The Best Sports Videogames of 2016

You’re allowed to not like sports. Don’t sweat it. But also don’t shoot any guff towards those of us who do. “Sportsball” jokes just make you look petty. And although sports videogames are regularly some of the best-selling and most popular games of the year, they rarely get the respect afforded to games that daringly ask you to kill every last resident of floating, turn-of-the-century sundown towns. Our list might play a little fast and loose with the concept of sports, but it’s important to acknowledge the fine work and tremendous effort that goes into this overlooked corner of the industry.
10. NHL 17
Much like the NHL itself, which only now feels fully recovered from the disastrous lockout that killed the entire 2004-2005 season (and that’s despite a lockout that saw almost half the 2012-2013 season wiped out), NHL 17 is finally starting to recover the momentum that was lost from the ill-fated NHL 15. Beyond a strong recreation of the game’s lightning-fast action, NHL 17 adds a deeper GM mode, a number of minor league teams that haven’t been in the game before, and a tournament based on the World Cup of Hockey, which Canada won in the real world back in September. It’s still playing catch-up with some of the other big names in team sports videogames, but for the first time in years hockey fans have a videogame to get excited about.
9. Football Manager 2017
As always, this was a big year for fans of soccer (or, as the civilized call it, football). It’s the only major team sport that has three different prominent videogames devoted to it every year. Football Manager 2017 isn’t for everybody, of course—it’s a complex simulation that focuses on, well, management, letting you handle almost every aspect of the game other than actually playing the match. It’s fallen prey to the same pitfalls as most annualized sports games—familiar bugs and problems continue to reappear, and it might not feel like a substantial enough update for annual players. Still, if you’re looking for a numbers-focused sports sim this year, Football Manager is once again the best you’ll find.
8. Pro Evolution Soccer 2017
Konami’s soccer game might always live in FIFA’s shadow, but many fans insist it’s the better of the two. It’s definitely better at recreating the look and feel of an actual game of soccer, so if you’re only interested in playing against the computer or locally against friends it might be the one to pick. It doesn’t come close to matching FIFA’s roster, and playing online doesn’t work as well, but the game itself is perfectly fine.
7. FIFA 17
FIFA 17 gets the nod over Pro Evo this year because it’s narrowed the gap in play while adding to its already significant lead in almost every other aspect of sports games. For the first time during the PlayStation 4 / Xbox One era, FIFA uses a new engine that eliminates some of the persistent problems that have plagued it the last few years. It also introduces a career mode that works better than expected. Add in the regular advantages in terms of rosters and online play, and it’s hard not to call this the soccer game of the year. (Well, if you don’t count the soccer-ish game that comes in at number three on this list…)