
One of the neat details that make the game memorable for me is how the game represents each match. The range of control is comprehensive: you decide on the tactics to use for each match, as well as managerial tasks such as negotiation contracts with star players and sponsors, and investing in stadium expansions. As manager of a Division 3 club, your job is to lead the team up through the ladder, finishing up hopefully as the Premier League champion. That the game’s relative anonymity is undeserved is obvious from the first few minutes you spend with the game.įor starter, it includes accurate statistics for the players and clubs in the 1992/1993 Premier League season in England.

While Bundesliga Manager, the game’s German league equivalent, sells very well in Europe and is being continually updated, this England league counterpart was discontinued years ago. The Manager is an excellent soccer simulation game that is unfortunately much less popular than Championship Manager, current champion of the genre.
