The top 24 MLS players in EA Sports FC 24

With a 90 overall rating, Lionel Messi tops the list

Ahead of the launch of EA Sports FC 24, the best 24 MLS players in the game have been revealed.

This year, an obvious name tops the list: Lionel Messi, who is one of the top overall players in the game at a 90 overall rating.

In fact, the three highest-rated MLS players are all recent Inter Miami signings, with Jordi Alba and Sergio Busquets rounding out the top three.

Ahead of a September 29 release date, here is the entire list of the top 24 MLS players in FC 24. All players are listed with their overall rating.

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The top 24 NWSL players in EA Sports FC 24

FC 24 will only be the second version of the game to feature the NWSL

Ahead of the launch of EA Sports FC 24, the best 24 NWSL players in the game have been revealed.

FC 24 will only be the second version of the game to feature the NWSL, after the American top flight was first introduced earlier this year in FIFA 23.

This year, the game has rebranded after EA Sports and FIFA ended a 30-year partnership.

Ahead of a September 29 release date, FC 24 will be unveiling player ratings this week with the full list set to be revealed on Friday.

Here is the entire list of the top 24 NWSL players in FC 24, listed in order of their overall rating.

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The top 24 Premier League players in EA Sports FC 24

EA Sports FC 24 drops September 29

With EA Sports FC 24 set to come out later this month, the makers of the game have released a list of the 24 highest-rated players in the Premier League.

FC 24 will be the first version of the game to come out after EA Sports and FIFA ended a 30-year partnership last year.

Ahead of a September 29 release date, FC 24 will be unveiling player ratings this week with the full list set to be revealed on Friday.

In the Premier League, Manchester City duo Erling Haaland and Kevin De Bruyne top the list with a 91 rating, making them two of the four highest-rated players in the entire game.

Here is the entire list of the top 24 Premier League players in FC 24, listed in order of their overall rating.

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The top 24 players in EA Sports FC 24

The anticipation is building ahead of a September 29 release date

As the anticipation grows for EA Sports FC 24, Monday marked a major milestone as the company released its top 24 players in the game.

This year marks the beginning of a new era, as EA Sports and FIFA ended their 30-year partnership last year.

Ahead of a September 29 release date, FC 24 will be unveiling player ratings this week with the full list set to be revealed on Friday.

This year, both men and women were included in the list of the game’s top players, as Kylian Mbappé, Erling Haaland, Kevin De Bruyne and Alexia Putellas all shared the top spot with a 91 overall rating.

Here is the entire list of the top 24 players in FC 24, with all listed by overall rating.

Daniel Kaluuya narrates first trailer for EA Sports FC 24

It’s a new era for the hugely popular video game franchise

Academy Award-winning actor, producer and writer Daniel Kaluuya is the voice of the first trailer for EA Sports FC 24, the successor to the hugely popular FIFA video game series.

After a 30-year partnership, EA Sports and FIFA announced that last year’s FIFA 23 would be the final game that uses the global governing body’s name.

The new era is set to begin this fall with FC 24, starting with Monday’s release of the trailer and the Ultimate Edition cover.

Both the trailer and the cover feature stars of the game’s past and present, including Pele, Zinedine Zidane, David Beckham, Erling Haaland, Jude Bellingham, Sam Kerr, Marta, and USWNT stars Mia Hamm and Trinity Rodman.

Further details about FC 24 will be unveiled on Thursday in an official livestream event, which will feature the first look at gameplay, keynote speakers, and the reveal of the Standard Edition global cover athlete. The event can be found HERE.

The release date for FC 24 has not yet been confirmed, but the game is expected to be available sometime in late September.

Watch the first EA Sports FC 24 trailer

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Kerr and Mbappé ‘dream Ultimate Team pairing’ for Chelsea Manager

Mixed-gender soccer teams are on the agenda as EA SPORTS FC rumors start to circulate; EA VP doubles down on commitment to women’s soccer.

Chelsea manager Emma Hayes sees megastar Kylian Mbappé and her in-form striker Sam Kerr as a “dream pairing” both in real life and in the video game sphere. Both star on the cover of FIFA 23, the chart-topping soccer sim from EA Sports. I spoke to Hayes in London at the first event for EA SPORTS FC and FC Futures, where she was announced as an ambassador.

Hayes, currently managing through the tightest Barclays Women’s Super League title race yet, is pleased with the inclusion of women’s club soccer in FIFA 23, as participation in the girls game continues to grow in the US and Europe.

fifa-23-homegrown-eleven

“[For kids] seeing it to be it plays a massive part, and it was not something I had,” she says.

