Pes 2010 Database Review
Marco opened his master file: PES2010_Database_Final_v7.4.xlsm .
Marco smiled, closed his spreadsheet, and for the first time in years, he didn’t update a single stat. Some databases aren’t about data. They’re about connection. And PES 2010—with its imperfect, passionate, lovingly broken database—was the best kind of time machine.
“I’ve restored the original Konami database from August 2009. Plus, I’ve added a ‘Legacy Edit’ for your dad’s Kuyt. He’ll never get tired. Attached is the file and a short guide. Let me know when you win the league.” Pes 2010 Database
“We did it. Thank you for keeping the memory alive.”
Here’s a helpful and heartwarming story about the PES 2010 Database . Marco opened his master file: PES2010_Database_Final_v7
Not the official one. Not the one on the disc. But a fan-made, lovingly updated, obsessively accurate spreadsheet that tracked the fictional careers of every player from Pro Evolution Soccer 2010 —the “golden era” of football gaming.
Most people had moved on. They played hyper-realistic sims with ray tracing and dynamic weather. But for a small community, PES 2010 was different. It wasn’t about graphics; it was about soul . The weight of a pass. The unique, clunky-but-poetic dribbling of Fernando Torres. The way Adriano’s left foot could bend time itself. They’re about connection
He filtered for Liverpool. There was Kuyt. Official stamina: 93. Official work rate: High. But Marco remembered the community debate. ElderMillwallFan’s dad was right—Kuyt’s hidden “Consistency” stat was an 8 (out of 8). And his “Teamwork” was 98. That’s why he felt like he never stopped running.
He wrote back:
That night, Marco started a new file. He called it PES_2010_Community_Memories . It didn’t track goals or assists. It tracked stories. Every email, every tribute match, every father-son replay. Because in the end, the most important stat in any database isn’t speed or shot power.
A grainy shot of a laptop screen. PES 2010. Injury time. Liverpool vs. Everton. Kuyt, number 18, sliding in a rebound. The score: 2-1. And at the top of the screen, a user-modified team name that wasn’t in the original database: .