Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Licensing Is Hard, But That Excuse Falls Apart When SCI Did More With Less


Licensing Is Hard, But That Excuse Falls Apart When SCI Did More With Less

EA or SCI can say boxing licensing is complicated. That part is believable. Boxing does not work like the NFL, NBA, UFC, or FIFA-style licensing where one league, one union, or one major governing structure can unlock a huge group of athletes. Boxing is fragmented. You have active boxers, retired boxers, estates, promoters, managers, sanctioning bodies, trainers, brands, venues, and sometimes rival business relationships.

But “licensing is hard” cannot be used as a blanket excuse when Steel City Interactive, a smaller independent studio, secured a larger boxing roster than EA did with Fight Night Champion.

EA’s own page for Fight Night Champion says the game featured over 50 licensed boxers. (Electronic Arts Inc.) SCI’s own Undisputed roster page says it has over 100 boxers and promotes it as “The Greatest Roster of All Time.” (playundisputed.com) That means even by official public numbers, SCI had roughly double EA’s licensed boxer count, and possibly more depending on announced, added, or contracted boxers over time.

That is the contradiction.

EA is not a small company. EA reported about $7.5 billion in GAAP net revenue in fiscal year 2025. (Electronic Arts) SCI, by contrast, describes itself as an independent studio founded in 2020 to create Undisputed. (steelcityinteractive.co.uk) So how can a multi-billion-dollar company use licensing difficulty as a major shield when a newer, smaller studio managed to build the bigger licensed roster?

The answer is simple: licensing was hard, but it was not impossible.

What EA really should say is:

“We did not prioritize boxing licensing enough.”
“We did not see enough return on investment.”
“We did not want to chase every boxer individually.”
“We were not committed to building the deepest boxing roster possible.”

That would be more honest than hiding behind “licensing is hard.”

And SCI cannot hide behind it either. SCI used the roster as one of its biggest selling points. Their own marketing leans on having more licensed boxers than ever before. So once they proved they could get names, the conversation changes. The issue is no longer just, “Can you license boxers?” The issue becomes:

What did you do with those licenses?

Because a licensed boxer is not just a name and a face scan. Boxing fans want the boxer represented properly. They want the stance, rhythm, defense, punch selection, footwork, tendencies, clinch behavior, inside fighting, ring IQ, stamina style, durability, weaknesses, and personality. If the boxer does not fight like himself, then the license is being used as decoration.

So the real criticism is this:

You Cannot Use Licensing As The Excuse While Also Selling The Game On Licensing

EA had money, brand power, sports-game infrastructure, and years of experience. SCI had less money, less history, and less corporate power, yet still built a larger licensed roster than Fight Night Champion. That does not mean licensing is easy. It means licensing cannot be the main excuse for why boxing games are shallow, incomplete, or missing major names and eras.

The hard truth is this:

Boxing licensing is difficult, but commitment separates an excuse from a strategy.

If SCI could get over 100 boxers, then EA could have done more.
If EA had the money and industry machine, then EA had no real excuse to stop at “licensing is hard.”
And if SCI could secure the names, then SCI has no excuse for not making those boxers feel, move, fight, and behave like real boxers.

The roster proves the door was open.
The problem was never just licensing.
The problem was priority, vision, budget, data, execution, and respect for boxing.

Monday, June 15, 2026

If You Market Authentic Boxing, Expect Authentic Criticism

 To the fans, developers, and defenders who keep saying a boxing game is “just a game” every time real boxing fans critique it:

That statement is exactly the problem.

A boxing game is not “just a game” when people are paying for it. It is not “just a game” when fans are investing money, time, hope, feedback, and years of support into it. It is not “just a game” when the company markets it around authenticity, realism, simulation, boxer likenesses, licensed athletes, real arenas, real belts, and the promise of representing the sport.

You cannot sell a product using the identity of boxing, then turn around and tell boxing fans they are taking it too seriously when they expect it to actually look, feel, and function like boxing.

That is not how this works.

When you call it a boxing game, boxing fans have every right to judge it by boxing standards. Not generic fighting game standards. Not arcade button-mashing standards. Not casual “I just want to have fun” standards. Boxing standards.

Boxing is not just punches being thrown until somebody falls down. Boxing is distance. Timing. Rhythm. Foot placement. Angles. Defense. Feints. Clinching. Inside work. Ring generalship. Stamina management. Styles. Adjustments. Weaknesses. Strengths. Discipline. Consequences. Risk. IQ. Damage. Survival. Strategy.

If a game is missing too much of that, then boxing fans have the right to say something.

The people saying “it’s just a game” act like everyone has the same low standard or lack of respect for boxing that they do. They act like because they are willing to accept anything with gloves, robes, ring walks, and licensed names, everybody else should lower their standards too.

No.

Some of us actually care about the sport being represented correctly.

Some of us know what boxing is supposed to look like. Some of us know the difference between a boxer moving with purpose and a character sliding around the ring. Some of us know the difference between realistic pressure and reckless arcade aggression. Some of us know the difference between styles having identity and every boxer feeling like a reskinned version of the same base model.

That is not nitpicking. That is boxing knowledge.

And let’s stop pretending criticism is automatically hate.

Critique is not disrespect. Critique is not negativity. Critique is not “toxic” just because it makes developers, content creators, or casual defenders uncomfortable. Real critique comes from people who care enough to point out what is wrong because they want the game to improve.

The real disrespect is not fans criticizing a boxing game.

The real disrespect is asking boxing fans to stay quiet while the sport is watered down.

The real disrespect is telling paying customers to stop complaining after they bought the product.

The real disrespect is marketing a game to boxing fans, taking their money, using their passion, using the sport’s name, using real boxers’ likenesses, and then acting offended when those same fans expect the game to honor boxing.

Customer or not, a boxing fan has the right to speak. But when someone pays for the game, that right becomes even stronger. They are not just a fan anymore. They are a customer. They supported the product. They have every right to question the quality, the direction, the missing features, the gameplay decisions, the balance choices, the modes, the boxer representation, and the overall vision.

You do not get to cash out on boxing fans and then tell them their standards do not matter.

