Compare Rugby 22 prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Eko Software. Published by Nacon. Released on 1/27/2022. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Simulation, Sports.

The only rugby sim in town right now, and it actually plays better than you'd expect - if you can stomach the missing licenses, dated visuals, and a career mode that feels held together with tape.

I don't normally cover sports sims - my comfort zone is 240Hz monitors and tight TTK debates - but when the pitch is empty and there's only one game wearing the jersey, you pay attention. Rugby 22 from Eko Software is exactly that: the sole realistic rugby union sim on PC as of its January 2022 release, and that monopoly cuts both ways. It sets its own bar, and it clears it just enough to matter. On the pitch, the game is genuinely more competent than its reputation suggests. Controls feel responsive once the muscle memory kicks in - passing, rucking, set pieces like scrums and lineouts all have mechanical weight to them. The tutorial throws you into scrums, tackles, goal kicks, and set plays in sequence, which is necessary because this is not a simple pick-up-and-play sport. Winning a scrum and executing a backs move through a well-chosen pod shape feels rewarding in a way that quick-match arcade sports games never quite manage. Framerate is stable enough that passing lanes read cleanly, and possession losses from outright bugs are rare. That said, conversion kicks feel clunky and loose, and the AI difficulty curve is inconsistent - it can shift from passive to oddly aggressive without clear reason. The on-field product lands somewhere between solid and promising. Off the pitch is where the frustration builds. The licensing situation is genuinely rough: no Southern Hemisphere national teams with full kits, no English Premiership, and several major nations running around in placeholder jerseys that look nothing like the real thing. You can play in the United Rugby Championship, Top 14, and Pro D2 with licensed clubs, and national sides like France, Ireland, New Zealand, and Australia are present, but significant gaps remain. Career mode uses a card-based player progression system that most reviewers found demotivating, and you cannot download community-created teams to paper over the cracks - a feature that mid-budget sports games have offered for years. Commentary is repetitive, poorly spliced, and occasionally calls the wrong player for the wrong action. Visually, the game sits a generation or two behind where it should be in 2022 terms, even if player animations are cleaner than in Rugby 20. Multiplayer is where the game has its best case. Local co-op and online PvP work, and sitting down with someone who knows rugby and playing through a tight Top 14 fixture is legitimately fun. The online player pool is small, though - this is a niche sport game with a niche PC audience, and finding ranked matches outside peak hours was already patchy at launch. If you have a regular opponent lined up, the experience lands much better than if you are hunting lobbies cold. Think of it less like a live-service competitive game and more like a sports board game that happens to run on PC. For a shooter guy, the ask here is straightforward: if you love rugby and have nobody else to play it on PC, this is your only real option and it does enough right to justify the time investment. If you are on the fence and do not already follow the sport, the learning curve and licensing holes will likely push you off it within a week. Fred, Scout Team

Rugby 22
SimulationSports

Rugby 22

Jan 27, 2022Eko SoftwareNacon
GamerScout Says

The only rugby sim in town right now, and it actually plays better than you'd expect - if you can stomach the missing licenses, dated visuals, and a career mode that feels held together with tape.

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About Rugby 22

I don't normally cover sports sims - my comfort zone is 240Hz monitors and tight TTK debates - but when the pitch is empty and there's only one game wearing the jersey, you pay attention. Rugby 22 from Eko Software is exactly that: the sole realistic rugby union sim on PC as of its January 2022 release, and that monopoly cuts both ways. It sets its own bar, and it clears it just enough to matter. On the pitch, the game is genuinely more competent than its reputation suggests. Controls feel responsive once the muscle memory kicks in - passing, rucking, set pieces like scrums and lineouts all have mechanical weight to them. The tutorial throws you into scrums, tackles, goal kicks, and set plays in sequence, which is necessary because this is not a simple pick-up-and-play sport. Winning a scrum and executing a backs move through a well-chosen pod shape feels rewarding in a way that quick-match arcade sports games never quite manage. Framerate is stable enough that passing lanes read cleanly, and possession losses from outright bugs are rare. That said, conversion kicks feel clunky and loose, and the AI difficulty curve is inconsistent - it can shift from passive to oddly aggressive without clear reason. The on-field product lands somewhere between solid and promising. Off the pitch is where the frustration builds. The licensing situation is genuinely rough: no Southern Hemisphere national teams with full kits, no English Premiership, and several major nations running around in placeholder jerseys that look nothing like the real thing. You can play in the United Rugby Championship, Top 14, and Pro D2 with licensed clubs, and national sides like France, Ireland, New Zealand, and Australia are present, but significant gaps remain. Career mode uses a card-based player progression system that most reviewers found demotivating, and you cannot download community-created teams to paper over the cracks - a feature that mid-budget sports games have offered for years. Commentary is repetitive, poorly spliced, and occasionally calls the wrong player for the wrong action. Visually, the game sits a generation or two behind where it should be in 2022 terms, even if player animations are cleaner than in Rugby 20. Multiplayer is where the game has its best case. Local co-op and online PvP work, and sitting down with someone who knows rugby and playing through a tight Top 14 fixture is legitimately fun. The online player pool is small, though - this is a niche sport game with a niche PC audience, and finding ranked matches outside peak hours was already patchy at launch. If you have a regular opponent lined up, the experience lands much better than if you are hunting lobbies cold. Think of it less like a live-service competitive game and more like a sports board game that happens to run on PC. For a shooter guy, the ask here is straightforward: if you love rugby and have nobody else to play it on PC, this is your only real option and it does enough right to justify the time investment. If you are on the fence and do not already follow the sport, the learning curve and licensing holes will likely push you off it within a week. Fred, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvplocal-multiplayerlocal-coopachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:aaaRugby UnionSports SimSet-Piece MechanicsCouch PvPCareer ModeLicensed LeaguesLow Player PoolController Required

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
26 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce GTX 950, 2 GB or AMD Radeon RX 46, 2 GB
Processor
Intel Core i5-650 or AMD Phenom II X4 965

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Memory
12 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
26 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce GTX 1060, 3 GB or AMD Radeon RX 570, 4 GB
Processor
Intel Core i5-3470 or AMD FX-6300

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Eko Software
Publisher
Nacon
Release Date
Jan 27, 2022

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