Pele: Soccer Legend
Score goals as Pelé from his early streets-of-Brazil days all the way to world champion status in Pele: Soccer Legend. The game follows his rise through a simple story, from local pitches to the global football scene, using short, focused challenges. Career mode sends you through Brazil, where each level recreates another moment from his football journey. The football drills change a lot from stage to stage, so the game never repeats the same shot pattern.
How to play?
Aim your soccer shot, adjust power, and fire the ball toward the goal or target. Some levels ask you to score several goals under specific conditions, while others demand a precise hit on a target, the crossbar, or similar tricky spots. Complete challenges to earn in-game money, then spend it on upgrades that strengthen your soccer kicks or unlock powerful bonus super-kicks. Stronger super-kicks help clear tougher football levels faster and open the next parts of Pelé's career path. Treat every level like a short training drill, focus on where the ball must land, and track how much power you use so the ball flies exactly where you planned. Finish the full career and see how many soccer challenges you can conquer with Pelé.
About this game:
- Players have rated this game 4.37 out of 5, based on 8441 votes.
- Released in November 2016.
- Ready to play on Web Browser (PC).
- Age rating: 7+
- Powered by HTML5 (Unity WebGL) — jump right in and start playing in your browser, no downloads needed.
Game features:
- Career mode follows Pelé across Brazilian locations using short, challenge-based stages
- Levels switch between scoring goals, hitting the crossbar, and striking fixed targets
- In-game currency comes directly from completed challenges and cleared levels
- Bonus super-kicks act as stronger shots that help finish harder stages
Tips & Tricks:
- Aim slightly above the target when going for the crossbar to avoid low hits
- Save bonus super-kicks for levels that require several goals with tight margins
- Upgrade power first if shots keep falling short of distant football targets
