And to the fans defending everything no matter what: you are not helping the game by attacking criticism. You are helping mediocrity survive. You are giving developers cover to ignore the very people who understand the sport the most. You are treating loyalty like silence, when real loyalty should demand accountability.

A real boxing game should not be protected from boxing fans. It should be shaped by boxing fans.

A real sports game should welcome critique from people who know the sport. Imagine telling basketball fans not to criticize a basketball game that does not understand spacing, defense, footwork, tendencies, fouls, or player identity. Imagine telling football fans not to criticize a football game that does not understand blocking, schemes, routes, coverage, clock management, or field position.

People would laugh at that.

So why are boxing fans expected to accept less?

Why are boxing fans told to be quiet when they point out missing clinching, poor inside fighting, weak footwork logic, bad stamina systems, shallow boxer identity, unrealistic damage, missing referee presence, arcade movement, poor AI decisions, and modes that do not reflect the depth of the sport?

That is not “complaining.” That is identifying the foundation of boxing.

The “just a game” crowd wants boxing fans to separate the game from the sport, but the entire selling point of a licensed boxing game is the sport. The game does not exist in a vacuum. It uses real boxing history, real champions, real contenders, real brands, real styles, real expectations, and real fan passion.

So yes, the game should be judged seriously.

No, that does not mean nobody can have fun.

No, that does not mean every player has to be hardcore.

No, that does not mean the game has to be impossible to play.

But it does mean the foundation should respect boxing first.

Casual fun should not come at the expense of boxing authenticity. Accessibility should not mean stripping away the sport’s identity. Balance should not mean making every boxer feel the same. Online complaints should not erase offline depth. Arcade comfort should not override simulation standards.

A boxing game can be fun and still be authentic. It can be accessible and still be deep. It can welcome casual players without disrespecting hardcore fans. The problem is when developers and defenders act like realism is the enemy of fun, when in reality, the sport itself is what makes the game interesting.

The hardcore fans are not the problem.

The people demanding standards are not the problem.

The people asking for better representation are not the problem.

The problem is a culture that wants boxing fans to consume quietly, clap on command, accept excuses, and treat every missing feature like it does not matter.

It does matter.

Boxing matters to the people who love it. Representation matters. Gameplay matters. Modes matter. Boxer identity matters. Mechanics matter. Details matter. Respect matters.

So when someone says “it’s just a game,” my response is simple:

Then stop marketing it like it is authentic boxing.

Stop using real boxers to sell it.

Stop using the passion of boxing fans to build hype.

Stop asking the community for support.

Stop expecting long-term loyalty from the same hardcore fans you keep dismissing.

Because to real boxing fans, this is not about being impossible to please. This is about wanting the sport represented with the respect it deserves.

If you do not respect boxing enough to understand why fans critique a boxing game, then maybe you were never the right person to speak for boxing fans in the first place.

Steel City Interactive Has a Testing Problem, And It Cannot Follow Undisputed Into the Next Game

 

Steel City Interactive Has a Testing Problem, And It Cannot Follow Undisputed Into the Next Game

There was, and still is, a serious testing problem with SCI’s Undisputed, and boxing fans can see the danger signs already if Steel City Interactive is planning another game.

The question is simple:

Who is being chosen to test these games, and how are they testing them?

Because from the outside looking in, Undisputed does not feel like a game that was tested deeply by people who understand boxing from the inside. It feels like a game tested around general playability, balance, online complaints, and casual fighting-game expectations — not around whether the game truly represents the sport of boxing.

That is a major problem.

A boxing game cannot be tested the same way you test an arcade fighter. You cannot just ask:

“Is it fun?”

You have to ask:

Does it look like boxing?
Does it feel like boxing?
Do boxers behave differently?
Does footwork matter?
Does defense matter?
Does stamina punish bad habits?
Does the inside game exist?
Does the clinch work?
Does the referee affect the fight?
Do styles clash the way they should?
Does the AI understand boxing, or is it just exchanging punches?

Those are not minor questions. Those are the foundations of a real boxing game.

Undisputed has too many areas where the testing process should have caught the problem early. The movement, the missing clinch, the lack of inside fighting, the boxer representation, the AI behavior, the loose arcade rhythm, the way many boxers do not feel like themselves all of that points to a deeper issue than patches.

It points to a flawed testing philosophy.

Were the testers hardcore boxing fans?
Were actual boxers involved in meaningful testing?
Were trainers, coaches, gym people, boxing historians, offline players, sim players, and career-mode players brought in?
Or was the feedback circle too small, too online-focused, too casual, too influencer-driven, or too rushed?

That matters.

Because if SCI chooses the wrong testers again, the next game will repeat the same mistakes with better graphics and a new engine. A new engine will not automatically create boxing intelligence. A new engine will not automatically create authentic footwork, clinching, inside fighting, stamina, judging, referee behavior, or boxer identity.

The testing has to change.

SCI should not only test whether the game functions. They need to test whether the game respects boxing.

They need different testing groups:

Former and active boxers who can identify what looks wrong immediately.

Trainers and coaches who understand footwork, positioning, defense, ring generalship, and styles.

Hardcore boxing fans who know eras, tendencies, and boxer identity.

Offline career-mode players who care about depth, longevity, and boxing ecosystem features.

Sim sports gamers who care about realism, sliders, tendencies, attributes, AI behavior, and long-term replayability.

Casual players too- but casual players should not be the only voice shaping the game.

That is where Undisputed felt backwards. The game seemed like it was trying to please casual fighting-game players while the hardcore boxing community was treated like a problem, a loud minority, or an obstacle. But the hardcore fans are the ones who stay. They are the ones who buy DLC. They are the ones who keep the game alive. They are the ones who notice when a boxer does not move, defend, punch, or react like himself.

So the question for SCI is not just, “Are you testing the next game?”

The real question is:

Who are you testing it with, what are they testing for, and are you actually listening to the people who understand boxing?

Because if the test is only about balance, online complaints, and whether punches land cleanly, then SCI is not testing a boxing simulation. They are testing an arcade fighting game dressed in boxing gear.

And boxing fans have already seen where that leads.

Steel City Interactive: Why Are the Long-Term Supporters Treated Like Secondary Fans?

