Goal Storm / ISS Pro series Pro Evolution Soccer series traces its roots to
Goal Storm (also known as
World Soccer Winning Eleven in Japan). The game was developed by
Konami Computer Entertainment Tokyo and was released in 1996. The first
Winning Eleven game, without the
World Soccer prefix, was
J.League Jikkyou Winning Eleven which was released only in Japan for the PlayStation in 1995, and featured only the 14 clubs that played in
1995 J.League. The following three games in the series were also produced by Konami Computer Entertainment Tokyo and they were released under the name of for the European market and for the rest of the world. Every game in this series was released on the
PlayStation.
Pro Evolution Soccer series Series overview Pro Evolution Soccer Tagline: "We are the Football Tribe" The first installment in the series of games was released in October 2001 for both
PlayStation and
PlayStation 2. It was released under the name in Japan. Commentary on the game was provided by
Jon Briggs and
Terry Butcher.
Pro Evolution Soccer 2 Tagline: "They Will Rock You" ( in Japan and in the United States,
PS2 and
GameCube only) and exclusively in
PS1 is the second installment and was released in October 2002 and some felt that it was a slight backwards step from the original
Pro Evolution Soccer. Others argued that it had improved. The pace of gameplay was much faster than in the game's older sibling, with sharper turns and quicker reactions to tackles. It also included a training session mode. Extra clubs were added, with an extra Master League division. There were two new commentators,
Peter Brackley and
Trevor Brooking, but this aspect of the game was criticised for the commentators' inaccuracies and tendency to speak over each other. The licensing was much the same, but infamously all Dutch players were called "Oranges" (e.g. goalkeeper
Edwin van der Sar was renamed "Oranges025",
Johan Cruyff was "Oranges082", etc.), because Konami did not hold the rights from the
Royal Dutch Football Association, for use from Dutch players; in fact, plenty of other football games of the period with FIFPro licences also saw this happen to them (including
FIFA 2002), following Netherlands' unsuccessful campaign at the
2002 World Cup qualifiers. Also, unlike in the original game, the "unofficial" club names stopped using obvious city names (e.g.
Manchester United was Manchester,
Real Madrid was Madrid, etc.), and instead used very ambiguous names (e.g. Manchester United were now Aragon, Liverpool became Europort, and West Ham became Lake District). The edit mode included a club editor which offset this problem to some extent, with editable kits and logos as well as club and player names. The game notably included licensed tracks by
Queen: "
We Will Rock You" as opening theme and "
We are the Champions" as ending for champions final. A
PlayStation version (known as in Japan) was also released in last April 2002 with matchball world cup 2002 by
adidas Fevernova, which was the last
Pro Evolution Soccer release for the original PlayStation with matchball by
Umbro.
Pro Evolution Soccer 3 Taglines: "The Season Starts Here" (
Winning Eleven 7/Pro Evolution Soccer 3/Winning Eleven 7: International (US)); "Football is Life" (
Winning Eleven 7: International (JP)) Cover athlete:
Pierluigi Collina (World) ( in Japan and in the United States) is the third installment in the series and was released in 2003. The most significant update was the overhaul in the graphics engine, with more life like players and much improved likeness. The gameplay was changed to accompany this, with more fast-paced action than that of
PES 2, a much better physics engine, additions such as the advantage rule improved passing and long-ball functions, while as per usual, more licences (with the infamous Dutch "Oranges" removed, replaced with pseudonyms such as "Froibaad" in the place of
Patrick Kluivert), more club teams and the Master League is now split into regional divisions, with competitions equivalent to the
Champions League with matchball
Adidas Finale 03 without UCL watermark, the
UEFA Cup and as
Umbro was no longer revived, the company has been replaced by
Adidas and
Adidas Fevernova as Official Match in
Winning Eleven 7 Japan version.
Pro Evolution Soccer 3 is the first in the series (3rd overall) to be released for
Microsoft Windows and was well received by the PC games magazines but criticised by fans for its lack of online mode and bloated system requirements at its time, particularly not supporting the common Geforce MX series. Its rival,
FIFA Football 2004, had online functions and had more modest system requirements in comparison. The game was essentially a direct conversion of the PlayStation 2 code, albeit with sharper graphics and is easier to download fan made mods for the game. First time, 7 Team fully licensed was added with 3 renamed stadium from generic to real stadium name with 6 club.
A.C Milan,
SS Lazio,
AS Roma,
Juventus,
Parma from
Serie A and
Feyenoord Rotterdam from
Eredivisie. National team was added
South Korea from Asia.
