Compare EA SPORTS™ FIFA 23 prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by EA Canada. Published by Electronic Arts. Released on 9/30/2022. Available on PC. Genres: Simulation, Sports.

The last game to carry the FIFA name lands with genuine on-pitch improvements, but an ocean of microtransactions and years of accumulated baggage keep it firmly in 'Mixed' territory on Steam.

I've sat through enough Saturday night couch sessions with FIFA to know the difference between a game that's fun to pick up and one that just looks fun in the trailer. FIFA 23 sits awkwardly between those two poles. On the pitch, there are real, tangible upgrades this time around. The new AcceleRATE movement system gives players distinct archetypes: Controlled, Explosive, and Lengthy, meaning the guy you're chasing actually feels different to the guy doing the chasing. Power Shots, where you hold both shoulder buttons and commit to a high-risk, high-reward cannon strike, add genuine drama to attacking play. Set pieces and free kicks also received meaningful reworks, and the pacing of matches feels notably slower and more deliberate than the sprint-fest of FIFA 22. For a casual four-player kickabout with a controller each, that slower tempo actually helps: it's more readable, and quick learners can hold their own without memorising skill move strings. Split-screen is present and works fine, which is the baseline requirement for any sports title at my table. Cross-platform multiplayer is a genuine step forward, letting PC, PS5, and Xbox Series players queue together in most modes. The inclusion of women's club teams and a Women's World Cup tournament rounds out the content in a way that genuinely adds variety for group sessions where not everyone wants to be Manchester City again. Career Mode got small but appreciated upgrades: player personalities now affect stat growth based on how you play, and the transfer menu flow is cleaner. Ted Lasso's AFC Richmond showing up as a playable club, complete with Roy Kent, is the kind of left-field addition that gets a room laughing. Here is where the mood shifts, though. Ultimate Team remains the gravitational centre of the entire product, and it pulls hard toward spending real money to stay competitive online. The chemistry system was updated, and FUT Moments add rotating scenarios to chase, but the underlying pack-purchase loop is as aggressive as ever. Pro Clubs received almost no meaningful attention, Career Mode fans will recognise most of what's here from previous years, and Volta Football continues to feel like a mode nobody asked to keep. On PC specifically, launch complaints about the anti-cheat system and optimisation issues contributed heavily to the Steam review bombing that landed the game at a "Mixed" score from over 150,000 reviews. Patches addressed some problems post-launch, but the technical reputation on PC never fully recovered. For the Saturday night crowd: three friends and a newcomer on the couch will have a good time. The controls are approachable with a gamepad, the new shooting mechanics give everyone a moment of celebration even on a losing streak, and the women's national and club teams add useful roster variety for groups who rotate who they play as. If you are a returning FIFA player expecting a meaningful leap forward, or if you plan to invest serious time in Ultimate Team without opening your wallet, manage expectations sharply. This is a better-playing game than its immediate predecessor, but it is still recognisably the same annual product with familiar limits. Riley, Scout Team

EA SPORTS™ FIFA 23

EA SPORTS™ FIFA 23

Sep 30, 2022EA CanadaElectronic Arts
GamerScout Says

The last game to carry the FIFA name lands with genuine on-pitch improvements, but an ocean of microtransactions and years of accumulated baggage keep it firmly in 'Mixed' territory on Steam.

PC
Steam Deck UnsupportedProtonDB Bronze
Best Price Available
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Historical low: €30.03

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Price History

Historical low
€30.036 Jun 2026
Keyshops
€29.73€30.77€31.80€32.845 Jun12 Jun19 Jun26 Jun3 Jul
Tracking prices since 5 Jun 2026
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Screenshots & Media

