The patch added multiple leagues not present in the vanilla game:
Graphically, PES 2013 has aged, but PESEdit 6.0 did its best to mask the years. The patch included a massive library of faces. In the standard game, only the superstars looked like themselves. With the mod, mid-table defenders and backup goalkeepers received high-quality face scans. It was a labor of love that made the on-pitch action feel like a broadcast.
Furthermore, the patch integrated new stadiums. While it couldn't match the sheer volume of modern mods, the inclusion of iconic grounds—and the specific crowd chants and turfs that came with them—added a layer of immersion that the base game sorely lacked. Coupled with custom scoreboards and a revamped soundtrack, it felt like a completely different product.
In the pantheon of football gaming history, Pro Evolution Soccer 2013 (PES 2013) holds a special place. Released over a decade ago, it is often cited as the "last great traditional PES" before the franchise shifted to the Fox Engine. For many PC gamers, the vanilla version of PES 2013 was a masterpiece of gameplay—but it lacked licenses. That is where the PESEdit Team stepped in.
Among the countless mods released for the game, one name echoes louder than most in modding forums and old hard drives: PESEdit 2013 Patch 6.0.
If you are a retro-gaming enthusiast or a PC player looking to revive the golden era of Müller, Van Persie, and Ribery, this patch represents the final, definitive version of the PESEdit modding suite. Here is everything you need to know about this legendary release.