Steel City Interactive: Why Are Hardcore Boxing Fans Treated Like Secondary Customers?

The long-term supporters should be treated like the foundation, not the obstacle.

If hardcore boxing fans and hardcore sports gamers are the ones who stay the longest, buy DLC, support roster expansions, promote the game, debate the mechanics, test the systems, and keep the community alive after the casual crowd moves on, then why are they treated like a secondary audience?

That is the question Steel City Interactive has to answer.

Because right now, the gameplay, boxer representation, modes, and overall direction do not feel fully built around the people most likely to support the game long-term. It feels like hardcore boxing fans are expected to pay, promote, defend, wait, and support, while the actual design direction keeps chasing a more casual audience that may not even stay.

That is backwards.

Casual players matter, but casual players are not always loyal players. A casual player may buy the game once, play for a few weeks, jump online, throw combinations, complain about difficulty, and move on to the next release. But hardcore boxing fans are different. They are the ones who stay. They are the ones who care about styles, eras, footwork, defense, stamina, clinching, inside fighting, damage, tendencies, robes, trunks, arenas, referees, judges, trainers, rankings, and career depth.

Those are the fans who would support DLC for old-school champions, forgotten contenders, prospects, gyms, venues, broadcast packages, career expansions, historic rivalry packs, trainer packs, and deeper creation tools.

So why does the game not reflect them?

Why are the gameplay systems not deeper?
Why is boxer identity still not strong enough?
Why are modes not built for long-term offline and sim players?
Why are core boxing mechanics missing or underdeveloped?
Why are the people asking for a fuller boxing experience treated like they are asking for too much?

Hardcore fans are not asking for fantasy.

They are asking for boxing.

Hardcore Fans Are Not the Problem

Steel City Interactive has to understand something clearly: hardcore boxing fans are not the problem. They are the foundation.

Too many companies look at hardcore fans like they are too demanding, too critical, too serious, or too small to matter. But that is a dangerous mistake. Hardcore fans are usually the ones who know when something is wrong before the casual audience can even explain why they stopped playing.

A casual player may say, “The game feels off.”

A hardcore boxing fan can tell you why it feels off.

They can tell you the footwork is too loose. They can tell you the stamina system does not punish bad habits properly. They can tell you the punches do not carry realistic weight. They can tell you inside fighting is missing. They can tell you clinching is not optional in real boxing. They can tell you the boxers lack individual identity. They can tell you career mode does not feel like a real boxing ecosystem.

That is not negativity.

That is expertise.

And if Steel City Interactive wants Undisputed, or a future sequel, to have long-term support, then the company cannot treat that expertise like background noise.

Hardcore boxing fans are the ones who will still be around when the hype dies down. They are the ones who will buy old-school boxer packs. They are the ones who will support arena packs, career expansions, broadcast packages, trainer systems, historic divisions, and deeper creation tools. They are the ones who will keep talking about the game years later if the game gives them something worth defending.

But right now, it feels like the hardcore boxing fan is being asked to fund a vision that does not fully respect them.

That is the contradiction.

You cannot depend on hardcore boxing fans for long-term engagement while building the game around people who may only play casually for a month.

You cannot sell boxing authenticity while ignoring the mechanics that make boxing feel like boxing.

You cannot market the sport’s history while underrepresenting eras, styles, contenders, and real boxing identities.

You cannot say the community matters while refusing to gather real public data from that community.

And you cannot act like hardcore fans are just a “loud minority” when they are the ones asking for the systems that give the game depth, replay value, and long-term monetization.

Hardcore Fans Are Not Against Fun

One of the biggest tricks in these conversations is when people act like hardcore fans do not want the game to be fun.

That is false.

Hardcore fans want the game to be fun because it feels like boxing.

They want fun that comes from strategy.
Fun that comes from adjustments.
Fun that comes from styles clashing.
Fun that comes from timing.
Fun that comes from setting traps.
Fun that comes from surviving a bad round.
Fun that comes from breaking down an opponent.
Fun that comes from winning because you boxed smart, not because you exploited mechanics.

That is real boxing fun.

There is nothing fun about every boxer feeling too similar. There is nothing fun about missing clinch and inside fighting. There is nothing fun about stamina systems that do not punish unrealistic output properly. There is nothing fun about online gameplay forcing the whole game to be balanced around spam, meta tactics, and casual complaints.

Real depth creates real fun.

A boxing game should not become less like boxing just to become more accessible. The goal should be to teach casual players the sport through good design. A real boxing game can make a hardcore fan out of a casual, but only if the game respects boxing first.

Boxer Representation Has to Go Deeper Than Names

The roster should not just be about popular names.

Every era should be represented. Old-school champions, forgotten contenders, regional legends, defensive specialists, pressure fighters, slick boxers, awkward stylists, journeymen, gatekeepers, prospects, and historic rivals should all matter.

Boxing history is deep. A real boxing game should not treat that history like optional decoration.

But representation cannot stop at face scans, names, ratings, and entrances. Hardcore fans do not just want a big roster. They want the roster to mean something.

A boxing game can have 100 boxers, 150 boxers, or 200 boxers, but if too many of them feel built from the same base logic, then the roster loses value.

A real boxing game has to ask:

How does this boxer control distance?
How does this boxer respond under pressure?
Does he fight tall or give up height?
Does he reset after combinations?
Does he punch while exiting?
Does he cut the ring or follow?
Does he fight better inside or outside?
Does he need rhythm?
Does he fade late?
Does he get reckless after hurting someone?
Does he shell up when tired?
Does he clinch when hurt?
Does he fight differently after being dropped?
Does he adapt round by round?
Does his corner change his approach?

That is representation.

Hardcore boxing fans notice these things because boxing is not just punches and movement. Boxing is decision-making. Boxing is habit. Boxing is rhythm. Boxing is fear. Boxing is confidence. Boxing is fatigue. Boxing is adjustment.

Joe Frazier should feel like Joe Frazier.
Muhammad Ali should feel like Muhammad Ali.
George Foreman should feel like George Foreman.
Larry Holmes, Roberto Durán, Pernell Whitaker, James Toney, Marvin Hagler, Bernard Hopkins, Lennox Lewis, Roy Jones Jr., and other greats should not feel like rating cards with different skins.

