EA Sports and FIFA are breaking up after this year, but developers at EA Vancouver vow fans will get a passionate last dance in FIFA 23, which the studio is billing as the biggest soccer game it’s ever built.
For starters, FIFA 23 will deliver long anticipated — and overdue, in the eyes of many — cross-platform multiplayer, with some limitations at first. EA Sports confirmed that a new matchmaking ecosystem, tested this spring in FIFA 22, will be available at launch. Players also get both the World Cup (commencing Nov. 21) and Women’s World Cup (July 20, 2023), with those tournaments’ branding, national teams, and players, for the first time in the same game.
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Women’s professional club soccer will make its debut in FIFA 23, seven years after women’s national teams joined the football simulation in its tournament and one-off play-now modes. Perhaps most importantly, Windows PC players will now get a game upgraded to the engine that PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X users have played with since 2020.
“This is our last FIFA-titled game, after a rich 30-year history,” producer Matt LaFreniere said in a closed presentation last week. “So we know that it has to be special.”
For starters, there’s some fine print on cross-platform play. The older consoles, PlayStation 4 and Xbox One, will be able to play with the newer members of their console family as well as each other. “This is a long time coming for FIFA and we know that our players have been waiting for this,” LaFreniere said.
Xbox Series X, PlayStation 5, and Windows PC will be able to play amongst themselves (as well as the older members of their platform type). The cross-play expansion will speed matchmaking time, LaFreniere said; further, “We’re already
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