About EA SPORTS™ FIFA 23

I've sat through enough Saturday night couch sessions with FIFA to know the difference between a game that's fun to pick up and one that just looks fun in the trailer. FIFA 23 sits awkwardly between those two poles. On the pitch, there are real, tangible upgrades this time around. The new AcceleRATE movement system gives players distinct archetypes: Controlled, Explosive, and Lengthy, meaning the guy you're chasing actually feels different to the guy doing the chasing. Power Shots, where you hold both shoulder buttons and commit to a high-risk, high-reward cannon strike, add genuine drama to attacking play. Set pieces and free kicks also received meaningful reworks, and the pacing of matches feels notably slower and more deliberate than the sprint-fest of FIFA 22. For a casual four-player kickabout with a controller each, that slower tempo actually helps: it's more readable, and quick learners can hold their own without memorising skill move strings. Split-screen is present and works fine, which is the baseline requirement for any sports title at my table. Cross-platform multiplayer is a genuine step forward, letting PC, PS5, and Xbox Series players queue together in most modes. The inclusion of women's club teams and a Women's World Cup tournament rounds out the content in a way that genuinely adds variety for group sessions where not everyone wants to be Manchester City again. Career Mode got small but appreciated upgrades: player personalities now affect stat growth based on how you play, and the transfer menu flow is cleaner. Ted Lasso's AFC Richmond showing up as a playable club, complete with Roy Kent, is the kind of left-field addition that gets a room laughing. Here is where the mood shifts, though. Ultimate Team remains the gravitational centre of the entire product, and it pulls hard toward spending real money to stay competitive online. The chemistry system was updated, and FUT Moments add rotating scenarios to chase, but the underlying pack-purchase loop is as aggressive as ever. Pro Clubs received almost no meaningful attention, Career Mode fans will recognise most of what's here from previous years, and Volta Football continues to feel like a mode nobody asked to keep. On PC specifically, launch complaints about the anti-cheat system and optimisation issues contributed heavily to the Steam review bombing that landed the game at a "Mixed" score from over 150,000 reviews. Patches addressed some problems post-launch, but the technical reputation on PC never fully recovered. For the Saturday night crowd: three friends and a newcomer on the couch will have a good time. The controls are approachable with a gamepad, the new shooting mechanics give everyone a moment of celebration even on a losing streak, and the women's national and club teams add useful roster variety for groups who rotate who they play as. If you are a returning FIFA player expecting a meaningful leap forward, or if you plan to invest serious time in Ultimate Team without opening your wallet, manage expectations sharply. This is a better-playing game than its immediate predecessor, but it is still recognisably the same annual product with familiar limits.

Riley
Riley · Scout Team

Sports & racing

Tags

Single-playerMulti-playerPvPOnline PvPShared/Split Screen PvPCo-opOnline Co-opShared/Split Screen Co-opShared/Split ScreenCross-Platform MultiplayerSteam AchievementsFull controller supportIn-App PurchasesSplit-Screen SportsPower Shot MechanicAcceleRATE SystemWomen's Football IncludedCross-Platform PlayCareer ModeFUT GrindCouch MultiplayerAnti-Cheat Controversy

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 - 64-Bit (Latest Update)
Processor
Intel Core i5 6600k or AMD Ryzen 5 1600
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti or AMD Radeo…

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 - 64-Bit (Latest Update)
Processor
Intel Core i7 6700 or AMD Ryzen 7 2700X
Memory
12 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1660 or AMD Rad…

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
57%(150,520)

Game Info

Developer
EA Canada
Publisher
Electronic Arts
Release Date
Sep 30, 2022

Game Modes

singleplayer
multiplayer
coop
online coop
local coop
Online Co-op
Local Co-op

Languages

Audio (12)
EnglishFrenchItalianGermanSpanish - SpainArabic+6 more
Subtitles (21)
EnglishFrenchItalianGermanSpanish - SpainArabic+15 more

Features

AchievementsController Support

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Frequently asked questions about EA SPORTS™ FIFA 23

How much does EA SPORTS™ FIFA 23 cost?

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What platforms is EA SPORTS™ FIFA 23 available on?

EA SPORTS™ FIFA 23 is available on PC.

When was EA SPORTS™ FIFA 23 released?

EA SPORTS™ FIFA 23 was released on 30 September 2022.

Who developed EA SPORTS™ FIFA 23?

EA SPORTS™ FIFA 23 was developed by EA Canada and published by Electronic Arts.