Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
EA Sports FC Mobile (commonly known as EA FC Mobile and formerly known as FIFA Mobile until September 26, 2023) is an association football simulation video game developed by EA Mobile and EA Canada and published by EA Sports for global version, Tencent Games for Chinese version and Nexon for Japanese and Korean versions for iOS and Android.
In addition, the game provides a Versus Mode, which allows players to choose all 439 real club teams and all in-game national teams to simulate (but not manage) friendly matches and custom tournaments. However, if a player exports their custom team from the main story mode, they can then directly manage their team like in normal gameplay.
Association football video games are a sub-genre of sports video games.The largest association football video game franchise is EA Sports FC (formerly FIFA) by Electronic Arts (EA), with the second largest franchise being Konami's competing eFootball (formerly known as Pro Evolution Soccer or Winning Eleven).
The game builds on the concepts and gameplay found in games like Sports Interactive's Football Manager and Electronic Arts' Premier Manager that have managed to engage millions of football fans, and giving them access to social features.
EA Sports FC 24 [1] is an association football-themed simulation video game developed by EA Vancouver and EA Romania and published by EA Sports.It is the inaugural installment in the EA Sports FC series, [2] succeeding the FIFA video game series after Electronic Arts's partnership with FIFA concluded with FIFA 23.
Pro Evolution Soccer 2009 (PES 2009, known as World Soccer: Winning Eleven 2009 in Korea and Japan) is a football video game in the Pro Evolution Soccer series, which was made by Konami. It is also the exclusive licensed game of the UEFA Champions League. [2] The Wii version is known as Winning Eleven Play Maker 2009 in Japan.
eFootball is a series of association football simulation video games developed and published by Konami.It has been completely rebranded from the original Pro Evolution Soccer series (known as Winning Eleven in Japan). [1]
Krisalis Software had a strong history of football video games in the past, and inclusively released European Club Soccer, a game that simulated the old knockout format in 1992. With the official branding, Krisalis worked on a 3D engine, fitted with the Tacti-grid and gameplay in the line of their older games. It had all 16 teams present in the ...