Pes 2013 Patch 3.6 →
A dataminer from Poland, Krzysztof_W , dissected the patch’s .bin files. Inside the “special” folder, he found a video file named “goodbye.sfd” (the old PES video format). He extracted it.
Then the match loaded. Fenomeno99’s opponent? A single AI player. No team. Just a ghost in a blue training kit. On the back of the jersey:
The post-match screen appeared, but instead of stats, a single line of text: “You cannot take what was never given.” Pes 2013 patch 3.6
Two weeks later, a Brazilian player named “Ronaldo Fenômeno” (username: Fenomeno99 ) was testing the patch on a livestream with 40 viewers. He enabled the hidden cheat table. He changed boot ID 99 for his virtual pro.
The video cut to a slow pan of the abandoned pitch. Snow. Rusted goalposts. A single floodlight still on. Then the text: “Patch 3.6 – For him.” A dataminer from Poland, Krzysztof_W , dissected the
“My father built this stadium’s first floodlights. He worked for Shakhtar. But in 1984, when I was born, they fired him. No reason. Just politics. He died last week. They are tearing down the stadium tomorrow. I can’t stop it. But I can put it in the game. Forever.”
By the winter of 2014, the PES 2013 modding world was a ghost town. Konami had moved on to the Fox Engine failures of PES 2014. Most editors had abandoned ship for FIFA’s new Ignite engine. But in a dimly lit apartment in Kharkiv, Ukraine, a 29-year-old programmer named Dmytro “Kiev” Shevchenko refused to let it die. Then the match loaded
Kiev never reappeared. His forum account went silent. His email bounced. Some say he moved to Canada. Others believe he died in the 2014 war in Eastern Ukraine. But his patch—Patch 3.6—lives on. Even today, on old hard drives and modding forums, you can download it. And if you know where to look—boot ID 99—you can still play that ghost.