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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/nba_2k_logo.png]]
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3The '''''NBA 2K''''' series is the most popular franchise of video games based on basketball. The series started life as a pair of exclusive basketball games for the Platform/{{Dreamcast}}, but later appeared on other consoles starting with ''NBA 2K2''. It's since surpassed [[Creator/ElectronicArts EA Sports]]'s ''NBA Live'' series, to the point where ''Live'' and ''NBA Elite'', a planned refresh of the ''Live'' franchise, had several installments cancelled all the way up to ''NBA Live 2020''.
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6!!The NBA 2K series provides examples of:
7* AnnouncerChatter: Unlike many sports games, 2K records their talent simultaneously in the same room, allowing a lot of way for the commentators to banter amongst each other instead of trading canned lines. ''[=2K17=]'' pushed the trope to a new level with a rotating third member of the virtual booth; instead of being stuck with the same three voices, each game would randomly slot in a third broadcast talent next to the two leads, from the likes of former players like Chris Webber and current broadcasters like Doris Burke, to give the game a more realistic talent turnover from game to game. ''[=2K18=]'' upped the ante even further with the addition of NBA legends Kobe Bryant and Kevin Garnett, who occasionally appear for Lakers and Timberwolves/Celtics games, respectively.
8** Exaggerated in ''[=2K22=]'', which features ''eight'' different commentators for the NBA games and three for WNBA ones. Also, all the NBA commentators freely rotate on each new game, making the commentary much less stale than your average sports game.
9* TheArtifact: The starting lineup for [=2K18's=] All-Time Heat had Chris Bosh at power forward and Alonzo Mourning at center. Since [=2K19=] didn't have Bosh, Mourning moved up a spot and Creator/ShaquilleONeal became the starting center. This didn't change when Bosh was brought back in [=2K20=].
10* AscendedMeme:
11** 2k16 once released a 90 overall Brian Scalabrine, aka '''The White Mamba''' for a limited time.
12** 2k19 later one-upped that by releasing a 99 overall Galaxy Opal Rarity version of Scalabrine.
13* AutomaticNewGame: On first launch, [=2K11=] the game will ask the player to adjust video settings, but otherwise skips the main menu and dives right into a single match between Lakers and Bulls. This initial game doesn't have too many tutorial messages.
14* TheBusCameBack: A December 2019 [=MyTeam=] event in 2K20 brought back Chris Bosh after he was absent in 2K19. A later update added him to the '12-'13 Heat, All-Time Raptors, and All-Time Heat teams.
15* ButThouMust: In the second high school game you play in 2K21's [=MyCareer=] mode, your player will always pick up an injury afterwards, even if you stand in the far corner just outside the out-of-bounds line of the court throughout the game. If you attempt to foul out, the game will never let you pick up your 5th foul.
16* TheCameo: UsefulNotes/MichaelJordan himself in 2K11. The very first time you boot up the game, and go through the ColdOpening (described below), Jordan, voiced by himself in this cutscene, [[BreakingTheFourthWall will look at the player, and ask if they're ready to play]], before joining the rest of the Bulls.
17* CharacterBlog: In ''2K13/14'', your player has a Facebook or Twitter page where fans will cheer or call you out on your performance, opposing players will challenge you or say you came through, the media will cover how you played as well as your poise during interviews and superstars will tag you as a friend if... in Steve Kerr's case for example, you shoot a lot of 3-pointers.
18* ColdOpening: Booting up ''2K11'' for the first time has you walking out with Jordan for the 1991 NBA Finals player introduction against the Lakers, replete with the Bulls mascot waving a flag, superstar entrance for Jordan and the man himself clapping powder in Jerry Krause's face.
19* TheComputerIsACheatingBastard: The other negative in using bad language, in that after the technical is called you and your team slide in a big way and the opponents step up their game like it was game seven of the finals, fourth quarter, scores are tied. In other words the game makes you pay for the technical by ramping up the difficulty to insane levels.
20** The Rookie Showcase (used from ''2K12'' to ''2K14'') has you trying to perform and impress the teams so you can get a high spot in the draft. There's just one problem: every other player on your team is so geeked up to do the same they become utter ball hogs, going against five on one odds and not allowing you a look on even if they have no chance of scoring. Your only hope is to dominate defensively as well as work on getting high numbers in points and assists. Thankfully being drafted means your team is much more focused on winning games rather than putting on a one man show, allowing you to play more to your strengths.
21* GameBreakingBug: One that was [[RealLifeWritesThePlot caused by]] [[UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic real life circumstances]]. The "NBA Today" option for ''NBA 2K20''[='s=] [=MyLeague=] simply causes the game to slow down from trying to simulate games that don't exist until it crashes. [[https://www.polygon.com/2020/3/12/21177627/nba-2k20-coronavirus-season-suspended-canceled-shut-down-nba-today-error-glitch The NBA indefinitely suspended its 2020 season in light of COVID-19, which had the unintended side effect of rendering the "NBA Today" option non-functional.]]
22* HarderThanHard: Hall of Fame difficulty
23* HateSink: Vic Van Lier in ''Livin' Da Dream'', an odd example as despite his extrene antagonistic behaviour up to including blackmailing the player and threatening to send them to jail over an accidental murder when called out on said behaviour, the ending intends for you to feel sorry for him when he dies in a car crash (in a car he took from the player, by the way).
