Sorry, computer footballers —

No PC port for EA’s high-end sports engine

Developer: Ignite Engine is unable to run on "lion's share of PCs."

EA
At last week's Electronic Entertainment Expo, EA was eager to show off how the power of its new Ignite Engine can create new, more realistic sports experiences titles. But while that engine will power EA's sports games on the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One, the company says the PC edition of FIFA 14 will not take advantage of it, owing to practical hardware considerations.

FIFA 14 is the only sports title EA still annually releases on the PC, and it remains popular worldwide even in countries that don't have a vibrant console market. The downside? A large contingent of FIFA PC players don't have the recent hardware needed to power the Ignite Engine, as EA Sports Executive Vice President Andrew Wilson explained to Polygon.

EA ran into a similar problem with FIFA games on the current generation of consoles; the console versions used a more advanced engine than their PC counterparts from 2005 through 2009. It wasn't until 2010's FIFA 11 that the company's console-level engine technology finally came to the PC edition of the game.

"Even though there were some PCs on the marketplace that could run that engine, the lion's share of PCs on the marketplace could not," Wilson said of early FIFA games on the Xbox 360 and PS3. "And the majority of the gamer base that was playing the game on PC did not have a PC spec that would work with that."

The same reasoning applies to the Ignite Engine, Wilson said, implying that it didn't make sense to put the time and effort into porting over an engine that the vast majority of PC players wouldn't be able to use. Wilson also noted that the Ignite Engine was built for game-focused architecture of the consoles—"how the CPU, GPU and RAM work together in concert in that type of environment"—and thus would be difficult to port to more generalized PC hardware.

The Ignite Engine will also be missing from the Wii U versions of this year's EA's Sports games. That perhaps shouldn't be a surprise, considering that last year's Wii U edition of Madden 13 was already missing the company's previous Infinity Engine technology, and EA has said it isn't even releasing Madden NFL on the Wii U this year at all.

Channel Ars Technica