EA Sports has repeatedly said it fixed the issue via updates

Jun 3, 2014 21:31 GMT  ·  By

The development team at EA Sports wants as many gamers as possible to play the new World Cup content that has been added for free to FIFA 14 and has delivered a short new video showing England striker Rickie Lambert scoring an all important goal in the simulated competition.

On the official Twitter channel the company shows off how the players of the new mode can perform, but has unfortunately chosen to show fans a goal scored from a header, which has prompted a rather furious reaction from the community.

Since FIFA 14 was launched, in September 2013, players have noticed that some types of crosses and headers are overpowered and tend to result in more goals than in real life.

EA Sports has delivered a number of updates for the football simulation that were supposed to solve the issue, but their own video shows that it is more present than ever.

The World Cup content for FIFA 14 has both an all new Kick-Off mode, which includes all the teams present at the real-world championship, and a new type of tournament for the Ultimate Team, which includes updated stats and all new items and consumables that can help gamers create a more powerful squad.