In the competitive landscape of FC 26, boosting services have become a divisive topic within the gaming community.
While these services promise quick progression and coveted rewards, they’ve sparked heated debates about fair play, account security, and the integrity of competitive gaming.
Boosting services in FC 26 are third party operations where skilled players or organizations offer to improve another player’s account for a fee. These services typically fall into several categories:
Rank Boosting: Professional players log into your account and play Division Rivals or FUT Champions matches to achieve higher rankings or secure better weekly rewards.
Squad Battles Grinding: Services that complete Squad Battles matches on your behalf to earn points toward milestone rewards.
Objectives Completion: Players who handle time consuming in game objectives, from scoring specific types of goals to winning matches with particular squad requirements.
Coin Farming: Services focused on accumulating FUT coins through various game modes, though this often overlaps with coin selling operations that violate EA’s terms of service.
While specific company names constantly change as EA cracks down on these operations, boosting services generally advertise through: Social media platforms, particularly Twitter, Instagram, and TikTok. Discord servers dedicated to FC 26 trading and services. Third party gaming forums and marketplaces. YouTube sponsorships and influencer promotions.
These services typically charge based on the desired rank (Bronze to Elite), the number of wins needed, or the specific objectives to complete. Prices can range from £20 for basic objective completion to north of hundred pounds for top tier FUT Champions finishes.
One recent boosting service on twitter has caught attention, charging players for completing in the Ultimate Gauntlet 2, this mode is considered to be too sweaty as the rewards it gives out are pretty great in this power curve.
A FUT boosting account is charging players £60 to win all 12 gauntlet matches for reference FC costs £70 right now, that is almost as much as the game itself.
🚨 Gauntlet orders are live
— Maestros – FUT boosting (@UTMaestros) October 13, 2025
• 🇸🇳 Diouf only = £30
• ✅ 10 Gauntlet wins = £50
• ✅ 11 Gauntlet wins = £55
• ✅ 12 Gauntlet wins = £60
DM me to order 🤝 pic.twitter.com/tnhApD7pOY
The FC 26 community and EA Sports have multiple serious concerns about boosting services:
Boosting fundamentally undermines the competitive nature of FC 26. When players use these services to reach higher divisions or secure Elite rankings in FUT Champions, they’re not earning those positions through their own skill. This creates a false representation of ability and distorts matchmaking systems designed to pair players of similar skill levels.
Players who purchase boosting services gain rewards they haven’t earned, including better player packs, more coins, and exclusive items. This creates an uneven playing field where wealth rather than skill determines progression, frustrating players who invest time to improve legitimately.
Boosting services contribute to a toxic gaming environment. Legitimate players face frustration when matched against boosters in higher divisions, while those who’ve been boosted often struggle to maintain their rank, leading to poor experiences for everyone involved. This cycle damages the overall community atmosphere.
More importantly the use of this service is inherently contradictory, you purchase the game for personal enjoyment, yet you’re simultaneously paying a service to experience it instead of you.
If you pay 35$ or 60$ for this you need serious help https://t.co/ex0JNnLB7P
— Brandy777 (@JoeDL_11) October 14, 2025
While boosting services market themselves as convenient shortcuts to success in FC 26, they come with substantial risks and ethical concerns. They undermine fair competition, violate game terms, and expose players to security vulnerabilities all while contributing to a less enjoyable experience for the broader community.
For players genuinely wanting to improve, EA’s skill games, practice modes, and the wealth of free educational content from legitimate creators offer far better long term value than any boosting service ever could. True satisfaction in competitive gaming comes from personal growth and earned achievements, not purchased rankings that crumble under the pressure of actual gameplay.



