Compare FIFA 17 prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Electronic Arts Inc.. Published by EA Sports. Released on 9/29/2016. Available on Origin, PC. Genres: Sport, Simulation, Casual. Metacritic score: 84/100.

The entry that gave FIFA a proper story mode and swapped its engine in one shot. Worth a look if you missed it, even in 2026.

I came into FIFA 17 sceptical of the hype around its big new additions, but it turns out the year EA dropped both a brand-new engine and a full story mode was genuinely worth paying attention to. The switch from the old Ignite engine to Frostbite is the foundation everything else sits on. Stadiums at night, mist hovering over the pitch, real Premier League managers pacing the touchline in recognisable likenesses - the presentation gap between this and its predecessor is immediately obvious. Whether the underlying football is better is a trickier question, and the honest answer is: mostly yes, with caveats. On the pitch, the biggest change is that pace on the wings actually means something again. Overlapping runs from teammates open up flanks in a way earlier entries discouraged, and a new threaded through-ball lets you bend passes ahead of a runner with the inside or outside of the boot. Shooting also feels crisper - driven shots and low finesse strikes land with more conviction than in FIFA 16. The rough edges are real though: the new penalty system, which swaps the old timing bar for an analogue stick aim-and-power approach, has a sensitivity problem that sends far too many efforts either into the stands or trickling embarrassingly toward the keeper. Set-piece reworks similarly have a learning curve that can feel arbitrary rather than rewarding. The mode that got everybody talking is The Journey, a story-driven single-player campaign following Alex Hunter, a 17-year-old from South London trying to break into the Premier League. You pick your club from all 20 Premier League sides, get loaned out, deal with a rivalrous childhood friend in Gareth Walker, and shape Hunter's personality through dialogue choices split between cool, balanced, and fiery responses. The production quality is genuinely impressive for a sports game - cutscenes hold up, and the commentary around Hunter's social media presence adds a layer of texture. The limitation is that the story is largely on rails. Key plot beats fire regardless of how well you perform, the difficulty of matches shifts to serve the narrative rather than your ability, and replay value is thin once the credits roll. It works best as a one-time single-player experience that eases less familiar players into the game's mechanics through structured training drills. FUT (FIFA Ultimate Team) is where the real long-term value sits, and FIFA 17 added two worthwhile hooks: Squad Building Challenges, which give active collectors a reason to do something with their surplus bronze and silver cards, and FUT Champions, a weekend league format where daily knockout tournaments feed into ranked weekend competition. Career Mode received smaller but welcome improvements to transfer budgets and touchline manager representation. Players who burned out on previous FUT cycles will find nothing here to change their minds - the loop of packs and cards is the same one that has always lived in this franchise. But for anyone who does enjoy building squads and grinding ladder play, this is one of the stronger iterations. As a historical purchase, FIFA 17 holds up as a solid football game with one genuinely memorable addition in The Journey and one contentious one in the new set-piece controls. It is not a revolutionary rethink of football simulation - PES 2017 competed seriously on pure ball physics that year - but for licensing depth, presentation, and mode variety, FIFA 17 is hard to argue with. If you are getting into this era of the series now, know that The Journey is a one-and-done campaign, and that FUT is the mode designed to absorb months of your time. Go in with eyes open to both. Alex, Scout Team

FIFA 17

FIFA 17

Sep 29, 2016Electronic Arts Inc.EA Sports
GamerScout Says

The entry that gave FIFA a proper story mode and swapped its engine in one shot. Worth a look if you missed it, even in 2026.

OriginPC
Best Price Available
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GamerScout Verdict

A solid football package best justified by The Journey's one-time story appeal and FUT Champions for competitive squad builders.

