
The first thing you have to do in Ultimate Team Draft is choose which difficulty level you want to play at. In single player mode, this doesn’t
affect the rewards you get, just the number of coins you earn from each match. After that, you get the choice of five formations from the 30-or-so in the game, the idea being that you
might experiment with something beyond the boring old 4-4-2 you’re probably used to. The first choice of player is your captain, who is
someone you can build your team around – these will always all be great players, far more skilled than most of those you’d find in the regular Ultimate Team mode.
When building your team, you need to consider chemistry, balance, and lots of other factors, such as whether they play in the same league or even the same team. When picking each position, FIFA will choose five random players from around the world, and once you’ve chosen each one, you can’t go back. You start out with your strikers, then your defenders and your midfielders, although you can switch players
around within these categories if you like. Once you’ve built out your main team, you have to pick your manager, which is your chance to
add that last bit of chemistry to your team.
From there, you’ll get to take your Ultimate Team out to play up to four matches, trying to win as many games as you can before you lose
and get knocked out. Then you receive rewards based on how well you did, both whether you win or lose. If you lose, the rewards are always worth at least as much as entering the mode, so you’re technically never losing anything by
playing Ultimate Team Draft. Shaikh concedes that it might not be how you would have spent the coins otherwise, but if you win matches,
especially online, then the rewards really will be worth it, combining packs, players, loan players
and coins. You can also occasionally get rare packs or players packs that aren’t available for purchase.

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