Compare Football Manager 2022 prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Sports Interactive. Published by SEGA. Released on 11/8/2021. Available on PC. Genres: Simulation, Sports, Strategy. Metacritic score: 87/100.

Hardcore football obsessives will sink 200+ hours into FM22's Data Hub and revamped pressing system. FM21 veterans, though, should think twice before double-dipping on incremental gains.

I have a spreadsheet that tracks every FM version's incremental changes back to FM14, so when Sports Interactive drops a new annual entry, I go in with calibrated expectations rather than hype. FM22 lands as a meaningful but measured step forward: the headline additions are the Data Hub, an overhauled pressing system, a reimagined Transfer Deadline Day, and the new Wide Centre-Back role popularised by Thomas Tuchel. None of these rewrite the formula, but together they push the sim closer to how real football management actually operates in 2022. The match engine is the most tangible upgrade for anyone who watches their games rather than simming them. Pressing now includes per-player triggers, so you can instruct a striker to harry a specific centre-back who is weak in possession without committing the whole team to a high press. Gegenpress setups and counter-attacking shapes in particular benefit from this granularity. The Wide Centre-Back role also opens up genuinely new tactical space: you can flip a back-three into a back-four in possession by pushing one CB wide and high, which changes your build-up geometry in ways that cascade through your entire shape. That said, inter-player animations are still occasionally stiff mid-turn, and some positional logic in transition breaks down at the edges. The engine is better; it is not perfect. The Data Hub is where the strategy-sim audience should focus their attention. xG curves, pass maps, pressing intensity charts, and per-player performance graphs all consolidate into a single post-match screen. If you previously had to triangulate three separate panels to figure out why your right winger kept backtracking into a central-midfield role, the Data Hub usually surfaces the answer faster. Scout reports have also been condensed from a multi-request paper trail into a single continuously updated dossier, which matters enormously when you are running a scouting network across four continents. Transfer Deadline Day now gets its own dedicated UI mode with agents pitching clients in real time, rival clubs tabling late bids, and a rolling social media feed. It sounds cosmetic but it changes your decision pacing in a noticeable way. Now for the honest caveat: the Steam user score sitting at 30% positive is context-dependent and worth understanding. A significant portion of the negative reviews come from players who bought FM22 through Game Pass or a sale after FM23 released and found ongoing matchday bugs that were never fully patched, plus frustration that the annual release model means FM21 saves are obsolete. The press conference loop remains a grind that offers almost no meaningful tactical leverage, and daily inbox noise still interrupts the flow between matches. The delegation system helps, but it requires upfront investment that newcomers rarely discover on their own. For first-time FM players, the interactive tutorial is more accessible than it used to be, and the depth is absolutely learnable if you treat the first season as a tutorial, lean on your backroom staff for training and press duties, and focus on mastering one tactical system before experimenting. The Metacritic score of 87 reflects the critical consensus on launch, and it is the more representative number for what FM22 actually delivers as a standalone product. This is the most complete football management sim available on PC, full stop. The question is whether you own FM21 already, in which case the upgrades are real but incremental. If FM22 is your entry point to the series, the Data Hub, revamped pressing triggers, and tightened transfer logic make this an excellent starting edition. Diego, Scout Team

Football Manager 2022

Football Manager 2022

Nov 8, 2021Sports InteractiveSEGA
GamerScout Says

Hardcore football obsessives will sink 200+ hours into FM22's Data Hub and revamped pressing system. FM21 veterans, though, should think twice before double-dipping on incremental gains.

PC
Best Price Available
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GamerScout Verdict

Best for first-time FM players or returning lapsed fans; FM21 veterans will feel the incremental ceiling almost immediately.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Football Manager 2022

I have a spreadsheet that tracks every FM version's incremental changes back to FM14, so when Sports Interactive drops a new annual entry, I go in with calibrated expectations rather than hype. FM22 lands as a meaningful but measured step forward: the headline additions are the Data Hub, an overhauled pressing system, a reimagined Transfer Deadline Day, and the new Wide Centre-Back role popularised by Thomas Tuchel. None of these rewrite the formula, but together they push the sim closer to how real football management actually operates in 2022. The match engine is the most tangible upgrade for anyone who watches their games rather than simming them. Pressing now includes per-player triggers, so you can instruct a striker to harry a specific centre-back who is weak in possession without committing the whole team to a high press. Gegenpress setups and counter-attacking shapes in particular benefit from this granularity. The Wide Centre-Back role also opens up genuinely new tactical space: you can flip a back-three into a back-four in possession by pushing one CB wide and high, which changes your build-up geometry in ways that cascade through your entire shape. That said, inter-player animations are still occasionally stiff mid-turn, and some positional logic in transition breaks down at the edges. The engine is better; it is not perfect. The Data Hub is where the strategy-sim audience should focus their attention. xG curves, pass maps, pressing intensity charts, and per-player performance graphs all consolidate into a single post-match screen. If you previously had to triangulate three separate panels to figure out why your right winger kept backtracking into a central-midfield role, the Data Hub usually surfaces the answer faster. Scout reports have also been condensed from a multi-request paper trail into a single continuously updated dossier, which matters enormously when you are running a scouting network across four continents. Transfer Deadline Day now gets its own dedicated UI mode with agents pitching clients in real time, rival clubs tabling late bids, and a rolling social media feed. It sounds cosmetic but it changes your decision pacing in a noticeable way. Now for the honest caveat: the Steam user score sitting at 30% positive is context-dependent and worth understanding. A significant portion of the negative reviews come from players who bought FM22 through Game Pass or a sale after FM23 released and found ongoing matchday bugs that were never fully patched, plus frustration that the annual release model means FM21 saves are obsolete. The press conference loop remains a grind that offers almost no meaningful tactical leverage, and daily inbox noise still interrupts the flow between matches. The delegation system helps, but it requires upfront investment that newcomers rarely discover on their own. For first-time FM players, the interactive tutorial is more accessible than it used to be, and the depth is absolutely learnable if you treat the first season as a tutorial, lean on your backroom staff for training and press duties, and focus on mastering one tactical system before experimenting. The Metacritic score of 87 reflects the critical consensus on launch, and it is the more representative number for what FM22 actually delivers as a standalone product. This is the most complete football management sim available on PC, full stop. The question is whether you own FM21 already, in which case the upgrades are real but incremental. If FM22 is your entry point to the series, the Data Hub, revamped pressing triggers, and tightened transfer logic make this an excellent starting edition.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Tags

steamFootball Management SimData-Driven TacticsPressing SystemTransfer Market DepthAnnual ReleaseDelegation MechanicsScouting NetworkCareer Mode

System Requirements

Minimum

OS *
Windows 7 64-bit, 8/8.1, 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
7 GB available space
Graphics
Intel GMA X4500, NVIDIA GeForece 9600M GT, AMD/ATI Mobility Raedon HD 3650 - 256MB VRAM
Processor
Intel Core 2 or AMD Athlon 64 1.8GHz+

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Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
87
Steam
30%(391)

Game Info

Developer
Sports Interactive
Publisher
SEGA
Release Date
Nov 8, 2021

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Frequently asked questions about Football Manager 2022

How much does Football Manager 2022 cost?

Football Manager 2022 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.

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What platforms is Football Manager 2022 available on?

Football Manager 2022 is available on PC.

When was Football Manager 2022 released?

Football Manager 2022 was released on 8 November 2021.

Who developed Football Manager 2022?

Football Manager 2022 was developed by Sports Interactive and published by SEGA.

Is Football Manager 2022 worth buying?

Football Manager 2022 holds a Metacritic score of 87/100, making it one of the standout Simulation titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.