Pes 2013 Highly Compressed 300mb [Free Forever]

Not everything is perfect. You should know what you are losing:

It is impossible to discuss this topic without addressing the dark side. The "Highly Compressed" market was an unregulated goldmine for malware distributors.

Because the files were often executable installers (setup.exe) rather than standard ISOs, unscrupulous uploaders would bundle adware, browser hijackers, or keyloggers into the installer. For many, the quest for the 300MB game ended with a formatted PC or a stolen password. The file became a modern-day "Trojan Horse"—promising a gift (free game) but delivering an attack.

To understand the 300MB phenomenon, one must understand the context of the early 2010s internet landscape. In many parts of the world, broadband data was expensive, capped, or non-existent. A standard game ISO file for PES 2013 on PC was roughly 5.5 to 6 Gigabytes.

Downloading 6GB on a shaky connection with a 10GB monthly cap was a significant investment. This created a market for "Rippers"—underground release groups that specialized in stripping games down to their bare essentials. pes 2013 highly compressed 300mb

The goal was simple: reduce the file size at all costs so it could be transferred via USB sticks at school or downloaded over a night on a 2G connection.

You might be wondering: How can a 5GB game fit into 300MB?

The "Highly Compressed" (HC) version uses aggressive archiving methods (like WinRAR or 7-Zip with ultra compression) and removes unnecessary bloat:

Crucial Note: A "300MB" file is the download size. After installation, the game will occupy roughly 1.8GB to 2.5GB on your hard drive—not 300MB. This is standard for repacks. Not everything is perfect

If you see d3dx9_43.dll or xinput1_3.dll errors, download and install DirectX Redistributable (June 2010) and Microsoft Visual C++ Redistributable 2012.


When a user downloads a "300MB" version of PES 2013, they are not downloading the game as Konami intended. They are downloading a surgically altered specimen. The reduction from 6GB to 300MB involves a ruthless process of digital amputation.

1. The Audio Purge The largest files in any sports game are audio assets. Commentary, stadium chants, and menu music take up gigabytes of space. Compression groups often stripped the game of all commentary, replacing high-fidelity stadium noise with generic looping tracks or total silence. In many versions, the iconic PES anthem was replaced by a low-bitrate MP3 or removed entirely.

2. Video Recompression Cutscenes, intro videos, and goal celebration replays are data hogs. Rippers would either delete these entirely or compress them to pixelated, blurry blocks that looked more like stop-motion animation than a video game. Crucial Note: A "300MB" file is the download size

3. Texture Downsampling This was the most critical step. While the 3D models (geometry) of players like Cristiano Ronaldo or Lionel Messi had to remain to make the game playable, the "skins" (textures) covering them were drastically reduced. High-resolution kits were replaced with low-res versions. Grass textures were flattened to a single green shade. The visual fidelity was sacrificed, but the gameplay engine remained intact.

4. The High-Compression Archives The files were usually packed using open-source archivers like FreeArc or 7-Zip with "Ultra" compression settings. When uncompressed, a 300MB archive would often balloon back to nearly 3GB or 4GB on the hard drive. The "300MB" claim referred to the download size, not the installation size—a crucial distinction often lost on excited young gamers.

If 300MB proves too stripped (e.g., missing sounds or menus), consider these mid-sized repacks:

These offer better stability and fewer missing assets.