Features
Best Football Video Games to Play Before the World Cup 2026
The 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off on June 11 with 48 teams, 104 matches, and a map spanning Canada, Mexico, and the United States. That gives football games a useful job before the first ball rolls at Mexico City Stadium: they let fans rehearse rhythms, squads, and arguments before the real tournament starts. EA Sports FC 26, eFootball, UFL, Football Manager 26, and FC Mobile all offer different versions of that itch. Some handle the weight of a press-resistant midfield; others are better for the chaos of a late-night group chat after Argentina, France, or Brazil drops a squad list.
FC 26 Owns the Big Match Feel
FC 26 is the obvious pick, which is not the same as calling it flawless. It still gives the cleanest TV-match feeling before World Cup 2026: walkout noise, sharp kits, nervous corners, and enough familiar faces to make a France-Brazil friendly feel heavier than it has any right to. EA’s two presets help more than expected, with Competitive built for Ultimate Team and Clubs, while Authentic slows Career Mode down enough for defenders to hold a line and for a low block to stay ugly for 20 minutes. The small stuff does the work: a full-back checking his run, a center back clearing first instead of trying a cute pass, a loose ball bouncing twice in the six-yard box before anyone gets a clean swing. It can still annoy you. But when it clicks, FC 26 feels closest to the tournament broadcast people will have all summer.
eFootball Has the International Pulse
eFootball remains messy, as free-to-play football games often are, but its live-service calendar has real tournament value. Konami’s 2026 FIFAe World Cup path gives the game a direct international hook, with national representatives competing in console and mobile categories and Challenger Series events feeding the wider scene. The best use is not pretending it has FC 26’s polish; it is using Dream Team and Authentic Team modes for short, sharp matches with players who show up in real international debates. The small observation here is simple: eFootball’s tempo often rewards patience around the box, and that makes it useful for practicing cutbacks, second balls, and the extra pass after a blocked shot.
UFL Is the Wild Card
UFL finally launched on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S on December 5, 2024, which already felt strange after all those Strikerz Inc. trailers and delayed promises. It is not FC 26, and nobody should pretend otherwise. The licenses are thinner, the animation can still look blunt, and the old Pro Evolution crowd will not find that same first-touch romance here. Still, the free-to-play start gives it a different appeal: no inherited superteam, no weekend squad full of the same 90-rated forwards, no sense that the whole thing has already been solved before kickoff. Cristiano Ronaldo helped push the game into view early, and AS Monaco’s partnership running to 2026 gives it a little real-world weight. UFL feels unfinished in places, but that is also why it is worth a look before the World Cup noise takes over.
Betting Screens Follow the Controller
Tournament gaming turns into a messy two-screen habit once the June friendlies start and squad rumors begin doing laps online. Someone loses 2-1 with England on FC 26, checks Brazil’s real price for the opening week, then gets pulled into an argument about whether Kylian Mbappé should start wide or central before the next lobby loads. In that kind of stop-start football night, downloading Melbet (French: télécharger Melbet) can sit next to match stats, live markets, and pre-match prices without pretending the game on the console is the same thing as the game in Dallas or Mexico City. The line between play and betting still needs a hard edge: Haaland scoring twice on a screen should not push anyone into a real stake five minutes later. The controller is allowed to be emotional; the bankroll is not.
Football Manager 26 Is the Long Game
Football Manager 26 is for people who would rather lose an evening to a 4-2-3-1 recruitment problem than play 10 online matches. Sports Interactive and Sega brought the series onto Unity for FM26, added major licensing steps around FIFA competitions, and confirmed World Cup-related branding and international management content through the wider FIFA partnership. That matters before 2026 because the World Cup is partly a tactical tournament and partly a squad-management exam: who covers left center back, who survives extra time, who presses after 70 minutes in Dallas heat. FM26 is where those questions become cruel in a believable way.
Mobile Football Fills the Gaps
FC Mobile and eFootball mobile are not substitutes for a full console session, but they fit the dead time between fixtures better than they used to. EA’s FC Mobile now leans on league content, Club Challenge PvP, team-building, and short-session play, which suits the World Cup rhythm better than a 45-minute Career Mode save. Fans who prefer to keep gaming, lineups, and betting checks on one device may opt to download Melbet (French: Melbet télécharger) before the tournament, because mobile access keeps odds, live markets, and settled bets from becoming another tab hunt during a matchday. The smart routine stays boring: check the real lineup, compare prices after team news, and keep the stake small enough that a 90th-minute VAR check does not spoil the night. The phone is already noisy enough.
Pick the Game That Matches the Mood
One game will not cover the whole wait, and trying to force one into that role feels a bit joyless. FC 26 is the Saturday-afternoon option: full match, proper crowd noise, the little dread of defending a corner in the 88th minute with tired legs on the screen. eFootball is better for two matches before bed, UFL is the curious free-to-play punt, and Football Manager 26 is the trapdoor under the evening, where one “quick” squad check becomes 45 minutes spent protecting a left center back who should have come off at halftime. The mobile games have their place, too: on the train ride, in the halftime queue, and in the last 15 minutes before Mexico opens the tournament on June 11. After that, the real World Cup will make all of them look slightly silly. Until then, they are useful in the old ways: pass before the tackle comes, mind the counter, and do not trust a 1-0 lead when the worst passer in the back four wants another touch.
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