Account sharing seems harmless — but it violates Konami's ToS, risks permanent bans, and is the most common vector for account theft. Here is every risk, honestly explained.
Konami explicitly prohibits account sharing. Beyond the ToS violation, sharing credentials is the most common way eFootball accounts get stolen and lost permanently.
Konami's ToS explicitly states accounts are for individual use only
Account sharing is detectable through multiple geographic logins and usage pattern analysis
Detected sharing results in account suspension — both the owner and user are at risk
Shared credentials can be changed by the recipient, permanently locking out the original owner
Any actions taken by the recipient (spending coins, breaking rules) affect the account owner
Konami's ToS explicitly prohibits account sharing. Detected violations can result in account suspension without appeal. Both the account owner and the user are at risk.
Once you share login credentials, the recipient can change your email and password, permanently locking you out. This is extremely common when sharing with online strangers or semi-trusted parties.
Logins from multiple geographic locations trigger Konami's security detection. The account may be temporarily locked requiring identity verification, or permanently flagged for review.
A shared account recipient can spend your coins, sell or delete players, change your team name, and take any in-game action. You have no way to prevent or reverse their actions once credentials are shared.
Purchase a verified eFootball account from efootballmarket.com that already has strong progress. Much safer than sharing someone else's account — you own it fully.
Create your own free Konami account. eFootball is free-to-play — anyone can start their own account legitimately.
If family members want to play eFootball, each person should have their own Konami account linked to their own email. Cross-device play is supported with separate accounts.
Your Konami account credentials should be known only to you. Use a strong, unique password and enable any available 2FA options.
Yes. Konami's Terms of Service explicitly state that accounts are for individual use only and that sharing credentials with others violates these terms. Discovered account sharing can result in account suspension or permanent ban on both the owner and the user.
The biggest risk is account theft. Once you share credentials, you lose full control. The recipient can change the email, password, and linked phone number, permanently locking you out. This is the most common outcome when accounts are shared with strangers or semi-trusted parties online.
Technically possible but not recommended. Besides the ToS violation, simultaneous logins from different locations flag Konami's security systems. The account risks a lockout or ban. Both parties are also at risk if one person takes actions that violate Konami's rules.