Finally, a football card game that doesn’t cost your soul

Esports

This football card game offers a refreshingly unique experience, standing apart from typical titles burdened by intrusive microtransactions and the pervasive corporate greed often seen in modern football. Instead, it evokes the simple charm of a 1980s Panini football sticker book, capturing a bygone era of simpler times.

Nutmeg blends card game mechanics with football management. While it doesn’t involve real-time match play like traditional football simulations, it incorporates familiar management elements: buying and selling players, training, stadium upgrades, merchandise decisions, and dealing with the club board. The game masterfully transports players to 1980s football, a time characterized by muddier pitches and a tangible closeness to the players.

The game’s retro aesthetic is impeccably executed. Your management office is a perfectly preserved relic of the 1980s, brimming with nostalgic tech: a fax machine for contracts, a Ceefax-enabled TV for news and results, a monochrome computer, a formidable metal filing cabinet, a rotary landline, an FM radio, a browning intercom, and a blackboard flip board. Every item is interactive, serving a purpose within this tactile, retro command center.

A key innovation lies in the card game mechanics. Players don’t manually control every match; in fact, only about one in five can be “broadcast” (manual control) each month, requiring strategic selection. The remaining matches are simulated by the computer based on team strengths. Interestingly, you don’t play player-cards directly during matches.

During a match, a sequence of events unfolds on screen, moving from defense to attack. As each event progresses, both teams have a chance to influence its outcome. For instance, if your team is attacking, the opponent can defend, and you can attempt to succeed. These outcomes are influenced by percentage chances, which can be altered using buff cards. If you have a 30% chance to score, a 30% buff card can secure the goal.

This system, though unconventional, is effective. An escalating orchestral score enhances the excitement as an attack builds. Despite static card art, the game’s energy convincingly simulates a football match, making pivotal interventions feel god-like. A “Hand of God” card, for example, significantly boosts scoring chances but risks a yellow card, adding charisma and wit to the gameplay.

While understanding how to buff percentage chances is straightforward, managing your hand of cards is more complex. A large hand offers greater tactical flexibility, though playing many cards incurs a stamina cost (mitigated by limited substitutions). Starting with a lower-division team, the reviewer often found themselves with few playable cards, leading to frustration and a sense of powerlessness.

This limited agency is partly a skill issue, as team training, tactics, and formation influence the card packs received before each game (e.g., a defensive regime yields more defensive cards). Individual players might also unlock unique buff cards. However, the reviewer expressed a desire for clearer visibility and control over deck building, feeling more at the mercy of temporary decks than empowered to craft their own.

The game’s identity as a “card game” is debatable. When players lack usable cards or when the computer simulates matches, the experience closely mirrors a traditional football management game. Even during manual card play, the depth of the card mechanics, with limited turns and few combo-oriented keywords, seems modest.

Despite these observations, the reviewer appreciates Nutmeg’s breezy approach. It prioritizes a fantasized, accelerated glimpse into football management over a rigid simulation. By limiting manual matches, the game streamlines progress, allowing quicker money accumulation, faster player development, and more frequent opportunities for engaging activities like buying/selling players and stadium upgrades. This focus on “big moves” is welcomed.

Ultimately, playing Nutmeg is akin to rediscovering a treasured Panini sticker book, conjuring images of idolized players from a different era of football and gaming. It’s an intriguing and charming blend of retro appeal with new mechanics. While its long-term strategic depth remains an open question, the current enjoyment is sufficient to overlook this.

Callum Whitby
Callum Whitby

Callum Whitby, 43, sports writer from Liverpool. With over two decades covering European football, he's established himself as an authority on Champions League and international competitions. His trademark long-form articles explore the cultural and historical contexts behind football rivalries. Hosts a weekly podcast featuring conversations with former players and managers from across the continent.

Sports News Review