Every match in goalunited is resolved by a probabilistic engine, not a deterministic formula. Stronger teams win more often, but never every time. Understanding what feeds into that probability is what separates managers who improve from those who stay frustrated.
A match result emerges from many interacting layers. This guide works through them from the bottom up: individual player stats, team-level factors, tactical choices, and finally the probability calculation that turns all of it into goals and a score.
Everything starts at the player level. Six statistics combine to determine how effectively a player contributes to their sector in any given match:
Stat | What It Does in Matches |
Skills (Keeping/Tackling/Playmaking/Passing/Scoring) | The primary determinant of positional strength. Each position relies most on one skill; secondary skills contribute less. Skills train up to 100 (or 115 with special cards). Skills above 32 begin to decline slowly. |
Experience (XP) | Improves the effectiveness of skills. A player with XP 100 performs significantly better than the same player at XP 20, even with identical skills. Caps at 100 (extendable to 115 with special items). |
Form | What fraction of potential the player shows today. High form (70+) means close to full output; low form (under 30) means noticeably reduced. Fluctuates naturally; trainable and card-boosted. |
Energy | Must meet or exceed the match effort threshold for full performance. Below threshold: performance drops and card/injury risk rises. Resets to 100 each new season. |
Endurance | Reduces energy consumed per match. At 90+ endurance, energy use is standard. At 5 endurance, 33% more energy is burned. Also affects efficiency decay over 90 minutes. |
Morale | Direct percentage bonus or penalty to effective skills. 'Very Good' (90+) gives up to +10% strength. 'Abysmal' (1–20) gives −15–25% strength. Resets to 'Okay' each season. |
Technique | A newer stat (1–100) that boosts the player's primary skill during matches. Only affects actual match performance. Grows through training and playing. |
All seven stats are important. A player with great skills but low energy, poor form, and abysmal morale can perform far below a nominally weaker player who is fresh, in form, and motivated.
On top of individual stats, several club-wide bonuses or penalties apply to the whole team in a given match:
Factor | Effect |
Team Spirit (0–100) | Improves ball possession for the whole team. Higher spirit also slightly boosts player form. Resets to 50 each season; driven up by wins, down by losses. Mental Coach raises the baseline above 50. |
Home Advantage | The home team receives a performance bonus based on stadium size and actual attendance. Bigger stadium + more fans = bigger advantage. Finals are played on neutral ground (no bonus). |
Coach Bonus | Your coach gives a sector-specific performance boost depending on their philosophy. Visible in the formation page via the 'Coach Influence' visualisation. |
Personality Bonus | 8+ different personalities in the starting eleven = +10% performance for all 11 players. One of the most consistent and freely-available bonuses in the game. |
Building Upgrades / Decorations | Active bonuses from stadium upgrades and special decoration buildings. Shown on page 3 of the post-match newspaper report under 'Bonuses'. |
Each sector on the 9-zone pitch is contested independently. For every sector, both teams' contributions are compared to determine which side has the advantage there, and by how much. Three tactical decisions influence these sector strengths:
Tactic selection applies bonuses to certain sectors and penalties to others. Advantage only materialises at 80%+ training.
Marking — Man marking strengthens sectors 1–3 (defence) by 7.5%; Zonal marking strengthens sectors 4–6 (midfield) by 5%.
Player placement — sub-positions shift a player's influence between adjacent sectors. Choosing where within each sector to place players is itself a tactical decision.
The sector heatmap in the post-match newspaper report shows the result: green sectors are those you dominated, red ones are where the opponent had the advantage. Percentages show the relative split (e.g. 60% yours / 40% theirs in a given sector).
With all the above calculated, the match engine runs each event probabilistically. When a player makes a pass, wins a duel, or takes a shot, the outcome is drawn from a probability distribution shaped by the relevant stats and bonuses. A stronger player is more likely to succeed, but not guaranteed.
This means that over a single match, luck is also a factor that shouldn’t be omitted. Over many matches, it averages out toward the stronger team winning more. This is exactly like real football; upsets happen, and they always will.
Concrete implications for how you manage:
Do not draw sweeping conclusions from a single result. One loss to a weaker team tells you almost nothing on its own.
Track sector control across multiple matches to spot real formation weaknesses.
A pattern of late goals conceded often signals an endurance problem; players fade in the second half.
A pattern of many chances created but few goals scored may be form-related or simply variance.
Before every meaningful match, run through these mental checks in order:
Player readiness: is energy above the effort threshold for every starter? Are any key players low-morale?
Formation: do I have 8 personalities? Are special jobs assigned deliberately?
Opponent analysis: what sectors did they dominate last week? What tactic do they favour?
Tactic selection: is my tactic trained above 80%? Does it play into the opponent's weaknesses?
Effort: is this match worth the energy cost of high effort? Or is normal effort sufficient?
Referee: fussy referee + key players near card limits = consider dropping effort at halftime.