LeBron James said the All-Star game is "something we need to figure out" as NBA commissioner Adam Silver hit out at the players.
Silver had promised a competitive All-Star game after a damp squib last year.
And although Sunday's game proved to be the highest-scoring All-Star encounter in NBA history, with the East beating the West 211-186, Silver was unimpressed with the level of competitiveness on show.
Rather flatly, Silver said: "To the Eastern Conference All-Stars, you scored the most points. Well ... congratulations."
James only played in the first half of his record 20th All-Star appearance, as he manages an ankle issue.
And while seeing Silver's side of the argument, James said it is a "deeper conversation".
"I think it's something we need to figure out," said James, who scored eight points for the West.
"Obviously from a player's perspective, it's fun to get up and down. But at the end of the day, our competitive nature don't like to have free-flowing scoring like that.
"But I think the good thing that came out of tonight was none of the players were injured, and everybody came out unscathed or how they were before the game started. So it's a deeper conversation."
James' Los Angeles Lakers teammate Anthony Davis said: "Obviously the fans and the league and everybody wants to be competitive, but then you also as players think about trying not to get hurt. Obviously injuries are a part of the game, and no one wants to get hurt in the All-Star Game.
"All these guys here are very valuable to their teams. So it's some mixed emotions about it.
"You try to go out there and compete a little bit and not just be a highlight show. But at the same time, do you guys really want to see somebody going down for a dunk and somebody going to contest it and, God forbid, something happens in the All-Star Game when it could have been avoided?"
However, Anthony Edwards, of the Minnesota Timberwolves, suggested he has no interest in playing too fiercely in an exhibition match.
"For me, it's an All-Star Game, so I will never look at it as being super competitive," he said.
"It's always fun. I don't know what they can do to make it more competitive. I don't know. I think everyone looks at it [like] it's a break, so I don't think everyone wants to come here and compete."