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Sunstrikuuu

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  1. Despite having multiple short passing options available with tactical instructions to play short passes, players in all positions choose frequently to play long, direct passes instead. A lot of these are either arguably or objectively good decisions, but lead to very direct moves that aren't what I want the team to be doing. 4-3-3 Wide DM. Relevant tactical instructions: much shorter passing, lower tempo, play out of defense, be more expressive, dribble less, wide attacking width, work ball into box. 54:51 -- DLP(s) Dawson is unmarked; Heath blasts the ball up front. 60:05 -- DLP(s) Mutasa is available, though the pass is a little risky. Heath is unmarked and available. Abu Bakr plays a successful long pass to Cooper. 76:36 -- Pettersson plays a long pass in behind the defense; Egemen Dogany is available for a shorter pass. 90:18 -- Egemen Dogany has multiple passing options. He's under no pressure and can wait for things to develop. After one touch, he hits a long pass behind the opposing left back for the right winger Antoine, who was not making a run, to chase. (Antoine then smashes the ball on the volley at the goal despite work the ball into the box team instruction and shoot less often personal instruction. I have 26 shots in this match and 3 on target. Oy. The joys of players with terrible decision-making, but maybe this is reportable behavior too.) 92:24 -- Egemen Dogany boots the ball down to the opposing centerbacks with his first touch. He could instead go back to the goalkeeper, to his left centerback, to the right back or back to the DLP. Vauxhall Motors v WDIDC.pkm
  2. 47:02 -- Hayes continues his run towards the penalty spot despite the ball coming off the bar and being free in the area. Vauxhall Motors v WDIDC.pkm
  3. 65:45 -- Buckley heads towards the opposing defense, despite being under no pressure and able to bring the ball under control. Vauxhall Motors Under 18s v Scarborough Athletic Under 18s.pkm
  4. In late February or early March. Typically it's the final major update in the game's lifecycle.
  5. What do these look like if you select the Attributes tab instead of Progress?
  6. I haven't used them in three or four years, so I don't have any opinions and can hopefully manage to express that without being snarky!
  7. I'm playing a low-league England save right now using the same tactic I used in FM22. Very tippy-tappy, short passes, all that stuff. It's possible that the player are just that much worse than what I had in the French 5th division last year, but I'm averaging 25% as many passes as I did last year (unless the analytics are totally busted). The average pass distance is a lot longer, which is odd because both the central midfielders and wingbacks are making fewer attacking runs. It's still relatively effective and has taken a while to bed-in in every save I've done with it, so I'm not too worried about results, but it's much less pretty to look at.
  8. I've done Vercelli in previous games. It's definitely a fun save if you're into the fallen-giant thing, but their market isn't huge and their existing stadium is quite small. If you want a small-to-large Italian save, I'd maybe suggest Messina. Their uniforms are great, the club goes back to 1900, and they have a 37,000-capacity stadium. Their big rival is Reggina, and they have a cool derby against them ("the Derby of the Strait").
  9. Yes, tentatively. Some players, even very good ones, do suffer significant physical decline in their late 20s and early 30s. It was very apparent for Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang in his age-31 season, to name a recent high-profile example, and it's fair to say that wasn't a single-season blip. And players become more injury-prone as they age, and less able to play multiple matches with short turnarounds. But that doesn't seem to happen in FM23. As Harry Kane aged from 28 to 32 in a test save I did, his Natural Fitness increased, and his recurring ankle injuries disappeared. I tracked 9 players who started the 2022-23 season in their late 20s or early 30s, and zero of them had decreases in Natural Fitness. Eight of the nine played 50 or more matches; the one who didn't played 49 for a team that has a shorter season, one domestic cup and didn't go deep in the Champions League. None of those nine players had any injuries to speak of. It's good that some players can remain effective into their 30s, but it's not good that players remain physically elite into their age 33-35 seasons. Like, a 35 year old Immobile probably shouldn't still have very good physical attributes, including 15 Pace. Mo Salah shouldn't actually be better as a 33 year old than he is as a 29 year old (probably. Maybe he should! Maybe he will! He's not better as a 29 year old than he was as a 27 year old, though! This isn't about any one player, it's about the pattern). Age curves and age cliffs are models of observed, real-world events, and it's disappointing how flat FM's are at the back end. My favorites are the supporter tweets which've been in for a few versions now. Arsenal interested in signing elite midfielder Eduardo Camavinga? Guaranteed to have a supporter tweeting WASTE OF MONEY, AWFUL PLAYER, WOT IS THE CLUB DOING??? like AFTV on steroids.
