

The first thing you will notice is that it still has that old PES charm: a slow pace, precise passing, and alarmingly good dribbling. That is to say, eFootball plays like a dream.

Open up the book and look within, though, and it is still - despite literally missing gameplay features - a compelling and intense on-the-pitch experience. What is that impression? Well, my mother always told me you shouldn't judge a book by its cover, but eFootball is a distractingly ugly beast. In the meantime, we have played a few matches - online and offline - and feel ready to give you a first impression of what eFootball 2022 is all about.
#Efootball 2022 series Patch
It seemed very unfair to give what is ostensibly a demo of a game a review score, and that first big Autumn patch that will add much of the missing content listed above. It's a very strange way to release, and it seems a decision made with one purpose: get to market before FIFA 22 officially launches and try to steal away a few customers with a new free-to-play title. You see, publisher Konami has released it in a demo state without all the teams, a hampered online mode, no Custom Teams (eFootball's FUT), no single-player, two major gameplay features missing, and more. However, the poor thing is currently crawling around the pitch with two broken legs and a skull fracture. First Impressions Article Kes Eylers-Stephenson eFootball 2022 just "released" on Xbox consoles.
