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EA FC 26 Blog

Have PlayStyles Ruined FC 26? Why Stats No Longer Matter in Ultimate Team

PlayStyles were introduced to add personality and realism to Ultimate Team cards, but in FC 26, they’ve become something far more controversial. Instead of complementing stats, PlayStyles now dominate them. Team-building decisions are no longer about pace, shooting, or dribbling; they’re about icons and small symbols under a card’s name. If a player doesn’t have the “right” PlayStyles, they’re instantly written off, no matter how insane their face stats look. And that shift has fundamentally changed how the game is played.

You see it everywhere in the community. The moment someone packs a big card, the first reaction isn’t excitement; it’s inspection. Does the card have Incisive Pass? Does it have Tiki Taka? Can it trigger the meta animations? That’s where we are now. Raw attributes feel secondary, and for many players, that’s taken away the magic of packing elite footballers in Ultimate Team.


Why High Stats Feel Meaningless Without PlayStyles

On paper, a card with 90+ pace, 90+ shooting, and 90+ dribbling should feel unstoppable. In reality, those numbers barely matter at high-level gameplay. If that same player lacks Incisive Pass or Tiki Taka, they suddenly struggle to play simple through balls or quick combinations. The card looks elite in the menus, but in-game it feels clunky, limited, and ineffective compared to lower-rated cards with the “correct” PlayStyles.

This disconnect is why so many players feel frustrated. You’ll see attackers with 90+ passing miss basic passes, or defenders with elite awareness fail to intercept obvious balls. Meanwhile, another card with weaker stats but the right PlayStyle Plus performs flawlessly. The game isn’t rewarding overall quality anymore; it’s rewarding specific animations locked behind PlayStyles.


Claudia Pina vs Icons: A Symptom of a Bigger Problem

Claudia Pina has become the poster child for this issue. She’s everywhere in high-level FC gameplay, not because she’s the highest-rated card in the game, but because her PlayStyles are perfectly tuned to the meta. Finesse Shot Plus alone makes her deadly, even in situations where logic says she shouldn’t score. That’s how powerful these traits have become.

There have even been community challenges proving this imbalance. Players have used bronze cards with terrible shooting stats and still scored outrageous goals purely because they had Finesse Shot Plus. When that happens consistently, it sends a clear message: stats are optional, PlayStyles are mandatory. And that’s a dangerous direction for a football game built around player attributes.


Winter Wildcards and the Ronaldinho Dilemma

With Winter Wildcards around the corner, the issue becomes even more obvious. EA Sports has already revealed official Ronaldinho Winter Wildcard stats, and the first thing people looked at wasn’t his pace, flair, or dribbling; it was his PlayStyles. Yes, Finesse Shot Plus and Technical Plus are great, but the immediate reaction was still the same: “Does he have Incisive? Does he have Tiki Taka?”

That alone says everything. We’re talking about Ronaldinho one of the most iconic footballers of all time, and yet players will hesitate to use him if he doesn’t fit the PlayStyle meta. That’s not a balance issue anymore; that’s a design problem. When legends feel replaceable by smaller cards simply because of PlayStyles, something has gone seriously wrong.


PlayStyles Should Enhance, Not Define, a Card

There’s no denying that PlayStyles should matter. They add flavor, identity, and unique strengths to players. But they were never meant to be a make-or-break mechanic. A card with elite stats should still feel elite, even without the perfect PlayStyle combination. Right now, that’s not the case.

If Technical, First Touch, or Incisive Pass are required just to make high stats feel real, then the stats themselves lose all meaning. At that point, you might as well remove attributes entirely and build the game solely around PlayStyles. Cards would either have the right traits and be usable, or lack them and be instantly discarded, which is already happening informally in the community.


Why This Hurts Squad Variety and Player Enjoyment

One of the biggest casualties of PlayStyle dominance is squad diversity. Players are packing cards they love in real life but never using them in-game because they don’t fit the PlayStyle meta. Entire promos are ignored because a card lacks one or two key traits. Even some Winter Wildcard and special cards feel dead on arrival if their PlayStyle selection is wrong.

This leads to absurd situations where professional players choose Claudia Pina over R9. Let that sink in. Ronaldo Nazário, one of the greatest strikers ever, is being sidelined because he doesn’t have Incisive or Tiki Taka. When that becomes normal, it’s no longer about preference; it’s about survival in the meta.


A Long Year Ahead If Nothing Changes

Unless EA Sports seriously rebalances PlayStyles, FC 26 could be a long and frustrating cycle. Players will continue to chase traits instead of footballers. Packs will feel less exciting. And squad building will become more restrictive instead of creative. The fun of experimenting with different players disappears when only a small group of PlayStyle-optimized cards are viable.

PlayStyles should give cards an edge, not decide their entire value. Until that balance is restored, Ultimate Team risks becoming less about football and more about chasing icons under a card’s name. And if that’s not a problem, it’s hard to know what is.

We will share more updates on FC 26 in separate articles. If you found this information helpful or would like to learn more, please explore the other articles on our site.

Claudia Pina POTM (87 LW/ST) Review in EA FC 26 — The Meta Breaker Nobody Expected

FC 26 New Unbreakables Promo – Full Player Breakdown, Official Stats & Top 10 Analysis

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