Compare Football Manager 26 prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Sports Interactive. Published by SEGA. Released on 11/4/2025. Available on PC, Mac. Genres: Simulation, Sports, Strategy.

The most ambitious FM reboot in a decade earns its stripes on the pitch but stumbles badly in the menus. Worth your time if you can stomach a rough first season.

I've tracked every Football Manager release since the Collyer brothers era, and FM26 is the most structurally significant entry Sports Interactive has shipped since the jump to 3D. That cuts both ways. The switch to Unity was supposed to be the great leap forward after FM25 was cancelled outright. In practice, you get a genuinely thrilling match engine and a tactics overhaul that changes how the game feels at its core, wrapped inside a UI redesign that will make you want to dig up your old FM24 save. Start with what works, because it matters. The dual-formation system is the real deal. For the first time in series history, you can run entirely separate setups for in-possession and out-of-possession phases. That means building out of a 3-2-5 and pressing in a 4-4-2, with player roles adjusting automatically between the two states. Watching your instructions actually translate into recognisable patterns on the new Unity engine is the closest this series has come to feeling like a proper football sim rather than a spreadsheet with cutscenes. The Premier League licence landing at the same time adds broadcast-quality presentation to top-flight English fixtures, and the integration of 14 women's leagues from 11 countries, including the WSL, NWSL, and Frauen-Bundesliga, is a genuine expansion of the game's scope rather than a token checkbox feature. Now the hard part. The rebuilt UI has attracted nearly universal criticism from seasoned players, and it earns it. Information that used to live two clicks away now requires learning a new mental map from scratch, the Portal hub is conceptually fine but cluttered in execution, and menu navigation is measurably slower than before. Steam user reviews sit at roughly 36 percent positive overall, and while some of that is launch-window overcorrection, the complaints about crashes, disappearing saves, and overlapping text are consistent across multiple outlets. Sports Interactive has been pushing hotfixes, and a major content update post-launch restored Matchday Shouts, tuned the match engine further, and added UI refinements including customisable attribute colours. International management, absent at launch, has since returned via free update with full FIFA World Cup 2026 licensing and a dedicated quick-start mode. The game is meaningfully better now than it was on November 4. For newcomers, FM26 is actually a more reasonable entry point than the discourse suggests. The tactical visualiser, FMPedia glossary, and dual-formation system all have tutorial layers, and the lower system requirements mean you are not locked out by older hardware. Veterans need to factor in a genuine adjustment period and should verify the current patch state before committing. The mod and workshop ecosystem, historically one of FM's strongest long-term pillars, is still establishing itself on the new engine, so those relying heavily on face packs, data updates, and custom leagues should check compatibility before diving into a 20-season save. FM26 is a foundation game. The underlying simulation depth is still unmatched in the genre, the tactical tools now reflect how modern football is actually coached, and the post-launch update cadence shows Sports Interactive is committed to finishing what launch day left incomplete. But it launched rough, and if you are the type who rage-quits over a UI taking three clicks to find the injury list, that frustration is real and documented. Diego, Scout Team

Football Manager 26
SimulationSportsStrategy

Football Manager 26

Nov 4, 2025Sports InteractiveSEGA
GamerScout Says

The most ambitious FM reboot in a decade earns its stripes on the pitch but stumbles badly in the menus. Worth your time if you can stomach a rough first season.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Football Manager 26

I've tracked every Football Manager release since the Collyer brothers era, and FM26 is the most structurally significant entry Sports Interactive has shipped since the jump to 3D. That cuts both ways. The switch to Unity was supposed to be the great leap forward after FM25 was cancelled outright. In practice, you get a genuinely thrilling match engine and a tactics overhaul that changes how the game feels at its core, wrapped inside a UI redesign that will make you want to dig up your old FM24 save. Start with what works, because it matters. The dual-formation system is the real deal. For the first time in series history, you can run entirely separate setups for in-possession and out-of-possession phases. That means building out of a 3-2-5 and pressing in a 4-4-2, with player roles adjusting automatically between the two states. Watching your instructions actually translate into recognisable patterns on the new Unity engine is the closest this series has come to feeling like a proper football sim rather than a spreadsheet with cutscenes. The Premier League licence landing at the same time adds broadcast-quality presentation to top-flight English fixtures, and the integration of 14 women's leagues from 11 countries, including the WSL, NWSL, and Frauen-Bundesliga, is a genuine expansion of the game's scope rather than a token checkbox feature. Now the hard part. The rebuilt UI has attracted nearly universal criticism from seasoned players, and it earns it. Information that used to live two clicks away now requires learning a new mental map from scratch, the Portal hub is conceptually fine but cluttered in execution, and menu navigation is measurably slower than before. Steam user reviews sit at roughly 36 percent positive overall, and while some of that is launch-window overcorrection, the complaints about crashes, disappearing saves, and overlapping text are consistent across multiple outlets. Sports Interactive has been pushing hotfixes, and a major content update post-launch restored Matchday Shouts, tuned the match engine further, and added UI refinements including customisable attribute colours. International management, absent at launch, has since returned via free update with full FIFA World Cup 2026 licensing and a dedicated quick-start mode. The game is meaningfully better now than it was on November 4. For newcomers, FM26 is actually a more reasonable entry point than the discourse suggests. The tactical visualiser, FMPedia glossary, and dual-formation system all have tutorial layers, and the lower system requirements mean you are not locked out by older hardware. Veterans need to factor in a genuine adjustment period and should verify the current patch state before committing. The mod and workshop ecosystem, historically one of FM's strongest long-term pillars, is still establishing itself on the new engine, so those relying heavily on face packs, data updates, and custom leagues should check compatibility before diving into a 20-season save. FM26 is a foundation game. The underlying simulation depth is still unmatched in the genre, the tactical tools now reflect how modern football is actually coached, and the post-launch update cadence shows Sports Interactive is committed to finishing what launch day left incomplete. But it launched rough, and if you are the type who rage-quits over a UI taking three clicks to find the injury list, that frustration is real and documented. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerachievementscontroller-supportworkshopcloud-savestier:aaaDual-Formation TacticsWomen's FootballLong-Term SaveUnity EngineTransferRoom IntegrationTactical DepthPost-Launch PatchesYouth DevelopmentInternational Management

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 18 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 (with updates 22H2), Windows 11 (with updates 23H2)
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
20 GB available space
Graphics
Desktop: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960 or AMD Radeon R9 380 or Intel HD 530 Laptop: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960M or AMD Radeon R9 M375 or Intel HD 530 512MiB VRAM
Processor
Desktop: Intel Core i3-530 or AMD FX-4100 Laptop: Intel Core i3-330M or AMD A6-5200 Requires SSE4.2 & SSSE3
Additional Notes
Microsoft no longer supports Windows 10 or older versions.

Recommended

OS
Windows 11 – with updates (23H2)
Memory
12 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
20 GB available space
Graphics
Desktop: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 or AMD Radeon RX 5600 XT Laptop: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 Mobile or AMD Radeon RX 6600M
Processor
Desktop: Intel Core i5-9600 or AMD Ryzen 5 2600 Laptop: Intel Core i5-1035G7 or AMD Ryzen 7 3750H
Additional Notes
Microsoft no longer supports Windows 10 or older versions.

Community Discussion

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Game Info

Developer
Sports Interactive
Publisher
SEGA
Release Date
Nov 4, 2025

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Football Manager 26 is available on PC, Mac.

When was Football Manager 26 released?

Football Manager 26 was released on 4 November 2025.

Who developed Football Manager 26?

Football Manager 26 was developed by Sports Interactive and published by SEGA.