The true test came on Friday night. His best friend, Marcus, came over, boasting about his 90-rated pace strikers.
Alex sat in his dimly lit room, the glow of the monitor reflecting off his glasses. He wasn't playing matches yet. Instead, he was buried in the
In the 70th minute, Alex saw his opening. He used a "Pass with Purpose" to zip the ball through a tight gap, performed a "No Touch Dribbling" feint to leave Sergio Ramos frozen, and slotted the ball into the bottom corner. fifa-16-installment-tutorials
"Ready to get wrecked?" Marcus grinned, picking Real Madrid.
By the end of the weekend, the group chat was silent. Alex wasn't just winning; he was orchestrating matches. He realized then that in the world of FIFA , the player who masters the new "installment tutorials" isn't just a gamer—they’re the manager of the digital pitch. The true test came on Friday night
Alex picked a tactically balanced Borussia Dortmund. For the first twenty minutes, Marcus tried to sprint straight through the middle. In previous years, it might have worked. But Alex, fueled by his hours in the tutorials, used the new slide tackle mechanics to recover and the improved defensive positioning to shut down every lane.
He started with the tutorial. He practiced the "No Touch Dribbling"—a move inspired by motion-capture sessions with Lionel Messi. By holding L1/LB, Alex watched his digital avatar feint, shimmy, and explode past a training cone. He did it a hundred times until the muscle memory set in. He wasn't playing matches yet
"It’s the tutorials, man," Alex said with a smirk. "The game changed. You're still playing last year's version."