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FIFA 14 is a football simulation video game developed by EA Canada and published by Electronic Arts worldwide under the EA Sports label. It was released in September 2013 for the PlayStation 2, PlayStation 3, PlayStation Portable, PlayStation Vita, Xbox 360, Wii, Nintendo 3DS and Windows. [6]
[9] [10] The FIFA 19 downloadable update allowed users to play only the 2019 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, [11] and FIFA 23 featured women's club football, the UEFA Women's Champions League, and the Women's World Cup tournament mode for the first time in the FIFA series, replicating the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup and becoming EA Sports' most ...
Below is a list of the 2021 FIFA Club World Cup squads. [1] Each team had to name a 23-man squad (three of whom had to be goalkeepers). Injury replacements were allowed until 24 hours before the team's first match.
Based on FIFA 14, the game offers both match and FIFA Ultimate Team gameplay. Announced on 9 August 2013, an open beta was released on 12 November 2013 in Brazil and Russia, [79] before being made globally available on 20 May 2014. [80] The game went offline on 14 July 2015.
(1 team) 2023 OFC Futsal Nations Cup New Zealand: 1st N/A Debut: UEFA (Europe) (7 teams) 2024 FIFA Futsal World Cup qualification (UEFA) Croatia: 2nd 2000: Fifth place France: 1st N/A Debut Kazakhstan: 4th 2021: Fourth place Netherlands: 5th 2000: Runners-up Portugal: 7th 2021: Champions Spain: 10th 2021: Champions (2000, 2004) Ukraine: 6th
The Ultimate and Champions editions were released on 6 October ahead of the release of the standard edition on 9 October. [21] EA Play subscribers were able to get a 10-hour early access trial of FIFA 21 on 1 October. [22] The game was also released on PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, and Stadia in December. [21] FIFA 21 did not contain a demo.
FIFA club competitions (4 C, 6 P) N. FIFA competitions for national teams (10 C, 9 P) V. FIFA (video game series) competitions (7 P) This page was last edited on 5 ...
For the 2023–24 UEFA Champions League, the associations were allocated places according to their 2022 UEFA association coefficients, which took into account their performance in European competitions from 2017–18 to 2021–22. [7] The team allocation reflected Russia's ongoing suspension from UEFA competitions.