  10. True, but there are only three buttons there. They shouldn't each have a unique combination of button size/shape and text size, you know? It could just be a misclick on the font size slider or a typo in the code, which would make it arguably a bug.
  11. I've only played two matches in FM23. It seems pretty similar compared to FM22's, though maybe more direct. Don't have a great handle on it. Old players stick around longer than I'm comfortable with at the top level. Based on the holidaying I did, the game world feels static and a little bit boring. The top teams don't have a lot of squad turnover, and teams that maybe should be fragile (Barcelona) are pretty stable.
  12. The reason is time. It takes time to play enough to have informed opinions. The things that really annoyed me about FM22 didn't become apparent until a few seasons in. The playing time/new contract spam of prior versions didn't start until six months in. How long does it take to play through a season? Twenty hours? And if what you really care about is long-term saves, where you're starting to deal with a whole new generation of players, you haven't even seen the bits you care about. I'd much rather hear some informed opinions from people before I invest that time into the demo.
  13. You don't understand why people like to get opinions before investing several hours into the demo?
  14. 46:34 -- Samassekou, Sokratis and Vrsaljko fail to mark Illic, creating a 2v1 attack in the middle, despite the whole team theoretically being in a defensive shape. Olympiacos v MBR.pkm
  15. 47:48 -- Retsos is running with the ball while being closed down. Rather than shoot or cross on the move, he comes to a stop and puts his foot on the ball before shooting, allowing it to be blocked. 79:24 -- An attacking corner is cleared. Sokratis slowly backpedals, allowing a defender to run past him and clear the loose ball, despite Sokratis's movement not being impeded in any way. Olympiacos v MBR.pkm
  16. What do you like about Football Manager? That will inform the answer, I think.
  17. Why are the "Mentality", "Shouts" and "Instructions" labels different sizes? Mentality and Shouts are 7px high; Instructions is 8.
  18. 0:59 -- Under no pressure, James elects to head the ball forward rather than control it, needlessly conceding possession. Olympiacos v Aris.pkm
  19. 46:38 -- Valbuena remains in the D rather than marking Gervinho, allowing him to freely receive the ball, turn and shoot. Olympiacos v Aris.pkm
  20. I holidayed from June 2022 to June 2025 and tracked attribute changes for a selection of high-level players who are at or slightly past their prime ages. The players I looked at were Salah and van Dijk, Kane, De Bruyne, Lewandowski, Jorginho, Thomas Muller, Ciro Immobile and Messi. This is on the latest GamePass version of FM23. At the end of the 2025 season, an age 33 Salah is still a star player for Liverpool, with 26 goals in 59 appearances. From age 29 at game start, his total attributes have increased by 6; his only decreases have been -1 Dribbling and -1 Pace (his Agility has also increased by 1). An age 33 van Dijk is still a star player for Liverpool, making 57 appearances and averaging a three-year high in tackles/90. His total attributes have dropped by 4 (-1 strength, -1 balance, -3 dribbling, +1 passing). An age 31 Harry Kane is still a star player for Tottenham, with 28 goals in 54 appearances. From age 28 at game start, his total attributes have decreased by 7; none have changed by more than 1. His jumping reach, stamina and strength have decreased by 1, but his natural fitness and agility have increased by 1. That seems optimistic for a player with a history of ankle problems. An age 33 Kevin de Bruyne is still a star player for Manchester City, with 8 goals and 25 assists in 67 appearances. His attributes have decreased by 19, mostly concentrated in technical attributes. His physical attributes have also each dropped by 1, except Natural Fitness and Pace, which are unchanged. An age 36 Robert Lewandowski is still a star player for Barcelona, with 37 goals in 54 appearances. His total attributes have decreased by 12; all of his physicals have dropped by 1 except Natural Fitness (unchanged at 20) and Balance, which has dropped by 2. An age 33 Jorginho is still a star player for Chelsea, with a match rating of 7.09 in 53 appearances. His attributes have decreased by a total of 1, with -1 Stamina and -1 Dribbling partially offset by +1 Corners. An age 35 Thomas Muller now plays for Manchester City, where he is a star player, making 57 appearances with 13 goals and 16 assists. His attributes have decreased by 12, including all of his physicals dropping by 1 (acceleration, balance, jumping reach) or 2 (agility, pace, stamina, strength; natural fitness is