![]() Again, this is a game meant to be touched, and it gets by alright if that’s the only way you plan on playing. Slow menu animations add to this frustration, with button presses not always being apparent in-game, and the general setup of buttons being mapped to functions is, on the whole, confusing and unintuitive. The Switch does have a touchscreen, of course, and it’s mostly okay to play the game using that alone, but trying to play in docked mode is a frustrating, borderline-impossible experience. As the name of the game suggests, Football Manager Touch is more or less built for touchscreens. Unfortunately, as coherent as the much of the package is, one area that needs some serious work is the user experience.
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