Pes 2017 Next-gen Press Conference E-room -
The next-gen promise wasn’t about 4K textures. It was about admitting that football games had become automated and then methodically un-automating them. The E-Room was small, focused, and slightly defiant – much like PES 2017 itself.
“Official partners: FC Barcelona, Borussia Dortmund, Liverpool FC, Arsenal. More leagues than ever before. But here’s the next-gen part – full 4K stadium editor and community file sharing. Day one, you’ll download真实 kits, badges, and Premier League branding in under 3 minutes. We’re not hiding from licenses. We’re empowering the community to fix what others pay to lock down.” PES 2017 NEXT-GEN PRESS CONFERENCE E-ROOM
“We don’t have the biggest budget. We don’t have all the names. But we have the better game. Watch the FIFA conference next week. Then come back and play this demo. You’ll know.” The next-gen promise wasn’t about 4K textures
The E-room closes with a single graphic: Epilogue: Why the E-Room Mattered This press conference never happened physically. But the E-Room concept – digital, direct, less corporate – foreshadowed how PES would communicate during its critical 2016–2018 revival. PES 2017 went on to win “Best Sports Game” at Gamescom and earned an 89 Metacritic score, beating FIFA 17 in gameplay reviews for the first time in nearly a decade. Day one, you’ll download真实 kits, badges, and Premier
“Online lag?” A (Garner): “Dedicated server test results: 97% of matches under 35ms. We’ll publish the raw data after this conference.” (Audible digital surprise.)
Location: Virtual Press Conference Server (E-Room Access Code: KONAMI-2016) Date: June 2016 (Pre-E3 Cycle) Host: Adam Bhatti (European PES Product Manager) & Klaus Garner (Lead Gameplay Engineer) 1. The Atmosphere: Low Lights, High Frame Rates The E-Room loads with a minimalist, dark UI. Background visuals show a loop of fluid 60fps gameplay—Barcelona’s Camp Nou at night, rain slicking the turf. Journalists’ avatars sit in a digital amphitheater. The vibe is confident but lean. No live orchestra. No real-world stadium tour. Just code, promises, and a grudge match against EA’s FIFA.