
INAZUMA ELEVEN: Victory Road
After nearly a decade of delays, LEVEL5's football RPG finally arrived and the community's verdict is loud: it was worth the wait, even if the opening hours will test your patience.
Comparar precios(0 tiendas)
Cargando precios...
We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.
Historial de precios
Capturas y multimedia
Acerca de INAZUMA ELEVEN: Victory Road
I came to Victory Road skeptical. Shooter brain. Competitive ladder mentality. A football RPG where matches are decided by elemental matchups, Tension Meters, and anime super-moves sounded like the opposite of my scene. Thirty hours later I get it, and I also understand the frustrations, so let me break both down honestly. The football itself is not EA Sports FC. Not even close. Matches function more like tactical RPG encounters than sports simulations. You're managing a Tension Bar that charges through passes, stolen balls, and won Focus Battles, then dumping that meter into Hissatsu Techniques (special moves), Keshin transformations that temporarily armour your players, or Mixi Max stat fusions. Positioning matters, elemental type matchups matter (Fire shots against Wood-type keepers hit harder), and the goalkeeper slot demands as much attention as any flashy forward. On paper that sounds complicated. In practice it clicks faster than the onboarding suggests, though the controls have a friction problem: executing complex sequences mid-match while the pace doesn't pause is a recurring criticism from players across all platforms, and it's fair. Once muscle memory builds, matches become genuinely tense. Against CPU, the AI eventually gets readable. Online is where the system stretches. The competitive structure is real. Competition Mode offers Ranked Matches and Room Matches, plus a Casual Mode using preconstructed teams if you want to test lineups without grinding. The headline mode is the quarterly Victory Road Online Tournament, which runs in three stages: an open Qualifiers where you accumulate points over a set period, a Main Tournament for top-ranked players, and a regional Finals. Each season has its own ruleset, with Seasonal Characters required on your roster to enter, which forces meta variety and prevents the same five optimized players from dominating indefinitely. A free DLC update arriving June 11, 2026 adds new Online Tournament restrictions and a Synergies feature, plus Chronicle Mode expansions, so LEVEL5 is actively tending the competitive side post-launch. Whether that live-service cadence holds long-term is still an open question. The content volume is genuinely staggering. Story Mode alone runs upward of 40 hours, following Destin Billows through a slow-burn narrative that earns its payoff once matches become meaningful rather than tutorial-gated. Chronicle Mode lets you replay key matches from prior games in the series with set teams, then repeat them with your own custom roster to unlock progression, an approach that blends objectives with Ultimate Team-style squad building in a way that works better than it sounds. Over 5,400 characters to collect, train, and slot into formations means the roster-management side has real depth. The weak link is pacing: the opening hours are genuinely slow, newcomers especially will feel the game is withholding the actual football, and the English dub voice acting is flat enough that switching to Japanese audio is the move if that option is available to you. On PC, the system requirements are modest enough that Medium settings push 60fps at 1080p without demanding a high-end rig, which is fine. For shooter-focused players wandering in: this is not your genre. But if you want a deep team-builder with a competitive ladder that actually has structure, cross-platform multiplayer, and months of solo content, Victory Road delivers more than its anime exterior suggests. The controls need work, the pacing needs patience, and the English dub needs a redo. Everything else is dense, surprisingly well-crafted, and clearly built by people who wanted it to be the best Inazuma Eleven game ever made.

Shooters
Etiquetas
Requisitos del sistema
Mínimos
- OS
- Windows 11 64bit
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 11
- Network
- Broadband Internet connection
- Storage
- 75 GB available space
- Graphics
- GeForce GTX 750(2GB) /AMD Radeon R7 370(2GB)
- Processor
- Intel Core i5-8400 / AMD Ryzen 3 3100
- Sound Card
- DirectX 11 sound device
Recomendados
- OS
- Windows 11 64bit
- Memory
- 16 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 11
- Network
- Broadband Internet connection
- Storage
- 75 GB available space
- Graphics
- NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060(6GB) /AMD Radeon RX570(4GB)
- Processor
- Intel Core i5-10400 / AMD Ryzen 5 3600
- Sound Card
- DirectX 11 sound device
Sigue explorando
Community Discussion
Be the first to comment on INAZUMA ELEVEN: Victory Road.
Reseñas y valoraciones
No hay valoraciones disponibles
Información del juego
- Desarrolladora
- LEVEL5 Inc.
- Distribuidora
- LEVEL5 Inc.
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- 13 nov 2025

![Gamedev builds Dream Team, open for suggestions :) [!shinydex, !discord]](https://static-cdn.jtvnw.net/previews-ttv/live_user_athansteen-440x248.jpg)