
Jockeying has never been more important along with the timeliness of your interceptions: it’s often a bad idea to charge down the opposition. It’s a little alarming to see high-scoring draws to begin with (the Real/Atletico prelude ended in a 6-5 win for me), but it’s the game’s very blunt way of telling you to change the way you play. It’s a welcome change that makes all AI matches feel closer to the real thing, far more tactical than just distributing it to the wings and holding down sprint.ĭefending is also not quite as simple as before with EA Sports seemingly toning down how much the AI helps you out. The solution that I have found most effective is one-two passing combined with some tricks because lingering on the ball or just trying to sprint past them more often than not results in dispossession.

The AI must have been stocking up on its B vitamins as they’re relentless and almost robotically efficient in their defending they have an answer for almost everything. There’s a big emphasis on speed this year with fast wingers more often than not making the difference – at least when playing online. It’s a little overwhelming at first and feels as if it’s catering primarily to Premier League fans, but it’s a breathless and incredibly satisfying game of football all the same. The most obvious changes in the gameplay department have proved to be some of the game’s most controversial: FIFA 18 is about as frenetic on the pitch as a pack of Jack Russell Terriers chasing the same toy. Some of its harshest critics say it’s more akin to a FIFA 17.5 and there’s definitely weight to that argument, but whereas I could quite easily wander away from FIFA 17 and find something better to do, FIFA 18 is tough to shake.
Fifa 18 gameplay after pause and play series#
There’s no genre-defining revolution to be found here, rather a series of small but noticeable changes that improve on what came before it. You just tweak and update, add new features that could work and take away those that don’t.įIFA 18 is no different. After over twenty years of developing and refining the simulated football experience, how can you continue to redefine what you’ve built to make kicking around a pigskin on some grass as satisfying as possible? The short answer: you don’t. If you ask me the game as taken a turn for the worst in this sense, people don't actually care about playing the game - and are doing all the other activities in it.I really don’t envy EA Sports. I did message a lad a few days back asking why quit after 2 seconds? Totally spoils the game and this mode, just don't understand it. It's the people who quit within 2 seconds of kicking off the game.įUT online singles, try it, you will get many people doing this. You may be talking about people like me, only thing is I don't want to quit, but it kicks me approx 34 mins in to game play vs online fut, so It's not people like you, this can't be helped if you are disconnected. It really p****s me off that someone does this, a complete waste of my time, that I can not do anything about. When I want to play a game, I go to play a game, simple. I would like to see EA do something about this, to deter these stupid actions by these types of people out there. If people do not want to play the game (like the above example given), then don't enter a game. The ball goes out of play, into pause mode and they quit!!! Is the amount of opponents in the FUT online single game mode that I have paired up against, gone through team selection, kit selection, commentary and intro, for them to straight after kick off and see the "pause queuing" icon at the top of the screen come up. One obvious negative for me that I have seen.
