

After announcing a delay back in October, SEGA is now looking ready to launch SEGA Football Club Champions 2026 for PlayStation 5, PlayStation 4, PC, Android, and iOS on January 22, 2026. The game was previously known as SEGA Football Club Champions 2025, but with the launch now confirmed for early 2026, updating the title was necessary.
For those who are unaware, SEGA Football Club Champions 2026 will be a free-to-play football management simulation. And yes, SEGA is the company that publishes the Football Manager series, so this appears to be a free-to-play spin-off. It appears that the new game will be less comprehensive on the management side of things, but still focus on deep levels of strategy.
What To Expect From SEGA Football Club Champions 2026
Digging into the history a little bit, this new SEGA Football Club Champions is essentially the globalized evolution of a long-running Japanese series, Saka Tsuku. The series consists of games like Let’s Make a Soccer Team (2006) for the PlayStation 2, and SEGA Pocket Club Manager (2018) on Android and iOS. This gives us a much better idea of what to expect here.
According to SEGA, the game will use the Football Manager engine and tech. But early footage and feature descriptions point to something closer to SEGA’s Pocket Club Manager mobile titles than the full-blown management depth PC players expect. They are branding it as a strategy-heavy management sim. It even features real leagues like the J League and K League. You also get tactical control, youth development, training schedules, and transfer scouting.
However, the game also promises stadium-building, global PvP, cross-play on phones, leaderboards, and free-to-play progression. Add gacha-style player recruitment on top, and you can almost hear the microtransaction icons loading. It will allegedly be less comprehensive than Football Manager, and SEGA is framing it as a more “accessible” simulation.
One of the biggest advantages here is cross-platform support. The game will be fully playable across PlayStation, PC, and mobile, meaning club progression should follow you wherever you go. Of course, this also signals the presence of seasonal content and live-service elements.
Sega is trying a weird thing here, trying to position this game between FC Mobile and FM 26 Touch. If it lands well, it could be a rare middle-ground football game; complex enough for strategy fans, but approachable and cross-platform enough for mainstream players. Hopefully, this isn’t another mobile-first game weighed down by microtransactions.