Rumors are flying around on social media around women being added into Ultimate Team, which is the biggest game mode in EA’s chart-topping soccer sim series. Currently, mixed-gender teams can only happen in Pro Clubs and VOLTA, where you play as a custom avatar online. FIFA Ultimate Team, for now, only features current club players and icons of the past in the men’s game. For comparison, Hockey Ultimate Team in EA’s NHL 23 does have mixed lines.

“I like the idea of it – I think it’s about choice,” Hayes says, when asked about her thoughts on the rumors, and if soccer realism was an issue in video games.

FIFA 23 Sam Kerr & Chloe Kelly

“Why should we restrict who you know our children piece together? I think you don’t always have to have very traditional views on role models, and it’s nice to think that we can put together teams much in the way that we want to.”

Representation in-game builds a love for the game on the pitch, and it is something that Hayes has experienced personally with family members playing FIFA 23.

“You always have to start at home. When I spend Christmas Day with all the kids in my family being Chelsea Women, whether they’re [playing as] me, whether they’re using some of my players, you really realize the reach and the impact it’s having,” she says.

“We’re normalizing football for girls at home much in the same way that it has been for boys. We now need to take a gaming experience and bring that [to the pitch]. We’re already seeing that with an upturn in attendances.”

Sam Kerr is in fine form for her club, as is Mbappé, so with the rumors of mixed teams coming to Ultimate Team in the next EA SPORTS FC title, I asked what Hayes thought about that partnership.

“We should just talk about the qualities that each player can bring! Because I’m sure they would make a fabulous strike partnership,” Hayes grins.

I also spoke to David Jackson, VP of Brand Marketing at EA Sports, about how women’s soccer will evolve with the rebrand of the game. Critics of the expansion in FIFA 23 have claimed that club soccer lacks immersion, feels unfinished, and sits as a detached part of the overall game experience.

We have a deep, deep commitment to women’s football. As I said we’ve spent a number of years educating [our teams]… Whether that’s physiological differences, gameplay differences, tactical differences, the business of women’s football,” he says.

erling-haaland-fifa-23

Representation for women’s soccer is evolving, and Jackson admits that this will take more than one game to get it right “We will get to a phenomenal outcome for women’s football through the lens of our product. But it will be a multi-cycle thing.”

Jackson reveals there are ‘big five’ leagues in game which players might not realize is a deeper experience. These partnerships are vital as EA Sports separates from FIFA, which provided a lot of the licensing as part of the package. Jackson now negotiates his own deals, and two of the five leagues represent women’s soccer.

“We have a big five in the game. The Premier League, La Liga, Bundesliga, NWSL and WSL. They are represented to a much higher level than any of our other platforms.”

FIFA 23 Belgium

Despite these positive comments, Jackson was tight-lipped on the rumors circulating about mixed teams coming to Ultimate Team.

“We will talk a lot more about product innovation and feature updates in July,” he says.

“What I can tell you is women’s football is immensely important to us. Wherever women’s football shows up it will show up at the highest quality in the context of our platform. We have what we believe to be a responsibility to ensure that women’s football is held in exactly the same esteem as men’s.”

Written by Alex Bugg on behalf of GLHF.

EA SPORTS FC Interview: Breaking free from FIFA

EA Sports VP of Brand David Jackson explains how EA Sports FC is breaking away from the FIFA brand.

“You want to play FIFA after school?”

A familiar sound across classrooms worldwide. Thirty years of the interactive football franchise published by EA Sports, from the SEGA Mega Drive to the PS5. A bestseller at every single annual release. Gone. Done. End of an era.

FIFA is easy to say, it rolls off the tongue. The game is almost entirely detached from its namesake at this point. I’m sure there are avid FIFA players out there that don’t know that FIFA is in charge of football, who Gianni Infantino is, or why the name of their favorite game is changing.

Because we’re all going to keep calling it FIFA for a while, aren’t we?

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“It wouldn’t surprise me, yes, that in the short term, there’s still a little bit of overhang with the amazing experiences delivered in the past,” admits David Jackson, VP of Brand at EA Sports. We sat down together in a cool London hotel, with the new branding in monochrome behind him, to talk about the future of the game and his love of football.

EA Sports want us to be talking about FC, now. Same game, new jersey. The rebrand launched over Easter weekend in a coordinated social media deluge, along with pitchside branding at fixtures across Europe. 