Pro Evolution Soccer 4 Tagline: "The long road to the Final" Cover athlete:
Pierluigi Collina,
Thierry Henry &
Francesco Totti (World). (, in Japan and in the United States) was the fourth installment in the series and was released in 2004. This is the first
Pro Evolution Soccer game to feature full leagues, namely the English, French, German, Spanish
La Liga, Italian
Lega Calcio Serie A, and Dutch top divisions
Eredivisie, though with full league licences only for the latter three. As a result, clubs in, for example, the English League, an unlicensed league, have ambiguous names like "West London Blue" and "Man Red" for
Chelsea and
Manchester United respectively, and their home grounds
Stamford Bridge and
Old Trafford are respectively named "Blue Bridge" and "Trad Brick Stadium". The gameplay has improved from
Pro Evolution Soccer 3 (though not as much of a significant leap as its predecessor) with improved AI, tweaked play-on advantages and better throughballs. Dribbling is tighter with the players (though at one-star difficulty, a player receiving the ball on either wing can dribble the ball down the length of the pitch relatively uncontested), plus free-kicks have been changed to allow lay-offs. The gameplay was criticised for its relatively easy scoring opportunities, as players can pass their way through opposing defenses, or hold on to the ball at the edge of the penalty area and simply wait for the opposing defenders to move away and thus give him space to shoot. A new 6-star difficulty was added as an unlockable in the shop, as well as the previous items, while the Master League included enhancements such as player development, so many players over 30 would see certain attributes decline as the game progresses. Conversely, players could improve upon their attributes up to the age of 24–25, though the improvement is most rapid and obvious in players aged 22 and under. The edit mode has been enhanced rapidly, with the options to add text and logos to shirts (essentially sponsors) and pixel logo editing as well as the traditional preset shapes, thus making it easier to replicate a team. The game also includes an "International Cup" and four regional Cups: • The "European Cup" is remarkably inclusive, including almost every major European country, as well as smaller countries like Slovenia, Hungary, and Slovakia. However, countries like Israel and Iceland are not included. The Czech Republic is simply called "Czech". • The "American Championship" is a merger of the
CONCACAF Gold Cup and the
Copa América. It includes most North, Central and South American countries. • The "Asia-Oceania Cup" includes only five Asian countries: Japan, Saudi Arabia, Iran, China, and South Korea, plus Australia. In real life, Australia would later join the
Asian Football Confederation, winning the
2015 AFC Asian Cup. South Korea is simply called "Korea". Adidas templates are used in Edit Kit in Edit mode
Pro Evolution Soccer 5 Tagline: "Bring it On" Cover athlete:
John Terry &
Thierry Henry (World) (known as in North America and Japan) the fifth installment in the series, was released in October 2005. The improvements are mainly tweaks to the gameplay engine, while online play finally made it to the
PlayStation 2 version. The game was perceived as much harder by fans, with a very punishing defence AI making it harder to score. Some players have pointed out inconsistencies in the star difficulty rating, such as 3 star mode being harder to beat than 6 star due to its more defensive nature, but in general scoring is harder. Referees are very fussy over decisions, awarding free kicks for very negligible challenges. There are various new club licences present, including
Arsenal,
Chelsea,
Celtic,
Rangers and a few other European clubs, as well as the full Dutch, Spanish and Italian Leagues. Since crowd animations on the PS2 version slowed down the framerate to an unplayable level in the testing phase, crowds were rendered as flat animated 2D bitmaps which, on certain angles, become unseen, making the stands appear empty; however, fully 3D-rendered crowds are present during cut-scenes. There are however
fan-made patches which address this in the PC version, although no official patch was released.
Official PlayStation 2 Magazine UK gave it a perfect 10/10 score.
Pro Evolution Soccer 5, was released for Xbox, Windows and PS2, all online enabled. A PSP version was released, but with stripped down features, such as no Master League, no commentary, only one stadium and limitations in the editor, due to the limitations to the
UMD. The PSP version featured Wi-fi play, and the gameplay was faster and more "pin-ball like" in comparison to its console siblings, but it did not receive the same acclaim as the mainstream console/PC versions.
Pro Evolution Soccer 6 Tagline: "Express Yourself!" Cover athlete:
Adriano (World),
John Terry (Europe);
Zico and
Shunsuke Nakamura (Japan) ( in Japan and in the United States) is the sixth installment in the series and was officially released in the
UK on 27 October 2006 and 28 April 2006 exclusively
PlayStation 2 released in Japan, upgraded from stuck kits without licensed league in Season 2005-2006 but used kits licensed from previously to new kits 3 licensed league from season 2004–2005 to season 2005-2006 included real font and numberic football players, for the
PlayStation 2,
PlayStation Portable,
Xbox 360 and PC platforms and on 9 February 2007 for the
Nintendo DS. The PC version does not utilise the Xbox 360 engine but is a conversion of the PS2 edition. The PSP version is similar in many ways to its PS2 brother, while the DS version has graphics and gameplay reminiscent of the older
PES series on the original
PlayStation. A criticism of the previous version was that the game was too unforgiving and so suppressed fluid attacking football.
