One of the culprits behind that is the invasiveness of FC 25 Coins Ultimate Team. Ads for the in-game events and pack offers can be seen in FC 's main menus, and sometimes, a pop-up window will directly encourage players to try out Ultimate Team. The gacha mechanics implemented in the pack opening system don't help, either. Easing off of pressuring players to play FC 25 Ultimate Team will surely benefit the game as a whole, as well as the Ultimate Team mode itself.

EA Sports has already announced that they will be implementing new technology to the PS5 and Xbox Series X/S versions of FC 25. with a brand new "Hypermotion Technology" being used to reimagine the movements of players on the pitch. Fans hope that this also means the abandonment of the buggy, unpredictable Frostbite engine used in the previous titles.

Hopefully, the Hypermotion Technology will improve player animations, especially in tight-knit situations, where a mistake or bug could mean the difference between a goal and no goal. Fixing animations will make the gameplay feel more responsive without many tweaks, as bugs related to animations were the main culprit behind gameplay fluidity issues in the latest iteration of the franchise.

Nearly every FC player plays Ultimate Team, and nearly every single one of them hates it for all of the toxicity surrounding the game mode. EA Sports should be quicker to ban users who insult, threaten, or discriminate against other players mid-match, as well as implement better punishment mechanics for rage-quitting and abandoning matches, as some users (especially on PC), have figured out ways to get around the existing ones.

Of course, a lot of FC 25 Ultimate Team's toxicity comes from FC itself, as the pack-opening mechanics and the encouragement of buying packs have ramped up in recent years. This became a serious issue for some players since they feel like microtransactions and the gacha-like pack system have been prioritized over a high-quality user experience.

In FC 21. Martin Tyler and Alan Smith have been replaced by Derek Rae and Lee Dixon as the default commentators, but the in-game commentary continued to suffer from the usual problems: awfully repetitive phrases, not enough range to accurately cover everything that happens on the field, and dull, insufferable periods of silence when playing as some of the lesser-known teams.

EA Sports has already announced the introduction of Alex Scott (the first female commentator in FC history) and Scott Robson as new additions to the FC 25 commentary team. Hopefully, it will be followed by the announcement of an expansion of recorded commentator lines and phrases to make it less immersion-breaking than it was in FIFA Coins for sale.