They should feel different because their styles, strengths, weaknesses, rhythms, defensive habits, pressure, ring IQ, and danger are different.

That is what makes DLC worth buying.

DLC Without Depth Is Not Enough

Hardcore fans will support DLC, but not blindly forever.

They will buy a legend pack if the legends feel like legends. They will buy an old-school contender pack if the contenders bring real styles. They will buy an arena pack if presentation makes fights feel different. They will buy a career expansion if it adds real boxing business, rankings, promoters, gyms, rivalries, injuries, and consequences.

They will buy a trainer pack if trainers actually affect strategy and development. They will buy a historic era pack if it comes with rules, presentation, trunks, gloves, venues, commentary style, and era-specific pacing.

But if DLC is just names added to a system that does not fully represent boxing, then the value drops.

Hardcore fans are not just paying for content.

They are paying for authenticity.

You can add more boxers, but if they all move too similarly, what is the point? You can add legendary names, but if their styles, tendencies, strengths, weaknesses, rhythm, defense, and ring IQ are not represented properly, then they become skins with ratings.

That is not enough.

DLC only works long-term when the base game respects the sport.

You cannot fix a shallow boxing system by adding famous names on top of it.

Modes Should Be Built for the Long-Term Player

The long-term players need more than quick matches and basic online competition.

They need modes with depth.

Career mode should not feel like a straight line of fights. It should feel like a living boxing world. Rankings should matter. Promoters should matter. Managers should matter. Trainers should matter. Belts should matter. Injuries should matter. Opponent selection should matter. Styles should matter. Bad matchmaking should have consequences. Taking a fight too soon should have consequences. Fighting past your prime should have consequences.

That is boxing.

A serious boxing game should be designed like a long-term ecosystem, not just a launch product. That means the game should have systems ready for years of expansion:

A deep career mode.
A real ranking system.
A boxer tendency system.
A proper AI identity system.
A deep creation suite.
CPU vs CPU.
Offline sliders.
Online rule contracts.
Era settings.
Historic divisions.
Promoter logic.
Trainer logic.
Judge logic.
Referee presence.
Injuries.
Weight cuts.
Catchweights.
Negotiations.
Amateur-to-pro progression.
Regional belts.
Sanctioning bodies.
Mandatory challengers.
Comebacks.
Upsets.
Robberies.
Rematches.
Rivalries.

That is the kind of game hardcore fans would live in.

That is the kind of game that sells DLC for years.

That is the kind of game that creates YouTube series, podcasts, tournaments, community downloads, fantasy matchups, historic recreations, and long-term conversation.

But when a game is built too thin, the hardcore fan runs out of reasons to stay. And once the hardcore fan leaves, the game loses its roots.

The Casual Crowd Should Be Welcomed, But Not Allowed to Redefine Boxing

Nobody is saying casual fans should be ignored.

A boxing game needs casual players too. It needs accessibility. It needs tutorials. It needs difficulty options. It needs fun modes. It needs a path for new players to learn.

But casual accessibility should not mean stripping away boxing.

The answer is not to turn boxing into an arcade fighting game with gloves. The answer is to build a strong boxing foundation, then give players options.

Casual lane.
Hybrid lane.
Simulation lane.
Competitive online lane.
Offline customization lane.

That is how you respect everybody without sacrificing the sport.

Online players need balance, but online balancing should not destroy the boxing simulation. Casual players need access, but accessibility should not flatten boxer identity. Competitive players need rules, but ranked play should not dictate the entire game for career players, offline players, CPU vs CPU players, and hardcore sim players.

Options create longevity.

Forced compromise creates resentment.

Calling Hardcore Fans a “Loud Minority” Is Bad Strategy

If a company or its defenders label the most invested fans as a “loud minority,” they better have real data to back that up.

Because sometimes the so-called loud minority is actually the early warning system.

They are the ones telling you what is missing before the wider player base quietly disappears. They are the ones explaining why the game lacks replay value. They are the ones identifying why DLC may not sell long-term. They are the ones pointing out why casual-first design can weaken the product.

That is not a group you dismiss.

That is a group you study.

That is a group you survey.

That is a group you respect, even when they are critical.

Because the opposite of criticism is not loyalty. Sometimes the opposite of criticism is silence. And silence is worse.

When hardcore fans stop complaining, stop posting, stop asking questions, stop making wishlists, stop debating mechanics, and stop pushing for improvements, that does not mean the game won.

It may mean they stopped caring.

That is when a game is really in trouble.

Content Creators Should Not Replace Community Data

Content creators have a role, but content creators are not the whole community.

They do not represent every offline player.
They do not represent every old-school boxing fan.
They do not represent every career mode player.
They do not represent every sim player.
They do not represent every former Fight Night player.
They do not represent every ESBC supporter.
They do not represent every fan who stopped playing.
They do not represent every buyer who is waiting for a real reason to return.

And some content creators may have relationships, access, sponsorship hopes, interview access, or platform incentives that make them less willing to press hard.

That does not mean every creator is compromised.

But it does mean their opinions should not replace transparent data.

A serious company should not hide behind selective feedback. It should want a clean, third-party survey with public results.

That survey should ask different groups what they actually want:

Hardcore boxing fans.
Casual sports gamers.
Online ranked players.
Offline career players.
Fight Night veterans.
ESBC early supporters.
Players who bought Undisputed.
Players who refunded Undisputed.
Players who stopped playing.
Players who still support DLC.
Players who refuse to buy DLC until mechanics improve.

That is how you learn the real picture.

Not by guessing.
Not by using Discord as the whole community.
Not by letting soft interviews stand in for accountability.
Not by letting content creators speak for everyone.

Steel City Needs Data, Not Assumptions

This is why a third-party survey matters.

Steel City Interactive, content creators, and certain community voices keep speaking as if they already know what the community wants. But where is the public data?

Where is the proof?

