Football Manager 2024
Football Manager 2024 puts you in the dugout as a football club manager, but a rocky launch and poor user reviews make it a hard sell at full price.
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About Football Manager 2024
Football Manager 2024 is a deep football club management simulation from Sports Interactive, the studio that has owned this niche for decades. You handle everything from transfer negotiations and squad rotation to tactical shape, press conferences, and youth development pipelines. If you have ever wanted to micromanage a lower-league club into a continental giant over fifteen in-game seasons, this is structurally the game that lets you do that. The question is whether this particular entry does it well enough to justify the purchase right now. On the depth side, FM24 continues the series tradition of being genuinely encyclopedic. The data model covering player attributes, hidden potential values, and club finances is as granular as ever. The tactical interface lets you tweak pressing triggers, set-piece routines, and individual player instructions in ways that reward obsessive attention. For returning managers who already know what a "half-space" is and why their striker's off-the-ball rating matters, the toolset is familiar and functional. The new features this cycle include refinements to the data hub and squad planner screens, which do make long-term roster construction a bit more readable. Here is the concern, and it is a real one: the Steam review score sits at 23% positive across nearly 900 reviews. That is not a number to dismiss. Common complaints in the review body point toward match engine inconsistencies, AI transfer behaviour that does not hold up to scrutiny in the later seasons, and a sense among veteran players that incremental annual changes do not justify a full new purchase over FM23. For a strategy and sim player, AI quality in the mid-to-late game is the make-or-break metric, and FM24 appears to have real problems there. Opponent managers making nonsensical buys, unrealistic wage inflation, and the match engine producing statistically absurd results are recurring themes. These are not cosmetic complaints. For newcomers to the series, the onboarding has actually improved in recent editions. The Staff Advice system and the streamlined news inbox mean you are not immediately drowning in 400 unread messages. The lower-league experience, picking a non-league club in England and grinding up through the pyramid, remains one of the most satisfying long-form strategy experiences in PC gaming. If you are patient and willing to spend a few hours with the built-in tutorials and the extensive community wikis, the learning curve is manageable. The problem is that recommending FM24 specifically as your entry point when the review signal is this negative feels difficult. FM23 is cheaper, more patched, and reviewed significantly better. The mod ecosystem and editor tools are a genuine asset. Custom databases, real-name fixes for licensed leagues, and community-built skins extend the game's lifespan considerably. If you are already inside the FM ecosystem and comfortable with the workflow, FM24 adds enough surface-area changes to be worth evaluating. But the math on its current reception is hard to argue with: below 25% positive on Steam means something broke badly for a large portion of the player base, and that matters. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Sports Interactive
- Publisher
- SEGA
- Release Date
- Nov 6, 2023