Compare FIFA 22 prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by EA Canada & EA Romania. Published by Electronic Arts. Released on 10/1/2021. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Simulation, Sports.

Solid split-screen sessions, improved goalkeepers, and a career mode that finally lets you build your own club - just know the PC version misses out on the headline HyperMotion tech.

I have spent enough Saturday nights passing a controller around to know that the first question any group of mates asks is not 'is this realistic?' - it's 'can I score a screamer and rub it in?' FIFA 22 answers that second question well, and it does so across a surprisingly wide range of modes. The on-pitch feel is slower and heavier than previous entries, which turns out to be a good thing. Passes require patience, defenders are harder to breeze past, and the new Explosive Sprint mechanic rewards you for picking the right moment to burst away from a marker rather than just holding the sprint button from kick-off. Improved goalkeeper AI means cheap near-post goals from previous games are less automatic, and matches have a genuine ebb and flow that makes them more watchable from across the room. For group play, the split-screen and local co-op support is there when you need it, and the Volta Football mode adds a scrappy, shorter-format street game that works brilliantly as a quick warm-up before jumping into proper matches. The Volta Arcade games - think footy-tennis, dodgeball-style variants - are chaotic fun, though EA's decision to lock that Arcade content to weekends only is the kind of arbitrary restriction that makes you scratch your head mid-session. Pro Clubs lets up to 11 people play together online in coordinated team matches, and Kick-Off quick games with House Rules options keep casual sessions moving fast with minimal setup faff. Career Mode receives a genuinely welcome addition in the form of create-a-club, letting you name your side, design a crest and kit from scratch, pick your stadium and set your budget before starting a league campaign. It hooks you in a way that generic manager saves often don't, because you are invested in the team from minute one. Player Career is less satisfying - there is a skill-tree system for upgrading your attributes, but outside of matches there is very little to actually do, and most players will drift back to the manager chair inside a few hours. The elephant in the room for PC players is HyperMotion, the motion-capture animation system that EA used as the flagship selling point for this entry. It is locked to PS5 and Xbox Series X versions. The PC version does not get it. The game still looks sharp and plays well, but if you have been sold on the idea of 4,000 new animations making every touch feel unique, that is a next-gen console exclusive experience. What PC does get is fast load times between matches, responsive controls with a gamepad, and perfectly adequate visuals - just manage your expectations against the console marketing material. FIFA Ultimate Team remains the mode where the community spends the most time and EA spends the most development attention. The card-collecting, squad-building loop is deep and genuinely absorbing, but the pay-to-win atmosphere in online competitive play is real and well-documented. Grinding for coins through the transfer market has also been made harder this cycle, with pack prices adjusted in ways that push players toward spending real money. If FUT is your primary reason for buying, go in with eyes open. If you care more about Career Mode, Volta, Pro Clubs, or sofa co-op, you will get a lot of football for your money without touching FUT at all. Riley, Scout Team

FIFA 22

FIFA 22

Oct 1, 2021EA Canada & EA RomaniaElectronic Arts
GamerScout Says

Solid split-screen sessions, improved goalkeepers, and a career mode that finally lets you build your own club - just know the PC version misses out on the headline HyperMotion tech.

PCXbox
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Gold
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Historical low: €19.94

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Price History

Historical low
€19.945 Jun 2026
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€17.53€25.82€34.11€42.405 Jun12 Jun19 Jun25 Jun2 Jul
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Screenshots & Media

