We are getting close to the usual pre-order window, and that means one thing for a lot of players: the next football game is starting to take over the conversation again. If you have been keeping an eye on the market and planning ahead, it makes sense to look at FC 27 Coins now rather than wait until launch week, when everything gets a bit chaotic. EA has not fully shown its hand yet, but plenty of details are already floating around, and a few of them look more solid than the rest. Some of the news is easy to dismiss, sure, but there are also real signs that the next game is shaping up to be a fairly busy one for Ultimate Team, Career Mode, and the wider licence picture. Reveal timing and what fans should expect The biggest date on the calendar right now is the official reveal, which is expected on July 14. That should be the moment EA finally starts laying out the next game in a proper way, instead of letting leaks and half-finished rumours do all the work. A trailer is likely, maybe with a few short clips focusing on gameplay and the new modes people have been talking about. The full release is still set for September 25, with early access for Ultimate Edition players arriving a week earlier. That part has already got people planning their first few days, because once the game drops, the rush is always the same. Everybody wants to get ahead, build squads quickly, and figure out what has changed before the price spikes start. Licences, leagues, and a few welcome returns One of the more interesting areas is licensing. EA FC has already had to deal with the fallout from losing the FIFA name, and with that comes a few awkward gaps in authenticity. This time around, there is good news on the international and regional side. The Asian Cup and Liga MX are both expected to return, which matters more than some people think because it opens up more variety in modes and squads. On top of that, EA has reportedly strengthened its links with national teams like Portugal and Brazil. Brazil is the one that keeps coming up in talks, mainly because of the club deals already in place with sides such as Bahia, Botafogo FR, Atlético Mineiro, and CR Flamengo. There is still a bigger question hanging over all of it, though: whether EA can finally secure the full Brazilian league. That would be a proper win for Career Mode and Ultimate Team alike, and you can tell there is interest on both sides. The only problem is that these deals tend to move slowly, and sometimes they stall for reasons fans never really get told about. Career Mode is trying to feel more alive Career Mode has been a sore spot for years, mostly because it keeps promising depth but often lands on the same old loop. From what is being said so far, EA wants interviews and player interactions to feel less robotic this time. Instead of hearing the same flat answers over and over, you should see more varied responses, with players reacting differently depending on the situation. That sounds small, but it matters. The mode only works if it feels like real decisions are being made, not if every press conference plays out like a clipboard exercise. There is also supposed to be more transfer information built into the process, so when you are chasing a signing, you will know more about injury history, training form, and how much competition is out there. If that all lands properly, it could make the market feel more alive. And if it does not, well, people will spot it straight away. They always do. Ultimate Team changes and the next big card idea Ultimate Team is getting the usual wave of tweaks, but there is one rumour that has caught a lot of attention: a new Hall of Fame card category. The idea is that this would highlight legendary players who have left a mark across the FIFA and FC series, not just in real football. That kind of thing can work if EA handles it well, because long-time players do care about the history of the game. It gives the mode a bit more identity, which it could honestly use. Alongside that, there are other expected changes such as quicker SBC completion, evolution adjustments, and a sticker-album style collection feature that sounds like it could be either brilliant or mildly annoying, depending on execution. If you are already thinking about building a squad early, you will probably hear people comparing prices and services before long, and some will look at EA FC Coins for sale as part of that early planning. That part of the community never really goes quiet. Last-gen support and the quieter details people miss There has also been some chatter about old consoles being dropped, but that does not look likely. EA still has too many players on previous hardware to walk away from them completely. What is more realistic is a stripped-back version, the kind people often call a Legacy Edition, where the key squads and faces change but the overall feel stays familiar. That may frustrate some fans, yet it is the sort of compromise the series has leaned on for years. The more important thing is whether the game feels better on the systems it is built for. If the launch version delivers cleaner gameplay, better movement, and fewer clunky animations, then most players will notice straight away. If not, the noise online will be loud, and probably pretty fast.