unchanged at 20). A 35 year old Ciro Immobile is still a star player for Lazio, scoring 20 goals in 50 appearances. His attributes have actually increased by 1, with -1 drops in acceleration, agility, pace, stamina and strength. Some of the improvement is in his awful crossing stat (why Immobile starts with 3 Crossing I don't understand), but he's also improved in passing, flair and vision. A 37 year old Messi is still a star player for PSG, with 14 goals and 12 assists in 49 appearances. Of the players I tracked, he's the only one who saw a pronounced dropoff in attributes, with a total decrease of 31 and drops across the physical spectrum (-1 acceleration and jumping reach, -2 agility, balance and stamina, -3 strength and -4 pace). -- It's a small sample, obviously, but there are a couple things that seem to stick out. First, there doesn't seem to be an age cliff for star players. Only Messi had a drop of more than 2 in any physical attribute. All the players who were physically monstrous at the start of the save are still physical monsters. The only attribute to drop for every player was dribbling. None of these players became more injury-prone. Messi had one non-contact, non-illness injury in three years. Salah had two. Van Dijk had one (he missed a total of eight days in three seasons!). Kane had three, one in each season. De Bruyne had five, but only one kept him out longer than a week. Lewandowski had six injures, none longer than three days. Jorginho also had five injuries, two longer than a week. Thomas Muller missed three days in three years, all from a single tight thigh. Immobile missed four days total from two injuries. This resistance to injuries and physical decline is contrary to research and to observed effects in the real world. None of these guys have retired. None have even moved into smaller roles. Second, star players do not change clubs often. Looking through the various awards, only one of the players who finished first, second or third in the European Golden Boy, European Golden Shoe or Best Player in Europe awards from 22-23 to 24-25 changed club: Jose Macias, who moved from Cruz Azul to Stuttgart and finished second in the 24-25 Golden Shoe. The other players (Rashford, Lewandowski, Vlahovic, Lautaro Martinez, Mbappe, Kevin Volland, Kane, De Bruyne, Haaland, Bernardo Silva, Gavi, Musiala, Xavi Simons) were all at the same clubs they started with. Camavinga, Tchouameni, Rodrygo, Vinicius Jr, Courtois, Carvajal, Asensio and Eder Militao are all still with Real Madrid; Koulibaly, Chilwell, Chalobah, Gallagher, Havertz, Sterling, Lukaku, Mendy, Fofana, Mount, Kante, Ziyech, Kovacic and Loftus-Cheek are all still at Chelsea; Ramsdale, Tomiyasu, Gabriel, Tierney, Partey, ESR, Odegaard, Martinelli, Jesus, Turner, White, Saliba, Patino, Zinchenko and Saka are all still with Arsenal (as well as a bunch of young players who have no chance of ever making it, like Alex Runarsson). Squads, at least at the big clubs, are very static. There's no churn. They're also pretty big. Every club in the top half in England has at least 31 players available for the senior squad, with most having more. Third, natural fitness hasn't decreased for any of the players I tracked, and all of them have 14+ natural fitness. That may explain some of why attribute drops are fairly small, and why they don't miss time with injuries. It's possible that players with lower natural fitness miss more games and decline more rapidly.
  21. 4-3-3 DM wide, AML/AMR as inverted wingers, striker as a pressing forward. Personally I'd have Odegaard as an attacking mezzala and Xhaka as a mezzala on support but there's probably a couple ways to handle the midfield. The complex one is Zinchenko, whose role isn't really replicable within FM; he's like a regista played at left back. It's tough within the structures of FM's tactics module to get IRL formations right, because it's hard to have a player be a midfielder in attack but press as a forward in defense without using man marking assignments that unbalance the other midfield players.
  22. Yes, frequently. A lot of the time it's due to either PPMs happening to match up well with what's needed (I found a random crap midfielder last year who had the Shoots With Power and Gets Forward Whenever Possible PPMs, and in the tactic I used in the French 5th division he turned into my top scorer two years running). The other time I notice it it's a striker who is both big and fast scoring more goals than his not-amazing attributes would suggest.
  23. Agreed. At a big club the initial staff set-up can get confusing pretty quickly, especially if you're signing coaches who might be usable in more than one role. Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose.
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