Pro Evolution Soccer 6 was issued with more tricks and an overall more attacking mentality, but whether it does make it easier to take on defenders and get forward is debatable. More new real face young players likely
Lionel Messi, new licensed national team and 3 new licensed club were added since
World Soccer Winning Eleven 10 announced trailer in March 2006 in Japan, including fully licensed kits World Cup 2006 by the National football team
England,
Spain,
Italy,
Argentina and
Australia and 3 new licensed club between
FC Bayern Munich only licensed from
Bundesliga,
Boca Juniors with include real name stadium call
La Bombonera from
Argentina League Division 1 and
São Paulo FC from
Brazil Serie A, to name a few (as well as the ever-present by
Japan and JFA MAX). The French
Ligue 1 is now included as fully licensed league first time from
Pro Evolution Soccer 6, as well as the Spain
LaLiga, Italian
Lega Calcio Serie A and Dutch
Eredivisie, plus several other individual clubs. However, the
Chelsea F.C. licence from
PES5 was removed and, due to a lawsuit, Konami were forced to drop the Bundesliga licence. The game had not updated Arsenal's venue to the Emirates stadium; the defunct Highbury is still present. The same applies for Bayern Munich, who, despite having moved to the
Allianz Arena, are still represented in the game as playing at
Munich's Olympic Stadium. Also, the recent extensions to
Old Trafford are not included, but included only
J-League Winning Eleven 10 + Europe League 06'-07' with real name
Manchester United stadium
Old Trafford, while
Serbia and Montenegro are still present despite the dissolution of the country in May 2006, this being due to the disestablished state competing at the
2006 World Cup. All teams which competed at the World Cup featured their 23-man squads from the tournament, including those who retired from international football (e.g.
Phillip Cocu of the
Netherlands) and from the game altogether (e.g.
Zinedine Zidane of
France), although club teams were fairly up to date. The
Xbox 360 version features next-generation, high-definition graphics and more animations, but gameplay similar to the other console versions, according to a recent interview with Seabass. The Xbox 360 version also finally introduces the Pro Evolution series to widescreen gaming, a feature that was sorely missing from the PS2 and
Xbox versions of the game. Much of the gameplay and editing options were severely stripped down for the 360 release.
Pro Evolution Soccer 2008 Tagline: "If football is your life,
PES 2008 is your game." Cover athlete:
Cristiano Ronaldo (World),
Michael Owen (UK),
Didier Drogba (France),
Jan Schlaudraff (Germany),
Gianluigi Buffon (Italy),
Lucas Neill (Australia) (Known as ) is the seventh installment in the series. The game was released for
PC,
PlayStation 3,
Xbox 360,
PlayStation 2 on 26 October 2007 in Europe, 2 November 2007 in Australia, and 31 December 2007 in Japan. The
PlayStation Portable and
Nintendo DS version were released in November, and the rather different
Wii version. was released in March 2008. It was the first game in the series to drop the
Winning Eleven name from its title in the United States. . A new adaptive AI system entitled 'Teamvision' was implemented into the game, Teamvision is a sophisticated AI programming that learns and adapts according to an individual's style of play. As such, it will learn new ways to build attacks and to counter specific movements and previous attacking or defensive errors, ensuring games are more in line with the tactical but flowing nature of the real thing. , officially abbreviated as and also known in Asia as , is the 15th installment in the series. It is also the game to be released during the series' 20th anniversary. It was released on 15 September 2015, in North America, 17 September in Europe, 18 September in United Kingdom, and on 1 October in Japan. Also in April 2016, the special edition of
PES 2016 called
UEFA Euro 2016 which features
Real Madrid and
Wales player
Gareth Bale on the cover, updated start from Data Pack 3.00 released in March 2016 with official background
UEFA EURO 2016 France with official HUD in during live game, in title game and Cup mode or Exhibition mode when you selected this real competition name. English commentary by
Peter Drury is provided for the first time with
Jim Beglin.
Pro Evolution Soccer 2017 Tagline: "Control Reality" Cover athlete:
FC Barcelona (World) (officially abbreviated as , also known in Japan as ) is the 16th installment in the series. On 25 May, Pro Evolution Soccer 2017 was announced and scheduled to be released on PC,
Xbox 360,
Xbox One,
PlayStation 3 and
PlayStation 4. On 26 July 2016,
Konami Digital Entertainment officially announced a premium partnership with Barcelona allowing "extensive" access to the
Camp Nou, which will be exclusive to the game for three years. Features includes, among others, improved passing, Real Touch ball control, and improved goalkeeping technique. Konami has released Pro Evolution Soccer 2017 for mobile phones.
