In brief, it sticks with the plain text approach, so no in-game graphic highlights, but adds a bootroom full of new features and options. There were add-on and update packs for CM2, including the popular CM 2 97/98 Edition, but for a good three years now soccer fans have been wondering what the next revision of the series would offer. I'm a self-confessed soccer grognard, and that's the underlying reason why I believe Championship Manager 3 has cemented the Collyer brothers' position as kings of footie sim designers. Was it more realistic? Generally, yes, but it was the attention to detail that truly won me over. I had lost faith in the level of realism in the series, and CM 2 offered a much richer level of detail. It wasn't until 1995, when Premier Manager 3) took to the field against Championship Manager 2 that I defected. Initial versions of both were rough, but despite their flaws they were still addictive, and I must say the lack of match highlights in Championship Manager turned me over to the side of Premier Manager.
Back in the early 90's, there were only two real contenders for my gaming money - Championship Manager and Premier Manager. As a lifelong footie fan, if you call Plymouth Argyle a football team, I've always had that burning desire to manage a soccer club to greatness, to be an armchair Arsene Wenger.