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Screenshots & Media

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About FIFA 17

I came into FIFA 17 sceptical of the hype around its big new additions, but it turns out the year EA dropped both a brand-new engine and a full story mode was genuinely worth paying attention to. The switch from the old Ignite engine to Frostbite is the foundation everything else sits on. Stadiums at night, mist hovering over the pitch, real Premier League managers pacing the touchline in recognisable likenesses - the presentation gap between this and its predecessor is immediately obvious. Whether the underlying football is better is a trickier question, and the honest answer is: mostly yes, with caveats. On the pitch, the biggest change is that pace on the wings actually means something again. Overlapping runs from teammates open up flanks in a way earlier entries discouraged, and a new threaded through-ball lets you bend passes ahead of a runner with the inside or outside of the boot. Shooting also feels crisper - driven shots and low finesse strikes land with more conviction than in FIFA 16. The rough edges are real though: the new penalty system, which swaps the old timing bar for an analogue stick aim-and-power approach, has a sensitivity problem that sends far too many efforts either into the stands or trickling embarrassingly toward the keeper. Set-piece reworks similarly have a learning curve that can feel arbitrary rather than rewarding. The mode that got everybody talking is The Journey, a story-driven single-player campaign following Alex Hunter, a 17-year-old from South London trying to break into the Premier League. You pick your club from all 20 Premier League sides, get loaned out, deal with a rivalrous childhood friend in Gareth Walker, and shape Hunter's personality through dialogue choices split between cool, balanced, and fiery responses. The production quality is genuinely impressive for a sports game - cutscenes hold up, and the commentary around Hunter's social media presence adds a layer of texture. The limitation is that the story is largely on rails. Key plot beats fire regardless of how well you perform, the difficulty of matches shifts to serve the narrative rather than your ability, and replay value is thin once the credits roll. It works best as a one-time single-player experience that eases less familiar players into the game's mechanics through structured training drills. FUT (FIFA Ultimate Team) is where the real long-term value sits, and FIFA 17 added two worthwhile hooks: Squad Building Challenges, which give active collectors a reason to do something with their surplus bronze and silver cards, and FUT Champions, a weekend league format where daily knockout tournaments feed into ranked weekend competition. Career Mode received smaller but welcome improvements to transfer budgets and touchline manager representation. Players who burned out on previous FUT cycles will find nothing here to change their minds - the loop of packs and cards is the same one that has always lived in this franchise. But for anyone who does enjoy building squads and grinding ladder play, this is one of the stronger iterations. As a historical purchase, FIFA 17 holds up as a solid football game with one genuinely memorable addition in The Journey and one contentious one in the new set-piece controls. It is not a revolutionary rethink of football simulation - PES 2017 competed seriously on pure ball physics that year - but for licensing depth, presentation, and mode variety, FIFA 17 is hard to argue with. If you are getting into this era of the series now, know that The Journey is a one-and-done campaign, and that FUT is the mode designed to absorb months of your time. Go in with eyes open to both.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

tier:no-steam-match:aaa-pricedenriched-from-kinguinStory ModeFUT ChampionsSquad BuildingCareer ModeFrostbite EngineWeekend LeagueSingle-Player CampaignAnnual Sports

System Requirements

Minimum

Windows 7/8.1/10 - 64-Bit CPU: Intel Core i3-2100 @ 3.1GHz or AMD Phenom II X4 965 @ 3.4 GHz RAM: 8GB Hard Drive Space Required: 50.0 GB Minimum Supported Video Cards: NVIDIA GTX 460 or AMD Radeon R7 260 DirectX: 11.0

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
84

Game Info

Developer
Electronic Arts Inc.
Publisher
EA Sports
Release Date
Sep 29, 2016

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Frequently asked questions about FIFA 17

How much does FIFA 17 cost?

FIFA 17 pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

Where can I buy FIFA 17 cheapest?

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What platforms is FIFA 17 available on?

FIFA 17 is available on Origin, PC.

When was FIFA 17 released?

FIFA 17 was released on 29 September 2016.

Who developed FIFA 17?

FIFA 17 was developed by Electronic Arts Inc. and published by EA Sports.

Is FIFA 17 worth buying?

FIFA 17 holds a Metacritic score of 84/100, making it one of the standout Sport titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.