Pro Evolution Soccer 2018 Tagline: "Where Legends are Made" Cover athlete:
FC Barcelona (World);
Philippe Coutinho (Brazil) (officially abbreviated as , also known in Japan as ) is the 17th installment in the game series. It was released worldwide in September 2017. This was the last game to feature the
UEFA Champions League,
UEFA Europa League and
UEFA Super Cup until
FIFA 19, after Konami lost the license to these franchises to
EA Sports.
Pro Evolution Soccer 2019 Tagline: "The Power of Football" Cover athlete:
Philippe Coutinho (Standard Edition),
David Beckham (Legacy Edition) (officially abbreviated as , also known in Japan as ) is the 18th installment in the game series.
PES 2019 is the first
PES in 10 years not to feature the UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League and UEFA Super Cup license after Konami lost the rights to EA Sports.
eFootball PES series Series overview eFootball PES 2020 Tagline: "Playing is Believing" Cover athlete:
Lionel Messi (World) (officially abbreviated as , also known in Japan as ) is the 19th installment in the game series. eFootball
PES 2020 introduces a change in the name and a focus from Konami in the online gaming space. The game will also mark its installment of the
UEFA Euro 2020, which was originally scheduled in the same year before being postponed to next year following to the
COVID-19 pandemic. In place of a new edition for the 2020–21 season,
eFootball PES 2020 will receive a content update, known as , while the development team works on the following game, and its first season entitled , which will see the Fox Engine replaced by
Unreal Engine 4 on its eighth and ninth-generation versions, as well as PC. In December 2019, Arsenal midfielder
Mesut Özil was
completely removed from the Mandarin version of
eFootball PES 2020 in
China following a tweet from Özil, himself a Muslim of Turkish descent, that characterized the
Xinjiang internment camps as a "crackdown" on
Uyghurs. According to
NetEase Games, they stated his comments "
hurt the feelings of Chinese fans and violated the sport's spirit of love and peace. We do not understand, accept or forgive this." Özil was later added during the 2022 April update.
eFootball PES 2021 Season Update Cover athlete:
Lionel Messi (Standard Edition).
Cristiano Ronaldo,
Alphonso Davies and
Marcus Rashford will become three ambassadors. On 15 July 2020, it was announced that
eFootball PES 2021 Season Update would be released in celebration of the series' 25th anniversary. Due to PES Productions focusing development efforts on
eFootball 2022 for the
ninth generation consoles, the game was based on the
eFootball PES 2020 engine. Konami announced an exclusive multi-year partnership with A.S. Roma and S.S. Lazio, while A.C. Milan and Inter Milan are not featured after they signed exclusive partnership deals with EA Sports, and instead are known as Milano RN and Lombardia NA respectively. The
Season Update was released for PlayStation 4, Xbox One and Windows on 15 September.
eFootball eFootball is the first football game from Konami without the title
PES for nearly 20 years. The game was released on
PlayStation 4,
PlayStation 5,
Microsoft Windows,
Xbox One,
Xbox Series X,
Android, and
iOS, on 30 September 2021. The cover of
eFootball features
Inter Miami's
Lionel Messi.
eFootball was met with overwhelmingly negative reception from critics and players alike because of the game's poor technical and graphical quality, and its lack of teams and features.
eFootball Kick-Off! eFootball Kick-Off! will release for the
Nintendo Switch 2 on June 3, 2026. It will be the first eFootball game to release for a Nintendo platform.
Other titles Arcade •
World Soccer: Winning Eleven Arcade Game Style •
World Soccer: Winning Eleven Arcade Game Style 2003 •
World Soccer: Winning Eleven 2006 Arcade Championship •
World Soccer: Winning Eleven Arcade Championship 2008 •
World Soccer: Winning Eleven Arcade Championship 2010 •
World Soccer: Winning Eleven Arcade Championship 2012 •
World Soccer: Winning Eleven Arcade Championship 2014 Game Boy Advance •
Wi-El: World Soccer Winning Eleven (2002) •
J-League Winning Eleven Advance 2002 (2002)
GameCube •
ESPN MLS ExtraTime 2002 PlayStation •
ESPN MLS GameNight PlayStation 2 •
ESPN MLS ExtraTime Nokia •
Pro Evolution Soccer 2010 Nintendo 3DS •
Pro Evolution Soccer 2011 3D Xbox •
ESPN MLS ExtraTime 2002 Windows MMO •
Winning Eleven Online •
Winning Eleven Online 2014 J-League Winning Eleven series The is exclusive to Japan and has been released since 1995 with the release of
J-League Jikkyou Winning Eleven exclusively for PlayStation.
Management games ====Card collection (
trading card) games==== == See also ==