EA College Football 27 Announces Huge Dynasty And Road To Glory Change
EA College Football 27 Credit: EA
The EA College Football community spoke loudly and EA listened. On Friday, July 10, EA posted this message on socials announcing the removal of all paid progression for Online Dynasty and Road to Glory. Let's talk video games.
Key Facts At A Glance
- What changed: EA is removing all paid progression from Online Dynasty and Road to Glory
- When: Saturday morning, July 11, via title update (PS5, Xbox Series X|S, PC)
- Why: Community backlash and the #CFBPlayDontPay boycott
- The catch: EA says more monetization is still coming to its games, just with better communication
- Points: College Football Points can't be used in those modes after the update, but stay usable elsewhere
What Did EA Change In College Football 27's Dynasty And Road To Glory?
During early access, EA added College Football Points and the Coach XP Accelerators that allowed players to buy their way up the progression ladder. After massive backlash from the community led by outspoken creators like Bordeaux, EA rolled back the concept.
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The removal is total, not a tuning pass. Beginning Saturday morning, July 11, EA is stripping every paid progression option out of both modes in a title update across PS5, Xbox Series X|S and PC.
Those points had reached players partly through pre-order bonuses, with Standard Edition buyers getting Dynasty Coach Points and Road to Glory Skill Points on top of anything purchased directly, as laid out in the pre-launch details.
Why Did EA Remove The Paid Progression?
Hashtags work. They work especially well when a large portion of the community gets involved. It's even more effective when it hits at a time when the developer/publisher wants anything besides bad press. That's why the #CFBPlayDontPay was so effective.
The revolt built fast. The hashtag climbed to No. 9 on US trends, Bordeaux and other EA Creator Network members turned on the campaign they were supposed to promote, and Steam reviews slid to "Mostly Negative."
What sharpened the anger was the setup. EA had pulled the Coach XP sliders that shipped in the last two games while adding the paid shortcuts, a change spotted almost immediately once early access opened, which made the slowed progression feel engineered to sell points. Insider Gaming reported that maxing a coach out of the gate ran about $100, more than the base game itself.
What Happens To Your College Football Points?
The minor bad news is that anyone who has already purchased CFP will lose them once the change goes in.
To be precise, the points are not erased. After the update, College Football Points can no longer be applied in Dynasty or Road to Glory, though any remaining balance stays in the account and can be spent elsewhere in the game. EA is urging anyone holding a balance to use it in those two modes before Saturday.
What's unresolved is refunds. EA has not said whether players who bought points specifically for these modes will get their money back.
[VIDEO: College Football 27 College Football Points explainer — YouTube, add]
Is This The End Of EA's Single-Player Monetization?
It's likely not the end. What EA must do is come up with a value-filled, completely transparent option for single-player experiences. It would make tons of sense to sell the legends they currently keep locked in Ultimate Team. I firmly believe fans would pay for all-time teams, if they had the ability to put them in Dynasty and Road to Glory. I'm almost sure we'll see some element of microtransactions in College Football 28. For the record, I'm not a microtransaction hater. They make sense in some instances. When real additional value is offered, there should be more charged because it's not simply a part of the base game. This attempt from EA did not check those boxes.
EA has been candid that monetization is not going away. The publisher framed the fix as better communication rather than a change of philosophy, and Insider Gaming reported that more monetization is coming across EA's slate.
That slate is the tell. Madden 27 is lined up for more monetization and EA UFC 6 will carry paid expansions for the first time, part of a portfolio-wide push tied to EA’s pending buyout. The College Football community proved it can force a walk-back. The broader direction has not.