Who was surveyed?
How many people responded?
Were offline players included?
Were hardcore boxing fans included?
Were older Fight Night players included?
Were ESBC supporters included?
Were sim sports gamers included?
Were people outside Discord included?
Were people who stopped playing included?
Were people who bought DLC asked why they bought it?
Were people who refused to buy DLC asked why they stopped supporting?

Those answers matter.

Because the community is bigger than Discord. It is bigger than content creators. It is bigger than online ranked players. It is bigger than the people currently defending the game.

A real survey with public results would show what different sections of the community actually want.

If hardcore boxing fans are truly a minority, prove it with public data.

If most players prefer arcade-style gameplay, prove it with public data.

If people do not care about clinching, inside fighting, CPU vs CPU, sliders, career depth, boxer identity, and authentic modes, prove it with public data.

But if the data shows that long-term supporters want deeper boxing systems, then SCI has to stop treating those demands like noise.

Hardcore Fans Want Accountability Because They Care

A lot of people misunderstand why hardcore fans are so demanding.

They are demanding because they see the potential.

They remember when boxing games mattered. They remember when a boxing game release felt like an event. They remember when people talked about styles, legacy, careers, created boxers, tournaments, rivalries, and fantasy matchups.

They know boxing can work as a video game.

They know it can sell.

They know it can have DLC support.

They know it can have a long life.

But they also know the game has to be built with respect for the sport.

That is why they ask hard questions.

Where is the data?
Where is the roadmap?
Where is the transparency?
Where are the missing mechanics?
Where is the deeper career mode?
Where is the boxer identity?
Where is the third-party survey?
Where is the proof that the direction reflects the actual community?

Those are fair questions.

Steel City Interactive should not be afraid of them.

The Real Business Case for Hardcore Fans

From a business standpoint, hardcore fans should be viewed as long-term revenue drivers.

They are the ones most likely to buy historic boxer DLC, contender packs, prospect packs, era packs, arena packs, gym packs, trainer packs, promoter packs, career expansion packs, creation suite expansions, broadcast presentation packs, and offline universe mode expansions.

They are also the ones most likely to create free marketing.

They will make posts. They will make videos. They will host podcasts. They will build communities. They will debate rosters. They will recreate historic fights. They will share created boxers. They will promote updates if they feel respected.

That is powerful.

But that support has to be earned.

Hardcore fans are not ATMs. They are not just there to buy whatever gets released. They want to see the game moving toward the boxing experience they were sold on and hoped for.

If Steel City wants long-term support, then hardcore fans cannot be treated as a side audience.

They have to be part of the main design conversation.

The Bigger Question

The bigger question is simple:

Is Steel City Interactive building a boxing game for people who love boxing, or a fighting game for people who only casually recognize boxing?

Because those are not the same thing.

A real boxing game has to be built from the sport outward. The foundation has to be boxing logic. The movement has to respect boxing. The stamina has to respect boxing. The damage has to respect boxing. The roster has to respect boxing history. The modes have to respect the boxing ecosystem.

Then, after that foundation is built, you can add accessibility.

But if you build the game around casual comfort first, then try to add authenticity later, the foundation will always be weak.

And that is what many hardcore fans are reacting to.

They are not just complaining about missing features. They are reacting to a direction that makes them feel like the sport itself is being compromised.

Final Message to Steel City Interactive

Steel City Interactive needs to stop looking at hardcore boxing fans like they are asking for too much.

They are asking for the game to respect the sport.

They are asking for boxer representation that goes deeper than names and ratings.

They are asking for modes that last longer than a short honeymoon period.

They are asking for gameplay that rewards boxing IQ.

They are asking for DLC that has real value because the foundation is strong.

They are asking for public data instead of assumptions.

They are asking not to be treated like a secondary audience when they are likely the audience that will support the game the longest.

That is not unreasonable.

That is common sense.

Because when the casual crowd moves on, the hardcore fans are the ones still there.

When the hype fades, the hardcore fans are the ones still discussing updates.

When new DLC drops, the hardcore fans are the ones most likely to buy it.

When a sequel is announced, the hardcore fans are the ones who can either rebuild trust or warn everyone not to fall for the same promises again.

So the question remains:

If hardcore boxing fans and serious sports gamers are the long-term supporters, why are they not treated like the foundation of the game?

Why are the gameplay, modes, boxer representation, and feedback process not built around the people who actually stay?

Steel City Interactive needs to answer that.

Not with slogans.
Not with soft interviews.
Not with content creator talking points.

With data.
With transparency.
With better design.
With real boxing systems.
With respect for the people who have carried this conversation the longest.

Because without hardcore boxing fans, a boxing game has no roots.

Ash Habib, SCI, and Content Creators: Where Is the Data From the Community?

Ash Habib, SCI, and Content Creators: Where Is the Data From the Community?

Stop Speaking for the Community Without Showing the Receipts

Ash Habib, Steel City Interactive, and even some content creators keep speaking as if they know what the boxing gaming community wants.

But one question keeps getting ignored:

Where is the data?

Not Discord noise.
Not selective comments.
Not creator circles.
Not stream chats.
Not the loudest voices online.
Not safe interviews where the same talking points get repeated.

Where is the actual community data?

If SCI, Ash Habib, or content creators are going to keep saying what “the community” wants, what “hardcore fans” want, what “casuals” want, what “online players” want, and what boxing fans supposedly asked for, then they need to back those statements up with real numbers.

Because right now, too much of it sounds like assumption, narrative control, damage control, and selective listening.

And when some content creators and community voices keep saying we do not need a survey — especially a third-party survey with public results — they sound compromised.

Maybe not bought.
Maybe not officially controlled.
Maybe not directly connected to SCI.

But compromised in the sense that they sound too comfortable protecting the narrative, too close to access, and too quick to dismiss the need for real public data.

Saying “The Community Wanted This” Is Not Evidence

Game companies love using the word “community” when it benefits them.

They say:

“The community asked for this.”
“The community wanted changes.”
“We listened to feedback.”
“We made decisions based on player response.”
“We had to balance the game for the community.”

But those statements mean nothing without proof.

Who exactly is “the community”?