“To see it come to life in the world of football, and have it be showcased through the lens of hundreds and hundreds of our partners all over the world. All the way from La Liga and Real Madrid, all the way through to League Two here in England, so the rebrand means the world to us,” Jackson beams. 

This drip-feeding of the game which we won’t see until September feels early. FIFA 23 is still live, and still has content to come, including its annual ‘Team of the Season’ promotion in FIFA Ultimate Team. The rumor mill feels like it has started early this year, for a title which we won’t get any info on until July. But as the soccer season heads towards a climax in both league and continental competitions, it seems EA knew this was the time to stick its new flag in the ground.

“The brand and its identity and vision went live through the lens of football – that’s where it lives most strongly,” he responds, putting my thoughts about FIFA 23 being abandoned early to bed.

“We know we have a responsibility to make sure that there’s no confusion in the space around what was a FIFA product and what that will look like in the future… We also know that we exist in the context of global football, and the seasons at the moment in some of the major leagues are really heating up.”

All this, it turns out, has been the plan for a long time. We’ve known the new name for a little while now. It started with a trademark filed in the UK in October 2021, spotted by VGC, and behind the scenes, EA Sports had been planning for the breakup for much, much longer. 

“[We’ve been planning for] a number of years now, working to ensure that we had our own platform and our own brand that we could invest deeply and on behalf of our players,” Jackson says.

Aside from the obvious – money and politics between EA and soccer’s governing body – I was curious to know why they’ve been planning this move, and what this independence had Jackson so stoked.

“It’s the freedom for us to be able to consider anything that we want to do in the future and not have it be limited or curtailed by any third party,” he says.

“This brand is ours and ours alone, to build on behalf of partners and players all over the world.”

Jackson is very relaxed when I ask him if he is fussed about people continuing to call his game FIFA. It’s a game I’ve played since 2002, and it’ll be hard for me to make the change. 

“We think over time people will call the platform FC,” he says. “Then, via osmosis over time, it’ll become very obvious that this is an FC product. Or this is an FC experience and it comes from EA Sports.”

The new brand identity is centered around triangles, a shape the EA Sports press release describes as ‘a dominant shape in [soccer] culture that represents the sport in multiple dimensions’. As a representation of the player indicator symbol that appears above every athlete in every match, it makes the most sense to me. The response online has been divided. For the majority of the 150m users, it probably makes no difference. Jackson, however, doesn’t want apathy.

“We’ve heard some really positive reactions to the visual identity, and we’ve equally heard some challenging feedback as well,” he says. “That’s okay. What we didn’t want is any middle-of-the-road sort of easy-to-ignore feedback.

“There’s at least something memorable in the identity that we’re looking to deliver and all of that feedback is really welcome.”

With this newfound freedom from third-party shackles, EA Sports is confident that it can continue to play a part in soccer culture around the world, and blur the line between reality and video games. Over 19,000 fully licensed players, 700+ teams and 30+ leagues will be present in the first EA SPORTS FC title. Jackson’s team has built relationships with 300 global football partners, including UEFA, that will allow further expansion into areas including both women’s and grassroots soccer.

That starts with FC Futures, a charitable initiative that is investing $10 million into the grassroots game, in real life. 

FC Futures launched its first project at a primary school in South London, the ‘Rocky and Wrighty Arena’, where Arsenal and England icon Ian Wright went to school. Wright is the first ambassador for FC Futures, along with Emma Hayes, the manager of Chelsea Women. 

That, Jackson says, is just part of the project. “We’re going to democratize a library of practices through the lens of the [game] engine where coaches can go online and download those practices and be able to use them in their plans.

“The final thing is technical packs, where people will get access to cones and bibs and balls to be able to use on the pitches that we build, so that we can really actively reinvest in the real world of football.”

Cynics will say this is guilt money for dragging people away from the pitch and in front of screens playing football, but the love of the game – regardless of where or how it is played – really shines through in Jackson’s words. 

“So some research that we did sort of neuters or counters maybe a perception that our game detract from people playing football in the real world, we found that 63% of people, if they play our game, are disproportionately more likely to play football in the real world,” Jackson explains.

“It’s super, super important for our teams and our partners to know that we are investing in young people’s access to the world of real football and their fandom of the sport. And it’s really genuinely important to me as well.”

And for Jackson, a father living in Canada and a big Everton fan, it’s personal, too.

“I have three young kids, I see what it’s like when you do have access [to quality facilities to play] in Canada and where you don’t, in previous places we’ve lived,” he says. “It’s night and day in terms of their love for the sport once they can play and once they can play with facilities that are adequate for you know their needs.”

