But Amir was stubborn. The commentary wasn't just sound; it was validation. It was the difference between playing a game and living it.
In the summer of 2007, the internet was still a frontier. For Amir, a 17-year-old living in a cramped apartment overlooking the dust-choked streets of Karachi, that frontier was accessed through a screeching, 56k modem that tied up the family phone line. His currency was not rupees, but patience—measured in the time it took to download a single megabyte. Pes 6 Language Pack
His friend Zain, who lived in the richer part of town with a broadband connection, laughed. "Just play in Italian, dude. It sounds cooler." But Amir was stubborn