just setting up a casual match required navigating menus that were not as user-friendly as I\u2019d have hoped. Once in, batting on my end had noticeable sync issues: The ball rubber-banded just before the zone, making it hard to read pitch direction. Outfielders occasionally refused to throw back to the plate after a catch. Other players have reported similar &#8220;teleporting fastball&#8221; problems in online Ranked. Commentary also remains the weakest link \u2014 the majority of lines feel recycled from the last few entries \u2014 and the b atting cage minigame is somehow worse than it\u2019s ever been.<\/p>\n<p data-cy=\"paragraph\" class=\"paragraph jsx-2269604527\">But hey, at least the deftly-crafted Negro Leagues Storylines mode returns for a fourth season, spotlighting Roy Campanella, Mamie &#8220;Peanut&#8221; Johnson, John Henry &#8220;Pop&#8221; Lloyd, and George &#8220;Mule&#8221; Suttles. The produced video segments remain some of the most meaningful content in any sports game \u2014 genuinely worth your time. The gameplay challenges tied to those stories, though, are still bare-minimum scenarios \u2014 get a base hit, strike someone out, don&#8217;t allow a run \u2014 and the mode&#8217;s value is almost entirely in the videos, not in the playing. It\u2019s fun to earn those players as cards in Diamond Dynasty, but the history deserves more than that.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>When I reviewed MLB The Show 20, I praised it as the best baseball simulation around while dinging it for playing too safe, recycling visuals, and leaning on marginal improvements instead of taking real swings. Six years later, I\u2019m getting deja vu. Despite giving MLB The Show 21 a standing ovation for finally starting to<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":5859,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"fifu_image_url":"","fifu_image_alt":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[29],"tags":[5824,1942,1630],"class_list":{"0":"post-5858","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-new-releases","8":"tag-mlb","9":"tag-review","10":"tag-show"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/beteja.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5858","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/beteja.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/beteja.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/beteja.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/beteja.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=5858"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/beteja.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5858\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/beteja.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/5859"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/beteja.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=5858"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/beteja.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=5858"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/beteja.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=5858"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}