About FIFA 22

I have spent enough Saturday nights passing a controller around to know that the first question any group of mates asks is not 'is this realistic?' - it's 'can I score a screamer and rub it in?' FIFA 22 answers that second question well, and it does so across a surprisingly wide range of modes. The on-pitch feel is slower and heavier than previous entries, which turns out to be a good thing. Passes require patience, defenders are harder to breeze past, and the new Explosive Sprint mechanic rewards you for picking the right moment to burst away from a marker rather than just holding the sprint button from kick-off. Improved goalkeeper AI means cheap near-post goals from previous games are less automatic, and matches have a genuine ebb and flow that makes them more watchable from across the room. For group play, the split-screen and local co-op support is there when you need it, and the Volta Football mode adds a scrappy, shorter-format street game that works brilliantly as a quick warm-up before jumping into proper matches. The Volta Arcade games - think footy-tennis, dodgeball-style variants - are chaotic fun, though EA's decision to lock that Arcade content to weekends only is the kind of arbitrary restriction that makes you scratch your head mid-session. Pro Clubs lets up to 11 people play together online in coordinated team matches, and Kick-Off quick games with House Rules options keep casual sessions moving fast with minimal setup faff. Career Mode receives a genuinely welcome addition in the form of create-a-club, letting you name your side, design a crest and kit from scratch, pick your stadium and set your budget before starting a league campaign. It hooks you in a way that generic manager saves often don't, because you are invested in the team from minute one. Player Career is less satisfying - there is a skill-tree system for upgrading your attributes, but outside of matches there is very little to actually do, and most players will drift back to the manager chair inside a few hours. The elephant in the room for PC players is HyperMotion, the motion-capture animation system that EA used as the flagship selling point for this entry. It is locked to PS5 and Xbox Series X versions. The PC version does not get it. The game still looks sharp and plays well, but if you have been sold on the idea of 4,000 new animations making every touch feel unique, that is a next-gen console exclusive experience. What PC does get is fast load times between matches, responsive controls with a gamepad, and perfectly adequate visuals - just manage your expectations against the console marketing material. FIFA Ultimate Team remains the mode where the community spends the most time and EA spends the most development attention. The card-collecting, squad-building loop is deep and genuinely absorbing, but the pay-to-win atmosphere in online competitive play is real and well-documented. Grinding for coins through the transfer market has also been made harder this cycle, with pack prices adjusted in ways that push players toward spending real money. If FUT is your primary reason for buying, go in with eyes open. If you care more about Career Mode, Volta, Pro Clubs, or sofa co-op, you will get a lot of football for your money without touching FUT at all.

Riley
Riley · Scout Team

Sports & racing

Tags

Single-playerMulti-playerMMOPvPOnline PvPShared/Split Screen PvPCo-opOnline Co-opShared/Split Screen Co-opShared/Split ScreenSteam AchievementsIn-App PurchasesPartial Controller SupportSplit-Screen Local MultiplayerCareer ModeCreate-A-ClubVolta FootballPro ClubsFUT MicrotransactionsCasual-FriendlyGamepad OptimisedStreet Football

System Requirements

Minimum

64-bit Windows 10 Processor (AMD): Athlon X4 880K @4GHz or Equivalent Processor (Intel): Core i3-6100 @3.7GHz or Equivalent Memory: 8 GB Graphics card (AMD): Radeon HD 7850 or Equivalent Graphics card (NVIDIA): GeForce…

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 - 64-Bit (Latest Update)
Processor
Intel i5-3550 @ 3.40GHz or AMD FX 8150 @ 3.6GHz
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 670 or A…

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
81%(120,030)

Game Info

Developer
EA Canada & EA Romania
Publisher
Electronic Arts
Release Date
Oct 1, 2021

Game Modes

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

Languages

Audio (13)
EnglishFrenchItalianGermanSpanish - SpainArabic+7 more
Subtitles (21)
EnglishFrenchItalianGermanSpanish - SpainArabic+15 more

Features

Achievements

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Frequently asked questions about FIFA 22

How much does FIFA 22 cost?

FIFA 22 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 22 cheapest?

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What platforms is FIFA 22 available on?

FIFA 22 is available on PC, Xbox.

When was FIFA 22 released?

FIFA 22 was released on 1 October 2021.

Who developed FIFA 22?

FIFA 22 was developed by EA Canada & EA Romania and published by Electronic Arts.