It’s been a tough couple of years for the Pro Evo series, struggling to break into the top 4 and seeing their cross-town rivals reap the benefits, winning every award and trophy imaginable. PES is to Everton what FIFA is to Manchester City, dwarfed by an astronomical budget and fanbase, whilst faltering themselves in the past few years. They say the number thirteen is unlucky for some, and it’s looking like PES 2013 might just spell bad news for FIFA.
The first hurdle PES has had to overcome is its control scheme; to the newcomer and FIFA convert, the native controls controls can appear somewhat daunting, with crosses and shots reversed and many other intricacies altered in such a way that PES has an almost entirely different feel. This is no fault of the game, by and large, merely a different style of play and game. Some buttons feel far more intuitive than FIFA, with others comparatively nonsensical. Mapping shoot to X/Square might initially pose some problems, but for most gamers it’s where the right thumb most frequently lies, making it both readily available and at the same time significantly more comfortable. Conversely sprint on the right shoulder harks of the ‘tap to sprint’ era of the turn of the century and whilst mapping it to the same button as soft tackle upon defence, not opting for the right trigger causes discomfort, never designed to be held down for long periods of time, typically the least frequently used and most fleeting, legacy might be important but so are ergonomics.
The overall feel of Pro Evo 2013 is a much greater fluidity and looseness when set up against FIFA, the ball more liable to spin and bounce with a hitherto unknown degree of authenticity, never more present than during goalkeeper saves and deflections. The ball physics are absolutely sublime, spin and deflecting kills speed and flummox everybody, with saves and parries with both more direction but an added degree of uncertainty through the Dynamic First Touch system. ‘Regular’ player control feels like FIFA’s close control system, players naturally duck and dodge to a greater degree, and FullControl taking this to an entirely new level. Initially feeling clunky and unresponsive, taming this beast will reap the most prestigious of rewards.
Gone is the incessant drone of Andy Townsend and even if the array of commentary is vastly slimmer, at least his replacements provide comparatively dulcet, warming tones in John Champion and Jim Beglin, a selling point in its own right.
One of the most impressive things about PES is it’s unique visual style, heavy on neck varicose veins and an impressive attention to visual detail in its craft of even the little known players. Even in an unlicensed team like West Midlands Stripes -West Bromwich Albion to you and I- player likenesses are rather astounding, each player manually designed to look uncannily like their real life counterparts, players rarely have the eerie Goldeneye look that some of the mid-level FIFA players do.
One of the major selling points of for FIFA-converts seems to be the training system, a nice idea which in reality will cause many a broken controller and fantasy fist shaking. It’s a great idea, but executed like a Peter Crouch scissor-kick, cumbersome, unwieldy and very rarely accurate. The simple issue is that it doesn’t inform the new player as to where they are going wrong, leaving the played frustrated and unwilling to continue.
Fundamentally goals in PES feel immeasurably rewarding, especially when well-worked and tiki-taka feels sublime, especially when using fully manual passing and shooting. The control scheme can seem a little bewildering at first, but by and large it suits the job just fine and with the off-the-ball control, far excel’s FIFA’s current ability. 2012 isn’t exactly going to be the year of the FIFA slaying, but PES 2013 is a brilliant game, a perfectly viable alternative to FIFA 13 and if Konami continue to approach their game in this way, we could have a very tasty showdown next season.
This game was reviewed on the Xbox 360.
THE GOOD
Excellent first touch controls, fluid passing, intelligent attacking movement and off-the-ball player controls are all a treat
THE BAD
Training mode ham-fisted and a lack of licensing will put some players off.
Final Verdict
Fundamentally goals in PES feel immeasurably rewarding, especially when well-worked and tiki-taka feels sublime and if Konami continue to approach their game in this way, we could have a very tasty showdown next season.