PSP Port of Winning Eleven 9.
Pro Evolution Soccer 5 (known as World Soccer: Winning Eleven 9 in North America and Japan, sometimes mislabeled as World Soccer Winning Eleven 9 International) is a football video game developed and produced by Konami as part of the Pro Evolution Soccer series. With featuring Arsenal and Chelsea it is the first release of the series which offered fully licensed clubs from the Premier League, which is one of the 3 unlicensed leagues of the game. There are also 3 licensed leagues just like in the predecessor Pro Evolution Soccer 4. The game also includes 3 fully licensed leagues, which are the Spanish Liga Española, the Dutch Eredivisie and the Italian Serie A. As with previous versions, the game features an edit mode allowing the player to edit certain elements of the game. It was the last release to feature the German Bundesliga (in the game as German League) before it was replaced by a generic league because of losing the license for the following releases. Pro Evolution Soccer 5 m
The PlayStation port of World Soccer: Winning Eleven 6, released for PlayStation 2.
The game featured 54 international and 16 club teams (plus seven hidden ones) to participate in several tournaments, from friendship games to the World Cup, with a vast choice of customisable tournaments. Players can create their players with personal statistics, and then put them into any team. They can also play legendary teams, such as Brazil with Pelé or Argentina with Maradona.
J.League Winning Eleven 5, released on October 25, 2001, was the first J.League entry on PlayStation 2. It was based on Winning Eleven 5. It was developed by KCET (Konami Computer Entertainment Tokyo) and published by Konami.
You control a character on a bicycle. and ride up, down, and jump through a three-dimensional course. and jump through three-dimensional courses. There are more than 30 different courses!
The third installment in the J. League Jikkyou football/soccer series. As with the other games in the series, the game focuses entirely on Japanese soccer leagues and lets you choose a team and try your luck at various available cups, quick exhibition matches or leagues. All the expected gameplay elements of a soccer game are there, from various player moves and rules of the game to setting team formations and choosing teams to control and stadiums to play on. Live commentator is present, but doesn't comment on everything but only on key elements as well as addressing players by their actual names. Camera isn't fixed and adjusts during gameplay to best show the current action, switches to back view for free kicks and penalties, zooms out if the ball is too high to show both the kicker and the ball, and otherwise works as an action camera slightly rotating angles and using zoom automatically instead of just scrolling over the soccer field. Before engaging in a match with another player or the CPU, player can also do