Tactical analysis is also now deeper than ever for those prepared to put the hours in. Training has been somewhat improved, and there's a brand new set-piece generator – welcome updates to two parts of the game which hadn't much changed in the past five years. Agents are present in the game for the first time, and handling their personalities to ensure you can keep your star striker's wage demands in check brings player-power realism to the series in a way we've never seen before.
It's no longer simply a case of throwing out offers or platitudes – you have to be reactive and willing to take risks to get what you want. Add in the option of linking in your Twitter and YouTube accounts, and FM 2011 feels fresh, somehow, despite the fact much of what you're doing has barely changed since the series' inception.Ĭontracts and player interactions have been completely overhauled, now working in real-time, so there's a satisfying sense of an actual negotiation taking place.
First off, the interface looks better than ever, with a tweaked manager's homepage complimenting a raft of small aesthetic changes – seen also in the noticeably improved 3D match engine.