24* HolidayMode: The announcers have special dialogue for a large number of days, up to and including Groundhog Day and April Fools Day.
25* HollywoodGenetics: [=2K16=]'s story mode, ''Livin' Da Dream'', features the story of a player created character nicknamed Frequency Vibrations. Freq's race is customizable by the player, but his parents are both African-American, and Freq's mother mentions that she came up with the name while pregnant with him, discrediting the idea Freq was adopted. The implications of this are never brought up in story.
26* JediMindTrick: Invoked in the [=MyGM=] mode, where the GM can perform one on a free agent (with a cost to earned credits).
27-->'''GM:''' This is EXACTLY the contract you're looking for. You won't be able to find a better deal with any other team.
28-->'''Player:''' You are 100% correct. This is EXACTLY the contract I'm looking for and I accept your contract offer.
29* LongRunner: The first game was released in November 1999, and it's still going very, very strong, even surpassing EA's long-running series of NBA games.
30* MissionPackSequel: Though there are frequently plenty enough improvements with each passing game to make it more different than the previous year's edition.
31* MultiPlatform: Since 2K2, every game in the series has been released on multiple consoles.
32* MythologyGag: In a rare case of this for a sports series, [[https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/71dtjEWYqfL._SY445_.jpg 2K11's cover]] and title screen is a homage to the [[https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/61cBTglJWDL.jpg 2K1 cover and title screen]], with Michael Jordan replacing Allen Iverson.
33* NameOrderConfusion: Although the AnnouncerChatter gets it right, the in-game menus tend to refer to [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yao_Ming Yao Ming]] as if Yao was his given name, not his surname.
34* NoFairCheating: You can import a created player into GM mode who is super elite and does not care about financial security at all. He will still demand something to the tune of 90 million dollars, you might not even have 90 million to afford him, much less the rest of the team.
35* OddNameOut: The game released in 2003 is, to date, the only game in the series not to be numbered. Instead of the expected ''NBA [=2K4=]'', it was called ''ESPN NBA Basketball'', due to Sega having the ESPN license at the time.
36* PermanentElectedOfficial / PresidentForLife: Some editions have included a cutscene in career mode where the league champions travel to the White House to meet UsefulNotes/BarackObama. These cutscenes remain unchanged even after the game chronology passes January 20, 2017, the date when Obama's term expired and UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump took over the Presidency.
37* ProductPlacement: ''[=2K11=]'' has Gatorade advertised on the substitutions, where the stamina meter shows athletes drinking from a bottle.
38* ProperlyParanoid: The team owner in 2K16 may be hard-headed and stern, but he is completely right about [[TheScrappy Vic]] and how he's no good for Freq.
39* RevenueEnhancingDevices: 2K had made any form of progress all but impossible without gambling on loot boxes in the hopes of unlocking boosts to help you get ahead enough to be able to use in game currency to boost your stats, a DoubleUnlock if you will.
40* SequelEscalation: Following the massive sales success of ''2K11'', the devs suddenly had the wallet to integrate more popular basketball-related brands, more licensed historic players and voice talent, and putting A-list music acts like Kanye, Eminem, and Drake on their soundtracks (including Jay-Z curating ''[=NBA 2K13=]'''s soundtrack himself).
41* SeriesMascot: Former Philadelphia [=76ers=] player Allen Iverson was the cover star for almost the entirety of the Sega era of the series, from the original ''[=2K=]'' until ''[=2K5=]'', which replaced him with Pistons star Ben Wallace, and started the tradition of having a new player on the cover every year.
42* ShownTheirWork: As stated before, the game has some impressively realistic commentary, which is a refresher from other sports games that has repetitive commentary. The arena announcer will also keep pace with them, such as when the home team scores three points he will call out, "One, two, threeeeee!!!!!!": occasionally he will drop saying the third part and the crowd will do it instead.
43** As well as the other work involved in the game such as the progress of your player reflected by their performance on court and what to improve on, 2K11 was downright eerie in the work put in, from "[[Music/TheAlanParsonsProject Sirius]]" playing to [[UsefulNotes/MichaelJordan Jordan]] slapping powder in front of Jerry Krause to commentary that would have you fooled into thinking it's an actual broadcast. 2K14 takes this up to eleven; your created player's performance rated down to performance in interviews and online fan reaction is impressive, but where it gets to almost a BigBrotherIsWatching level is through Kinect. It listens for play calling, picks, etc. However, if you swear the Kinect and in turn the referee will hear and you will be called for a technical foul.
44* SpiritualSuccessor: To the Platform/SegaSaturn title ''NBA Action''.
45* UnfortunateNames: '''Frequency Vibrations''', a.k.a., Freq. The name of ''2K16''’s [=MyPlayer=] was deemed by many to be so ridiculous, that it was [[MemeticMutation memed almost instantly]].
46* UnexpectedGameplayChange: The "My Player" mode in recent titles, where you control nearly every aspect of your player's basketball career.
47* WhoNamesTheirKidDude: Your character's name in 2k16's [=MyCareer=] mode, despite you ''naming them in the creation screen'' is, for some reason, "Frequency Vibrations". The name you gave them is used in the opening credits and outside of the cutscenes.
48--->''Starring [Your Name Here]''

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