Last fall, one channel called SOFTDRINKTV published a 14-minute clip entitled "The most awful Madden of All Time," then a week later by a video that lasted 19 minutes madden coins, titled "Madden NFL 22 isn't Good - Review." The channel returned to the same spot recently with one titled "Everything Wrong with Madden NFL 22 (in 16 minutes)."
The narrative of this one begins memorably or even a bit dramatically: "This is the kind of game that causes you to want to stick the thumbtack into your eyes. If playing Madden 22, the blessing of life turns into something of a curse. You'll no longer want to live. It creates existential dread."
Like all subcultures, Madden comes with its own expressions of slang. Precise throws are "lasers" (self-explanatory). The most common throw is described as a "dot" and it's "dotted up" -- which in turn evolved from "dart" (less explicit).
Similarly, strong defensive coverage was once "bagged," though recently I've heard YouTubers calling themselves "booked." The most logical one I can think of is "mossing" one person that is when an athlete leaps over a corner to snatch the ball out of the air, inspired to Randy Moss.
But , in reality, hate for Madden seems to be as much part of the society, even if it seems somewhat invasive at times. The subreddit r/Madden is almost all "rants" about the reasons why Madden is a mess, and usually just a video clip of a glitch or bug buy Madden nfl 22 coins. The tag #Madden22 on TikTok is equal parts highlights, as well as calling out busted plays that EA must fix.