In Search of Authenticity: FIFA 12 Vs. the Real World
When Catalan midfielder Xavi Hernandez—who plays for the Spanish national team and FC Barcelona—was asked last year to describe how he deals with defenders, he replied:
Think quickly, look for spaces. That’s what I do: look for spaces. All day. I’m always looking. All day, all day. Here? No. There? No. People who haven’t played don’t always realize how hard that is. Space, space, space. It’s like being on the PlayStation.
When he says that playing soccer is like being on PlayStation, he’s not being figurative—Xavi sees the game as a series of systems to be exploited, an algorithm to be carried to its logical conclusion.
The standard FIFA camera gives players a bird’s-eye view of the pitch, making it easy to find open players and progress down the field. Xavi, though, seems preternaturally organized and surgically precise. Barcelona’s style—onomatopoetically nick-named tiki-taka—is a complex web of triangles, timing, diagonal lines, calculus and short passes, all executed perfectly. Barça with Xavi at the helm play the way the FIFA engine might simulate a match.
Aaron McHardy, the senior gameplay designer for the team behind the FIFA franchise, takes Xavi’s invocation of videogame soccer as a compliment, noting that recreating the decision-making process was one of EA Canada’s major goals for FIFA 12. But Xavi’s comments carry weight specifically because he plays for one of the most structurally stringent teams in Europe: Barça, more than any other team, succeeds because all of its players are tuned into its Borg-like strategy, each content to do their part and little else.
This level of self-effacement is uncommon in sports, where outsized egos and personae rule the day. This is equally true in videogames, a medium that highly values self-expression and personalized experiences.
Xavi is tasked with aspiring to the platonic midfielder, but FIFA’s audience must do it for all 11 players on the field in order to be successful. When asked about Xavi’s comments, McHardy describes FIFA as an inversion of real-world soccer: “The way he was saying he’s trying to bide time on the ball … just like he’s on PlayStation, we’re trying to do the opposite. We’re trying to build a game to understand what a pro’s doing, what a defender’s doing in that moment.” Most narrative games feature protagonists who act as ciphers for the player, but FIFA—and its real-world counterparts—demand that its players be able to absorb successful tactics from the game. The relationship has switched. “You really have to make all the decisions that a pro makes,” McHardy concludes.
This devotion to contextual decision-making serves the higher goal of what McHardy calls “authenticity,” which he sees as distinct from the game’s photorealistic graphics and broadcast-style presentation.
“We are trying to mimic the real-world broadcast, but to say it’s just us trying to mimic the emotions that you get when you’re watching a game on TV is, I think, selling us far short,” McHardy explains. “We try to bring all of the nuance a player feels, what’s he’s going through in a match, to the videogame … so that you can get a wide range of emotions, not just held to what you can see on TV.”
EA Canada’s iterative approach to authenticity actually keeps Xavi’s analogy from falling apart. With Xavi anchoring their midfields, both the Spanish national team and FC Barcelona have developed a patient and precise style, by focusing on short, inexorably accurate passes. Teams that don’t lose the ball give their opponents few choices to score, the irony being that Xavi-helmed teams rarely have to score a lot of goals to actually win. I find their tactics cerebral and ineffable; less generous observers think its boring.
Where videogame and real-world soccer diverge is in the premium that FIFA places on scoring goals. Scoring goals is fundamental to winning soccer games, no doubt, but during the mid-to-late aughts, the most successful FIFA strategies boiled down to constant attack, and goals came consistently and easily. Real soccer simply doesn’t work like that, and Xavi’s comparison seems particularly out of touch given that the teams he plays for—and has come to embody—actively seek to stifle such an approach.