Compare Cricket Captain 2016 prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Childish Things. Published by KISS ltd. Released on 7/4/2016. Available on PC. Genres: Simulation, Sports.

Deep cricket management for die-hard fans only - if you need a rulebook before you can name a batting order, this one will eat you alive.

I'll be straight with you: I came to Cricket Captain 2016 as someone who covers shooters for a living, which means I had to put genuine effort into understanding what this game is actually doing before I could tell you whether it's worth your time. What I found is a management simulation that is almost deliberately hostile to outsiders - and that is both its biggest strength and its clearest weakness. The core loop is about making tactical decisions as a team captain and manager across Test matches, One Day Internationals, and T20 formats. You set fielding positions, manage bowler rotations, pick your lineup from a squad, and try to outthink an AI opponent across formats that each demand a different read of conditions. The 3D match engine shows you highlights of key moments rather than playing the whole thing out ball-by-ball in real time, which keeps sessions moving. Day-night matches are in here with a new lighting system, and user-controlled cameras give you a bit more visual variety when watching those highlights. On paper, that sounds approachable. In practice, the game front-loads you with menus, statistics tables, and squad management screens without much scaffolding. The in-game help system exists, but it does not hold your hand. Critics noted that the game is "far too convoluted and menu heavy" for the casual cricket fan, and that assessment tracks. For the audience it actually targets - people who already know what a seam bowler does in overcast conditions, who understand why you'd shuffle a tail-ender up the order in a T20 chase - there is genuine depth here. The roster covers 79 domestic teams across five leagues, including South African and New Zealand domestic sides added for this edition. The ODI and T20 World Cup tournament modes let you play as smaller international sides like Afghanistan, Ireland, or Scotland, which is a nice touch for fans of the global game. Historical scenarios featuring Sri Lanka and Pakistan add some replayable variety beyond the career grind. Player form calculation for shorter formats was specifically improved in this version, and the database received updated ability ratings. The multiplayer online PvP mode means you can take that tactical knowledge and test it against another human, which is where the strategic friction actually shines. The negatives are harder to ignore in 2025. Steam user reviews sit at a mixed 58%, and the long-running community criticism of the series is fair: year-on-year releases from Childish Things have historically moved the needle on database updates and cosmetic polish more than on structural mechanics. There is no player editor in this version, something the community loudly flagged at launch. AI selection logic had documented quirks. The series has continued releasing annual editions all the way to 2025, so if you want the most current rosters and engine improvements, newer entries objectively cover more ground. Buying the 2016 edition today makes sense only if you want a lower-cost entry point into the series format, or you specifically care about the 2016 squad data. Fred, Scout Team

Cricket Captain 2016
SimulationSports

Cricket Captain 2016

Jul 4, 2016Childish ThingsKISS ltd
GamerScout Says

Deep cricket management for die-hard fans only - if you need a rulebook before you can name a batting order, this one will eat you alive.

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About Cricket Captain 2016

I'll be straight with you: I came to Cricket Captain 2016 as someone who covers shooters for a living, which means I had to put genuine effort into understanding what this game is actually doing before I could tell you whether it's worth your time. What I found is a management simulation that is almost deliberately hostile to outsiders - and that is both its biggest strength and its clearest weakness. The core loop is about making tactical decisions as a team captain and manager across Test matches, One Day Internationals, and T20 formats. You set fielding positions, manage bowler rotations, pick your lineup from a squad, and try to outthink an AI opponent across formats that each demand a different read of conditions. The 3D match engine shows you highlights of key moments rather than playing the whole thing out ball-by-ball in real time, which keeps sessions moving. Day-night matches are in here with a new lighting system, and user-controlled cameras give you a bit more visual variety when watching those highlights. On paper, that sounds approachable. In practice, the game front-loads you with menus, statistics tables, and squad management screens without much scaffolding. The in-game help system exists, but it does not hold your hand. Critics noted that the game is "far too convoluted and menu heavy" for the casual cricket fan, and that assessment tracks. For the audience it actually targets - people who already know what a seam bowler does in overcast conditions, who understand why you'd shuffle a tail-ender up the order in a T20 chase - there is genuine depth here. The roster covers 79 domestic teams across five leagues, including South African and New Zealand domestic sides added for this edition. The ODI and T20 World Cup tournament modes let you play as smaller international sides like Afghanistan, Ireland, or Scotland, which is a nice touch for fans of the global game. Historical scenarios featuring Sri Lanka and Pakistan add some replayable variety beyond the career grind. Player form calculation for shorter formats was specifically improved in this version, and the database received updated ability ratings. The multiplayer online PvP mode means you can take that tactical knowledge and test it against another human, which is where the strategic friction actually shines. The negatives are harder to ignore in 2025. Steam user reviews sit at a mixed 58%, and the long-running community criticism of the series is fair: year-on-year releases from Childish Things have historically moved the needle on database updates and cosmetic polish more than on structural mechanics. There is no player editor in this version, something the community loudly flagged at launch. AI selection logic had documented quirks. The series has continued releasing annual editions all the way to 2025, so if you want the most current rosters and engine improvements, newer entries objectively cover more ground. Buying the 2016 edition today makes sense only if you want a lower-cost entry point into the series format, or you specifically care about the 2016 squad data. Fred, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvpachievementstier:sub-5Cricket ManagementTurn-Based TacticsCareer ModeHistorical ScenariosT20 ModeODI TournamentAnnual Sports SimDeep Micromanagement

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows Vista SP2/Windows 7 SP1/8/10
Memory
2 GB RAM
Graphics
Intel - HD 3000 Nvidia Laptop - GeForce 310m Nvidia Desktop - GeForce 510 AMD Laptop - Mobility Radeon HD 2600 XT AMD Desktop - Radeon HD 5450

Recommended

OS
Windows Vista SP2/Windows 7 SP1/8/10
Memory
2 GB RAM
Graphics
Intel - HD 4000 Nvidia Laptop - GeForce 620m Nvidia Desktop - GeForce 710 AMD Laptop - Radeon HD 7550m AMD Desktop - Radeon HD 6450

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Childish Things
Publisher
KISS ltd
Release Date
Jul 4, 2016

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