![]() ![]() ![]() This is a lovely touch, almost like a football-themed Choose Your Own Adventure game. The more you train, the more you level up as a coach, learning additional drills to utilise in future sessions - a choice of three, in fact, each of which enhances your squad in a different area. Striking a balance between preparedness and exhaustion, you can now select a series of training drills - from a relaxed piggy in the middle to intensive sprint training - to set your team up for the coming fixture. Without model wives and nightclub brawls to indulge in, how can you fill your time? Training is the answer, and the main area Top Eleven has improved for its 2016 update. The problem, then, is what to do in between fixtures. Matches in Top Eleven are played against other player's teams, scheduled for actual dates and times - meaning you have to either make yourself available to oversee your team play via the basic 2D match engine, or return later to see how things turned out. I'll be attempting to lead my Top Eleven team to glory (or at least mid-table competence) over the course of a week, and will report back with my findings every few days. While other footy management titles on mobile let you play marathon sessions and plough through entire seasons at your own pace, Top Eleven's approach is fundamentally different. Unlike Football Manager and Champ Man 16, Top Eleven eschews licensed players and teams in favour of player-named clubs, customisable crests and kits, and teams of anonymous no-marks. Upon returning to Top Eleven for its 2016 update, it doesn't feel as if much has changed.įormer Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho remains the scowling face of the game, despite currently being jobless, and it still hasn't escaped the spreadsheet-heavy look that betrays its origins as a 2010 Facebook game. ![]()
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