Was it the Discord community?
Was it Steam players?
Was it console players?
Was it online ranked players?
Was it offline career players?
Was it boxing fans?
Was it casual fighting game players?
Was it content creators?
Was it competitive exploit players?
Was it people who bought the game because they believed ESBC was going to be a true boxing simulation?

Those are not all the same groups.

A hardcore boxing fan who wants realistic footwork, clinching, inside fighting, referee presence, stamina consequences, boxer identity, and CPU-versus-CPU authenticity is not asking for the same game as someone who only wants faster online punches, easier combinations, and constant action.

So when Ash Habib, SCI, or a content creator says “the community,” the next question should always be:

Which community?

A Content Creator Audience Is Not the Whole Community

This does not only apply to SCI.

It applies to content creators too.

Too many content creators speak as if they represent the boxing gaming community, but where is their data?

A YouTube channel is not the whole community.
A Discord server is not the whole community.
A stream chat is not the whole community.
A comment section is not the whole community.
A creator’s personal preference is not community data.

Having followers does not automatically make someone the voice of boxing gaming fans.

Influence is not evidence.

A creator may have an audience. A creator may have access. A creator may have relationships with developers. A creator may get interviews, early information, or inside conversations.

But none of that means they represent the full boxing gaming community.

If a creator says, “The community wants this,” they should be asked the same question SCI should be asked:

Where is the data?

Did they run a structured survey?
Did they separate offline players from online players?
Did they separate boxing fans from casual gamers?
Did they ask simulation fans?
Did they ask career mode players?
Did they ask older Fight Night fans?
Did they ask people who followed ESBC from the beginning?
Did they ask people who stopped playing Undisputed because it did not feel like boxing?

Or are they just speaking from their own platform, their own audience, their own preference, or their own access?

That matters.

“SCI Already Knows What We Want” Is Not an Answer

Another thing content creators love saying is:

“SCI already knows what we want.”

But that is not an answer.

That is another way of avoiding the survey question.

If SCI already knows what the community wants, then show how they know. Where is the public data? Where is the survey? Where are the results? Where is the breakdown between offline players, online players, boxing fans, casual gamers, career mode players, simulation fans, and old ESBC supporters?

Saying “they already know” does not prove anything.

That is blind trust.
That is access talk.
That is creator-circle logic.
That is protecting the company from accountability.

Because if SCI already knew what boxing fans wanted, why are so many core boxing features still missing or underdeveloped?

Where is the clinch?
Where is the real inside fighting?
Where is the in-ring referee?
Where is CPU-versus-CPU?
Where are deep sliders?
Where are boxer tendencies?
Where is true style identity?
Where is deeper career mode control?
Where is the separation between offline realism and online balancing?

If SCI already knew what the community wanted, then why does the community still have to keep repeating the same basic boxing requests?

Content creators cannot have it both ways.

They cannot say SCI already knows what fans want while also defending the missing features, the vague answers, the lack of public data, and the refusal to support a third-party survey.

If SCI truly already knows, then a third-party survey should not scare anyone.

It should confirm what they already know.

So why are some people against it?

That is the real question.

Because “SCI already knows what we want” sounds less like confidence and more like a shield. It sounds like a way to stop the conversation before fans can demand proof.

The community does not need content creators telling us SCI already knows.

The community needs SCI to show the data.

And if there is no data, then nobody should be speaking like the community has already been measured.

Rejecting a Third-Party Survey Raises a Red Flag

One of the biggest red flags in this whole conversation is how some content creators and some people in the community keep saying we do not need a survey.

Not just any survey.

A third-party survey with public results.

Why would anyone be against more data?
Why would anyone be against public results?
Why would anyone be against separating offline players from online players?
Why would anyone be against finding out what boxing fans, casual players, career mode players, simulation players, and old ESBC supporters actually want?

If the goal is truth, a third-party survey helps everybody.

It helps SCI.
It helps fans.
It helps investors.
It helps publishers.
It helps content creators.
It helps the future of boxing games.

So when people immediately reject the idea, they sound compromised.

Again, that does not automatically mean they are paid off or working behind the scenes for anyone. But it does make them sound access-driven, narrative-protective, and afraid of what real public data might expose.

Because a third-party survey takes power away from selective voices.

It takes power away from Discord cliques.
It takes power away from creator circles.
It takes power away from safe interviews.
It takes power away from people who say “the community wants this” without showing proof.

That may be exactly why some people do not want it.

A real survey would show whether the loudest voices are actually the majority. It would show whether hardcore boxing fans are truly a “loud minority” or whether they are the long-term base that has been ignored. It would show whether players want a true simulation, a hybrid, or an arcade boxing game. It would show whether offline players have been pushed aside for online balancing. It would show whether fans still care about the original ESBC vision.

And that is why a third-party survey matters.

If someone truly believes the community agrees with them, they should welcome the survey.

If a content creator truly represents the community, they should welcome the survey.

If SCI truly listened to the community, they should welcome the survey.

If the data supports their position, the survey proves them right.

But if they are scared of the results, that tells us something too.

Feedback Without Structure Is Not Data

If SCI has been making decisions based on community feedback, then show how that feedback was collected.

How many people responded?
What platforms were represented?
Were offline and online players separated?
Were console and PC players separated?
Were boxing fans separated from general sports gamers?
Were casual players separated from simulation players?
Were career mode players separated from ranked players?
Were players asked whether they wanted arcade, hybrid, or simulation gameplay?

Were they asked whether clinching should be in the game?
Were they asked whether an in-ring referee matters?
Were they asked whether inside fighting matters?
Were they asked whether CPU-versus-CPU should exist?
Were they asked whether the ESBC vision should have stayed intact?
Were they asked whether online balancing should affect offline realism?

These questions matter because feedback without structure is not data.

A Discord comment is not data.
A Reddit argument is not data.
A YouTube comment section is not data.
A creator interview is not data.
A private conversation with selected fans is not data.
A few loud voices repeating the same thing is not data.

Real data has structure.
Real data has sample size.
Real data has categories.
Real data has methodology.
Real data has public results.
Real data can be reviewed, challenged, and tested.

If SCI has that kind of data, release it.

If content creators have that kind of data, show it.

If they do not, then they need to stop speaking as if the community has been properly measured.

