After many years of watching European football on television, I'd like to think I know a little bit about what makes for a good simulation of the 'beautiful game'. Soccer fans from all over the world are able to re-live their favorite team's best moments, both on the club and international levels, and duke it out online against teams from different continents. However, not every football game is created equal. Something I know all too well after more than a decade playing EA's FIFA and Konami's PES/Winning Eleven games.
The FIFA series, while primarily an annual football simulation franchise, has taken a few chances with games like fan favorite FIFA Street and the quadrennial FIFA World Cup games alongside some smaller DLC releases like UEFA Euro 2012 and the now cancelled FIFA Manager titles.
The debate surrounding the best game in the series has been a hot button topic for fans since the early 2000s and is a bit more difficult to rank compared to a first-person shooter or third-person action series. Annual game franchises tend to be conservative in their changes, although hardcore fans are able to notice even the most minute of gameplay tweaks. While there certainly are some obvious candidates like the aforementioned FIFA Street, I'd like to imagine the most ardent of fans would tend to focus on the annual releases, which is what this list will definitely angle towards. Here are the past 25 FIFA games ranked!
25 FIFA 14
I play each FIFA title for about 250 hours before jumping on board with the next year's version. I remember the fond times I had playing FIFA 06 and 2010 FIFA World Cup among more recent releases like FIFA 13. I could tell you about the hilarious matches I had against friends or the trophies I won in Manager Mode. But I couldn't tell you anything about FIFA 14.
What's even more odd is that I bought FIFA 14 twice, both when the PS3 version came out in September of 2013🐓 and when it got🀅 ported to the PS4 a few weeks later in November. But yet, besides the main menu, I don't remember any particular matches or online shenanigans. And for I game I know I put roughly 200 hours into, that should say everything about its quality.
24 🔥 FIFA Street (2012)
FIFA Street 2012 is just a bad game. You would expect a game called FIFA Street, a reboot from the original 2005 version, would include a few more tactics tha🍬n simply using the same move over and over again. You would sadly, like I was, be sorely mistaken.
FIFA Street devolves into using the exact same spin move or juggle trick over and ov🦹er again unꦬtil you get near your opponents net and miss most of the time. And this strategy works on all players, even including defenders or your own goalkeeper making the trek across the court! How's that for fun? It's not! I couldn't imagine how hectic and frustrating the online experience must have been. Playing with a friend on a couch was maddening enough without adding the pressure of dropping points earned online.
23 FIFA 11
FIFA 11 is the only title where I simply loathe the overall aesthetics and look of the game. Menus and stylistic decisions about the way other sports game are presented might not be important to those fans, but I demand a welcoming and vibrant style to the FIFA games, and they've all delivered except for FIFA 11. It's just kind of bland and ugly.
It also doesn't help that the innovation from FIFA 10, with its introduction of 360 dribbling, simply stalled when FIFA 11 dropped, opting for a focus on what would eventually becomes FIFA's premier mode: Ultimate Team. As a Manager Mode fan, that was the final nail in the coffin, and I've never returned to FIFA 11 since. To top things off, it also has the weake🌄st soundtrack, although still very good.
22 FIFA 12
Like FIFA 11, FIFA 12 just felt unnecessary. And not being a fan of Ultimate Team, it felt like a way for EA to cash in. The Ultimate Team YouTube craze, with fans opening packs and screaming in their mom's house when they get an in-form 98 rated Cristiano Ronaldo, started with FIFA 12.
Even with my favorite real-life football team winning the Champions League—as many fans will understand the link between real-life success and the amount of hours played in FIFA—I still couldn't get myself to go into the menu and start up a match. However, this was when I managed to convince a few friends, who are now hardcore fans, to jump on the FIFA bandwagon. Althoug🌳h they're now even better than ♈I am!
21 FIFA 99
I know what you're thinking. FIFA... 99? 1999. Not 2099. The first FIFA game I ever played on my rickety old Dell computer. You could say it was the beginning of a lifelong fascination, but to be honest I only played a few matches. However, those matches were unlike any other I would 🍎play in the future.
FIFA 99 deserves a shout-out, even a negative one by being placed 💞this low on the list, solely for its charming 1999 pixel aesthetic and the ability to play full 90 minute matches. I don't mean 90 minute matches that skip dozens of seconds before your eyes like in the recent games. I mean 90 actual Earth minutes. And that is why I only played a few matches!
20 ☂ FIFA World Cup 2010 💯
Most of the games this low are just forgettable, and FIFA World Cup 2010 is no different. Even after many hours scrolling through a list of teams using the game's dynamic map feature, I couldn't find much to like about it. The gameplay is just horrendous and had me questioning how on earth a FIFA title that proceeded the technical marvel that is FIFA 10 happened to play this badly.
Yes, the selection of teams was impeccable, but half of them didn't have licensed kits. Playing the British Isles against the Maldives is fun in theory, until both teams show up with blank red and green kits. But hey, I had a few good laughs conceding with Germany against my brother who picked Botswana🔯, soඣ that was fun.
19 FIFA 05
There are some FIFA games that are known for one aspect or another. FIFA 13 has an excellent soundtrack, FIFA 06 pushed the franchise past Konami's PES, and people only like FIFA 05 because it contained an asinine amount of highly rated players. It's not a bad game, but it's far too highly rated within the FIFA community.
FIFA 05 hardly did any more than its predecessor and its focus was clearly to cash in on its excellent roster of players instead of pushing the boundaries of gameplay and fixing issues from previous games. Luis Figo, Roberto Carlos, and the original Ronaldo on the same team? That's why people like FIFA 05, and the insistence to pick the teams with the highest rated players continues to this day. How🍒ever, future games didn't just rely on that single 🃏aspect to pull in gamers.
18 FIFA 04
One of the few controversial opinions on this list, I just wasn't that encapsulated by FIFA 04. Many in the FIFA community consider it to be a top-5 game, but for me, it's just more of the same. Sure, the shooting mechanics—particularly with Ars꧟enal's Thierry Henry who was smacked on the game's cover—were an improvement from previous titles in the early 2000's, but besides that, it was more✱ of the same yearly football.
To be fair, I wasn't the fan I am today when the game came out, but future games being able to pull me in says more about FIFA 04 than it does about my football sensibilities at the time. And it doesn't help that I hate Arsenal Footbal🌠l Club! Fourth place fo🐼rever.
17 ꦉ FIFA Street 2 ✃
The delight I had when the original FIFA Street came out, despite its flaws, sadly did not translate to this trainwreck of a football title. My biggest issue was the unresponsive nature o♑f the players and the repetitive AI that pass by you using the same moves they used the last time they had possession. And the game just won't let you stop them!
Animations that either take too long to complete or frustratingly have your player being interrupted only to still carry on the animation as your opponent walks to your goal makes for completely unfair and unbalanced matches. Having said that, it was only the second Street game to release, so the novelty of nut-meggin🐈g your🀅 friends had not worn off completely.
16 🍨 UEFA Champions 🐭League 2006-07
Unlike another title with a similar name on this list, the 2006 version of the UEFA Champions League game really wasn't that good - and that's being kind. And it follows the same 'let's not change anything at all except to re-skin the game with different kits and badges for the te�🌼�ams and call it a day' pattern.
Oh, and I forgot to add: 'and let's make the gameplay far worse than the last game'. UEFA Champions League 06-07 doesn't deserve to be in the same breath as the two mainline games that it was sandwiched in between—FIFA 06 and FIFA 07. I'm all for🍨 spin-offs, but let's not be lazy EA! You can start by purchasing the UEFA license back from Konami. Please.