Apps Games Articles
eFootball™ 2024
KONAMI
Rating 4.3star icon
Editor's summary
Editor rating
star icon star icon star icon star icon empty star icon
4.2

One-line summary eFootball™ 2024 is easy to recommend if you want slick, skill-driven mobile football that feels genuinely playable on a phone, but it’s harder to love if you want a quick, no-friction experience free of online dependency and menu clutter.

  • Installs

    100M+

  • Developer

    KONAMI

  • Category

    Sports

  • Content Rating

    Everyone

  • Latest version

    8.1.0

  • Package

    jp.konami.pesam

In-depth review
eFootball™ 2024 feels like a mobile football game that genuinely wants to be played rather than merely collected, tapped through, or passively managed. After spending real time with it, that is the biggest reason it stands out. The app opens with the usual free-to-play framing and a lot of football branding energy, but once you get onto the pitch, the core gameplay is what carries the experience. Passing has weight, movement has some rhythm to it, and matches feel like they are trying to recreate actual football flow instead of turning every possession into an arcade sprint. That sense of flow is the app’s strongest quality. On mobile, football games often fall into one of two traps: either they are too simplified to be interesting, or they ask too much from touchscreen controls and become frustrating. eFootball™ 2024 mostly lands in a workable middle ground. The controls take a little time to internalize, especially if you are trying to play with intent rather than button-mashing your way through attacks, but once they click, there is a satisfying amount of control over build-up play, pressing, and finishing. We had matches where patient passing felt rewarding, and others where a single mistake in midfield turned into a dangerous counterattack. That unpredictability makes it engaging over longer sessions. Visually, the game also makes a strong first impression. It does not feel bare-bones or cheap. Player animations, stadium presentation, and the general match-day atmosphere give it enough polish that it feels like a serious football title rather than a stripped-down mobile spin-off. This matters more than it sounds. A football game lives and dies by presentation because the sport itself is repetitive by structure: same pitch, same ball, same 90-minute idea. When the movement, camera work, and animations are convincing enough, each match has a bit more drama. eFootball™ 2024 does a good job of sustaining that illusion. Another thing we appreciated is that the game rewards concentration. There is a meaningful difference between casually poking at controls and actually reading the game. Defending, in particular, benefits from timing and positioning instead of just constant tackling. That gives matches tension. It also means wins can feel earned, which is essential in a sports title with this much longevity. That said, the app is not frictionless. The first major annoyance is that so much of the experience around the matches feels busier than it needs to be. Menus, progression paths, event-style structure, and general navigation can make the game feel heavier outside of actual play. We repeatedly had the feeling that the best part of eFootball™ 2024 is being on the field, while the worst part is everything you have to step through before getting there. It is not impossible to learn, but it is not especially elegant either. The second weakness is how demanding the game can feel if you just want quick, relaxed football. This is not the kind of mobile sports app that always works as a five-minute distraction. It asks for stable attention, some tolerance for setup and management, and a willingness to deal with the structure surrounding matches. If you are the sort of player who wants to instantly jump into a clean offline-feeling football session and move on, this app can feel more involved than ideal. There is a seriousness to it that fans will appreciate but casual players may find tiring. The third issue is touchscreen precision. Even though the controls are better than many mobile football games, there are still moments where input confidence drops. Fast transitions, crowded penalty-box situations, and defensive scrambles can expose the natural limitations of playing a complex sport on a glass screen. We had stretches where the game felt smart and responsive, then moments where we were fighting the interface more than the opposition. That inconsistency does not ruin the app, but it does keep it from feeling effortless. Still, there is a lot here to like if you meet the game on its own terms. The best sessions came when we sat down intending to actually play football: to build attacks, track runners, and adapt to the momentum of a match. In those moments, eFootball™ 2024 delivers a more convincing football experience than many mobile games manage. It feels competitive without being completely inaccessible, polished without being sterile, and deep enough to sustain repeated play. Who is it for? It is for football fans who want a mobile game with real match feel, some tactical texture, and enough mechanical depth to reward practice. It is also for players who do not mind spending time learning controls and navigating a fairly dense overall structure to reach the good stuff. Who is it not for? It is not for someone looking for a super-casual sports app, nor for players who get quickly irritated by layered menus, progression systems, or the occasional awkwardness of touchscreen control in high-pressure moments. If your ideal football game is instant, simple, and low-commitment, this may feel like more work than fun. Overall, eFootball™ 2024 succeeds because the football itself is genuinely enjoyable. That sounds obvious, but in this genre it is rare enough to be the deciding factor. Even with some unnecessary friction around the edges and the occasional control hiccup, the app offers a strong on-pitch experience that keeps pulling you back in. For many players, that will be more than enough reason to install it and stay with it.