Content Creators Should Not Become PR Shields

One of the problems with the Undisputed conversation is that some content creators have become too soft with SCI.

Instead of asking hard questions, they repeat talking points.
Instead of challenging vague answers, they accept them.
Instead of asking for data, they move on.
Instead of pressing for accountability, they protect access.
Instead of representing frustrated boxing fans, they sometimes frame serious criticism as negativity.

That is a problem.

Content creators should not become unofficial PR shields for developers.

They should not soften criticism just because they want interviews.
They should not avoid hard questions because they want relationships.
They should not act like hardcore boxing fans are the problem.
They should not dismiss legitimate criticism from people who wanted the game to represent the sport correctly.

There is nothing wrong with enjoying Undisputed.

There is nothing wrong with supporting SCI.

There is nothing wrong with preferring a hybrid or arcade-leaning experience.

But do not call that “the community” unless the community was actually measured.

And do not speak over boxing fans who have been asking for a real boxing game for years.

The Hardcore Boxing Fans Were Not the Problem

Hardcore boxing fans are not trying to ruin Undisputed.

They are trying to save the identity of boxing games.

They are the ones who remember what ESBC was originally presented as. They remember the words “realistic,” “authentic,” and “simulation.” They remember early footage that looked like boxing people had a real voice in the process. They remember the promise of a boxing game that would respect the sport instead of reducing boxing to loose movement, repetitive punch exchanges, stamina exploits, missing mechanics, and online balancing excuses.

Hardcore boxing fans are not the loud minority.

They are the long-term support base.

They are the ones who would buy old-school boxer DLC.
They are the ones who would support era packs.
They are the ones who would care about contenders, champions, prospects, trainers, referees, arenas, gyms, and boxing history.
They are the ones who would keep a real boxing game alive for years if the sport was represented accurately.

So if SCI, Ash Habib, or content creators are claiming the community wanted the game to move away from deeper simulation systems, then they need to prove it.

Where is the data showing boxing fans did not want clinching?
Where is the data showing boxing fans did not want inside fighting?
Where is the data showing boxing fans did not want an in-ring referee?
Where is the data showing boxing fans did not want realistic stamina?
Where is the data showing boxing fans did not want boxer identity and tendencies?
Where is the data showing boxing fans preferred a hybrid arcade direction over the original ESBC vision?

That data has not been shown.

“We Listened” Is Not Enough Anymore

SCI cannot keep hiding behind the phrase “we listened.”

Listening is not the same as understanding.

A company can listen to the wrong people.
A company can listen to the loudest people.
A company can listen to the easiest feedback.
A company can listen to feedback that justifies decisions already made.
A company can listen without separating serious criticism from casual complaints.

The same goes for content creators.

A creator can listen to their own chat and think that represents the entire community.
A creator can listen to online-ranked players and ignore offline players.
A creator can listen to casual players and ignore boxing fans.
A creator can listen to people who want a faster game and ignore people who want a deeper boxing simulation.

That is why a third-party survey is needed.

Not an SCI-controlled survey.
Not a Discord poll.
Not a creator-led popularity contest.
Not a marketing tool.

A real third-party survey with public results.

One that separates the player base into clear groups:

Boxing fans.
Hardcore sports gamers.
Casual players.
Offline players.
Online players.
Career mode players.
Ranked players.
Console players.
PC players.
Players who followed ESBC from the beginning.
Players who only discovered Undisputed after release.
Players who stopped playing because the game did not feel like boxing.

Then ask them real questions.

Do they want simulation, hybrid, or arcade gameplay?
Do they want offline and online balanced separately?
Do they want CPU-versus-CPU?
Do they want sliders?
Do they want clinching?
Do they want inside fighting?
Do they want referee interaction?
Do they want more boxer tendencies?
Do they want deeper career mode?
Do they want old-school boxers?
Do they want every era represented?
Do they believe Undisputed delivered on the original ESBC vision?
Would they support long-term DLC if the game represented boxing accurately?

That is how you find out what the community actually wants.

Without Public Data, It Looks Like Narrative Control

When a company keeps saying what the community wants without showing the data, it starts to look like narrative control.

When content creators do the same thing, it becomes part of the same problem.

It becomes a way to justify missing features.
It becomes a way to dismiss hardcore fans.
It becomes a way to blame criticism on a “loud minority.”
It becomes a way to avoid asking why the game changed direction.
It becomes a way to make the community look divided while the real questions go unanswered.

Undisputed was not just another generic fighting game.

It was sold to many fans as the return of serious boxing gaming. It carried the weight of years of demand from people who had waited since Fight Night Champion for a modern boxing game.

That kind of community deserves more than vague statements.

It deserves transparency.

The Questions SCI and Content Creators Need to Answer

Ash Habib and SCI should answer these questions clearly:

What data did you use to define what the community wanted?
How many players were surveyed?
What platforms were represented?
How many respondents were offline players?
How many were online players?
How many were boxing fans first?
How many were casual gamers first?
Did you ask players whether they wanted a true simulation boxing game?
Did you ask players whether they wanted clinching, inside fighting, and referee interaction?
Did you ask players whether they wanted the ESBC vision preserved?
Did you ask players whether online balancing should affect offline realism?
Did you ask players whether they wanted more sliders and customization?
Did you ask players whether they wanted boxer identity to matter more?
Did you ask players whether they wanted CPU-versus-CPU?
Did you ask players whether they would support old-school boxer DLC?
Did you ask players whether they would support a long-term live-service boxing game if the sport was represented accurately?

And content creators should answer their own version of those questions too:

Who are you speaking for when you say “the community”?
Did you survey your audience?
Did you survey outside your audience?
Did you ask offline players?
Did you ask career mode players?
Did you ask boxing fans who do not watch your channel?
Did you ask people who criticized the game?
Did you ask people who left the game?
Did you ask people who supported ESBC before it became Undisputed?
Are you speaking for the community, or are you speaking for your platform?

And most importantly:

Will anyone release the results publicly?

The Community Is Not a Shield

The community should not be used as a shield when criticism gets uncomfortable.