EA SPORTS FC is expected to launch in September 2023.

Written by Alex Bugg on behalf of GLHF.

EA Sports outlines the future of its not-FIFA sports game series

EA Sports officially unveiled its FIFA successor, EA Sports FC, and outlined a bit of what to expect from the sports game in the summer

EA Sports officially unveiled its FIFA successor, EA Sports FC, and outlined a bit of what to expect from the sports game in the coming months. The EA Sports FC game will release on Nintendo Switch, PlayStation, Xbox, and PC later in 2023. 

EA publicly ended its relationship with FIFA, reportedly after FIFA required EA to pay $1 billion to continue using the FIFA license.

EA will begin showcasing its new FC brand in upcoming matches around the world and plans to debut its first EA Sports FC game sometime later in 2023. FIFA plans to launch a rival “egame” in 2025, which is presumably just a video game.

EA Sports will continue its partnerships with Premier League, La Liga, and Ligue 1, among others, for the upcoming FC game. In keeping with an earlier promise to use the EA Sports platform to promote inclusion, the group is also actively forging new partnerships to spotlight women’s leagues, including collaborations with the WSL and NWSL. 

As for what to expect from the game itself, we’ll have to wait a bit longer to find out. EA said they’ll reveal more about EA Sports FC, including gameplay, sometime in July 2023 after the Summer Game Fest wraps up.

Written by Josh Broadwell on behalf of GLHF

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EA Sports-FIFA split is ‘the perfect storm,’ says Konami

We had a chat with Konami’s senior partnerships and activations manager for eFootball, David Monk, about the future of soccer sim games.

EA Sports and FIFA parting ways has been the talk of the town for an entire season, which isn’t surprising – they’ve been partners for 30 years. This will have a massive impact on the entire gaming industry, and sports in general. EA Sports FC is set to be the first post-FIFA soccer game from the publisher, kicking off an entirely new brand, similar to what happened only last year to Konami and eFootballPES’ heir.

But how will that impact the entire soccer gaming landscape? We’ve asked Konami just that, as it is still busy catching up with its long-running competitor after the much-debated IP change.

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“If you objectively look at the football simulation category landscape, now you have a perfect storm for new entrants,” David Monk, senior partnerships and activations manager at eFootball, Konami, tells GLHF. 

“You have increased consumer capabilities in mobile gaming, and obviously, with console gaming, it’s more accessible, with the new generation of consoles coming out and these new technology bases available to users, as well as Android.

“Also, a lot more free-to-play games have come out in the non-football simulation category. So you look at all those ingredients everywhere – it’s the perfect storm for new publishers and new developers to enter into the simulation category.”

It’s clear that Konami won’t be considering, for example, coming back to retail, premium releases, should EA Sports stick to that model and prove successful again – or any other temptation after eFootball’s troubled start

At the same time, the Silent Hill publisher knows that the soccer simulation category will soon be much more crowded – UFL is releasing in 2023, Goals is currently in development, and perhaps there’s even more on the horizon.

Of course, everyone is looking at what FIFA will be doing after parting ways with EA Sports, and launching a few World Cup initiatives – four games, including metaverse and NFTs, to start with. One of the biggest names the internet discourse keeps calling out as a possible FIFA partner for the future is 2K Sports, the label behind the most popular NBA and PGA games, but the company has debunked any rumor on that front, so far.

Written by Paolo Sirio on behalf of GLHF.

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¡Adiós FIFA! Los cambios que esperamos en EA Sports FC

El legado de 20 años del videojuego conocido como FIFA desapareció para dar paso a EA Sports FC, la nueva plataforma para jugar futbol en línea que promete ser la opción favorita de todos los aficionados como lo fue el del pasado.

El legado de 20 años del videojuego conocido como FIFA desapareció para dar paso a EA Sports FC, la nueva plataforma para jugar futbol en línea que promete ser la opción favorita de todos los aficionados como lo fue el del pasado.

En 2023 el videojuego cambiará de nombre por lo que el FIFA 23, próximo a estrenarse, será el último de la saga con este nombre y licencia de ser el juego oficial de futbol avalado por el máximo organismo rector. Ahora FIFA expandió sus licencias y por supuesto, busca adueñarse del imperio de los e-sports en materia de soccer.

Los fanáticos, amateurs y profesionales, ya tienen en mente los cambios que les gustaría ver en el videojuego que no está siendo anunciado como tal, sino como una plataforma de juego, lo que nos permite tener algunas pistas, y peticiones, de lo que esperamos ver en la nueva versión.