![]() ![]() FIFA 21 looks set to continue on the Frostbite engine, though other developers in EA’s team have been using other engines to power their games, meaning that a change could still happen for next-gen. The FIFA series has been using EA’s in-house Frostbite 3 engine since FIFA 17, and the Ignite engine before that for this current generation. ![]() This year, Juventus are joined by Roma as teams missing from the game, though no confirmation yet as to what name will replace the Rome based club. ![]() Legendary Argentine clubs Boca Juniors and River Plate were also missing, all three owing to exclusive deals with rival game PES. One was for Italian giant Juventus, resulting in the team being called Piemonte Calcio, and marking the first time in 25 years that FIFA could not use the Juventus name. Last year’s FIFA was missing some licenses that the series had previously had access to. EA Play’s Feel Next Level trailer from the EA Play event on June 18 features live footage of Borussia Dortmund’s Signal Iduna Park and Liverpool’s Anfield, meaning that both are likely to be heavily featured throughout. FIFA 21 will be no different, with a huge number of licenses for clubs and players that are faithfully recreated. This allows you to play in all of Europe’s major leagues faithfully, while players on teams, kits, and some stadia are faithfully recreated. The FIFA series has always excelled at the presentation of soccer, providing tailored graphics and images, using official licenses from leagues all over the world. ![]()
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