I hovered over the packs and my coin balance stared back like a scoreboard refusing to move. For a few seconds the choice felt like standing at a fork under floodlights. I breathed, and the math started to make sense.
I’ve opened both National Premium Packs, tested managers in matches, and pushed Ronaldo and Kane through different systems on PlayStation and PC (Steam). You’re not buying pixels—you’re buying coachable advantages: manager proficiencies, unique skills, and a handful of squad-shaping cards. Let me walk you through what matters, what feels cheap, and who walks away winning.
Portugal pack: A Ronaldo fan at a jersey stall
At a local matchday stall you’d see Cristiano shirts piled higher than any other. That same gravitational pull applies here: the Portugal Premium Pack exists largely because of Cristiano Ronaldo’s Epic card.
The Epic CR7 is the crown jewel. With the second booster enabled he can reach an overall of 105 and carries the Willpower skill, which raises offensive attributes while active. If you play with a tempo that funnels chances to a main finisher, he’s devastating. I ran him as a focal point in a 4-2-3-1 and he finished chances in ways cheaper alternatives couldn’t replicate.

Beyond Ronaldo, the pack hands you Roberto Martinez as a manager with 90 Proficiency in Quick Counter and 89 in Long Ball. If you like vertical transitions and rapid outlet passes, Martinez is a proper match. I tested a counter-heavy setup and his instructions lined up perfectly with player tendencies.

The supporting cards matter: Vitinha (98) makes a tidy orchestrator in midfield, and João Cancelo (96) is excellent for three-at-the-back systems—solid both going forward and tracking wingbacks defensively. If Ronaldo is the prize, these are useful companions rather than throwaway pulls.
When you should buy Portugal: You are a Ronaldo collector, you run a system built to feed a central finisher, or you want Martinez’s quick-counter profile. One pack costs 2000 eFootball Coins, and for many free-to-play players that’s a choice between a dream upgrade and a long grind.
Which pack is better for Cristiano Ronaldo fans?
If you worship CR7, the Portugal pack is the shortest route to an Epic Ronaldo you can actually count on getting. That specific Epic rarely appears elsewhere and isn’t offered as a freebie—so the pack removes the gamble in a way most other offers don’t.
England pack: A tactics board at halftime
Stand by a dugout during halftime and you’ll hear coaches arguing over possession versus pace. The England Premium Pack is built precisely for that conversation.
The real headline here isn’t a single player; it’s Thomas Tuchel as a manager item with 90 Proficiency in Possession and 89 in Quick Counter. That duality gives you flexible game plans without swapping managers between matches. On PS5 and Xbox I found Tuchel let me shift from patient build-up to razor-fast counters within the same squad template.

Harry Kane’s Epic arrives with Low Screamer. He’s slow but dominant in the air and excellent at hold-up play—perfect if your attacking shape uses runners off his shoulders. Jude Bellingham is also in the mix as a high-value box-to-box option; he competes with much rarer items for pure engine value.

When you should buy England: You want managerial flexibility, you value possession-based systems but want a safety net for counters, or you value a reliable Kane as a focal striker in slower builds.
Is Harry Kane worth 2000 eFootball Coins?
He is if you need a target man who also links play. Kane’s Low Screamer rewards good shooting angles, and his aerial and hold-up traits translate into consistent attacking returns in most competitive brackets on eFootball. If you prefer nimble forwards, he’ll feel heavy—but in slow, structured attacks he pays dividends.
Which manager is more flexible, Tuchel or Martinez?
Tuchel wins for in-match versatility. Martinez is a specialist in quick counters and long balls; Tuchel lets you toggle between possession-heavy patterns and rapid counters without changing your coach. For players who rotate tactics midweek, Tuchel is a better long-term pick.
Two metaphors to carry forward: Ronaldo’s Epic hits like a loaded cannon when finishes land, and Tuchel gives you a Swiss Army knife for tactics. Use those images to weigh the emotional pull of a club legend versus the practical gains of managerial control.
Final guideposts: if you want guaranteed Ronaldo and a counter-minded manager, take Portugal. If you want managerial flexibility and a reliable Kane who can hold play, take England. Or wait—if you have the coins, you can take both and build something ugly-good.
Which one would you pick for your starting XI and why?