If SCI made certain design choices, say that.
If SCI chose online balance over offline realism, say that.
If SCI removed or failed to complete systems because of technical limitations, say that.
If SCI changed direction from ESBC to Undisputed, explain why.
If SCI listened to a certain type of player more than another, be honest about it.

And if content creators are giving opinions, they should say those are opinions.

Not community data.

Because many of us in the boxing gaming community never asked for the sport to be watered down.

We asked for boxing.

Not just punches.
Not just movement.
Not just licensed names.
Not just knockdowns.
Not just online exchanges.

We asked for the full sport.

The clinch.
The inside fight.
The referee.
The corners.
The judging.
The fatigue.
The ring generalship.
The styles.
The eras.
The champions.
The contenders.
The old-school legends.
The ugly fights.
The tactical fights.
The chess matches.
The wars.
The boxer identity.

That is what a real boxing game is supposed to represent.

Final Word: If You Speak for the Community, Let the Community Speak

Ash Habib, SCI, and content creators cannot keep making community-based claims without community-based proof.

If the data exists, show it.

If the data does not exist, then admit that these statements are based on limited feedback, internal decisions, personal opinions, access-driven conversations, technical limitations, or selective voices.

The boxing gaming community deserves honesty.

And before SCI asks fans to trust another game, another roadmap, another sequel, another promise of authenticity, or another “we listened” statement, they need to answer the question that keeps getting avoided:

Where is the data?

And before content creators or community voices dismiss the need for a third-party survey, they need to answer a simple question too:

Why not?

Why not let the community speak for itself?

Because if you are truly speaking for the community, you should not be afraid of the community being properly surveyed.

And if SCI already knows what we want, then prove it.

Without public data, “we listened to the community” is not transparency.

It is just a talking point.

Sunday, June 14, 2026

The ESBC Version Looked Like Boxing People Were Shaping the Game, Not Casual Arcade Fighter Gamers

 


The ESBC Version Looked Like Boxing People Were Shaping the Game, Not Casual Arcade Fighter Gamers

Before Undisputed became Undisputed, ESBC looked like something different.

That is the part a lot of people keep trying to skip over.

Before the name change, before the big marketing push, before the game started feeling like it was being pulled toward the same hybrid arcade sports-game lane that so many companies hide behind, ESBC looked like a boxing game being shaped by boxing people.

Not just gamers.

Not just streamers.

Not just people who enjoy fighting games.

Not just developers trying to make something “accessible.”

It looked like a project where actual boxing voices mattered.

That was the difference.

And that difference is exactly why so many hardcore boxing fans originally paid attention.

ESBC did not catch fire because people wanted another arcade puncher. It did not build hype because fans were begging for another casual-friendly fighting game with gloves on. The excitement came from the promise that this was finally going to be a boxing videogame that understood boxing as a sport.

A sport with rhythm.

A sport with range.

A sport with footwork.

A sport with styles.

A sport with ring IQ.

A sport with patience, danger, mistakes, counters, traps, adjustments, and punishment.

That is what ESBC appeared to be selling.

That is what made people believe.

ESBC felt like boxers had a voice.

When fans saw names like Sunny Edwards, Josh Taylor, Ben Davison, and other real boxing people connected to the early version of the project, it sent a message.

It looked like the studio was not just guessing what boxing should feel like. It looked like they were listening to people who had actually lived in the sport.

That matters.

A boxer sees things a casual gamer may never notice.

A boxer knows when the feet look wrong.

A boxer knows when the punches do not carry real weight.

A boxer knows when the movement looks too loose, too floaty, too universal, or too videogame-like.

A boxing trainer knows the difference between a boxer moving with purpose and a character sliding around the ring because the animation system is trying to look smooth.

A boxing mind understands that every boxer should not feel like the same body with different stats.

That was the promise of ESBC.

It looked like the developers were building around the sport first.

Not around shortcuts.

Not around “balance” as an excuse.

Not around making everybody comfortable.

Not around casual arcade fighter logic.

Boxing is not supposed to feel like every other fighting game. That is the whole point.

The early ESBC vision looked more serious.

The ESBC version gave fans the impression that the game was being built from the inside of boxing outward.

The movement looked more deliberate. The posture looked more grounded. The conversations around the game sounded more connected to realism, simulation, and authentic boxing identity.

That is why the hardcore fan base was so loud in support.

They were not supporting a logo.

They were supporting a direction.

They believed this game was finally going to respect the difference between boxing and a general combat game.

Boxing is not just two characters trading punches until one health bar loses.

Boxing is distance control.

Boxing is setting traps.

Boxing is winning rounds without always chasing a knockout.

Boxing is making someone miss by inches.

Boxing is making someone pay for being off-balance.

Boxing is fighting differently depending on the opponent, the corner, the referee, the rules, the stamina, the damage, and the round.

That type of game requires boxing voices.

It requires people who understand why a jab is not just a fast light punch.

It requires people who understand why clinching matters.

It requires people who understand why inside fighting matters.

It requires people who understand why foot placement, guard position, punch selection, and ring generalship matter.

That is the kind of energy ESBC originally gave off.

Then the game started feeling like it was drifting away from boxing people.

Somewhere along the way, the feel changed.

The promise started sounding different.

The language started becoming more industry-safe. Words like “authenticity,” “balance,” and “accessibility” began replacing the hard boxing language that simulation fans were listening for.

That is where the disconnect began.

Hardcore boxing fans did not ask for a game that merely looked like boxing on the surface. They wanted boxing logic built into the foundation.

There is a difference.

A game can have real boxers, real venues, real gloves, real trunks, and real commentary, but still not feel like boxing.

Presentation does not replace mechanics.

Licenses do not replace ring IQ.

Roster size does not replace boxer identity.

Smooth animations do not replace realistic movement.

Fast punches do not replace proper punch mechanics.

A game can look official and still feel wrong.

That is the fear many fans had when ESBC became Undisputed. The project that once looked like it was being guided by boxing people started feeling more like it was being reshaped by casual sports-gaming expectations.

And that is a serious problem.

Casual arcade fighter gamers should not define boxing videogames.

There is nothing wrong with arcade fighting games.

There is nothing wrong with casual modes.

There is nothing wrong with accessibility options.

But those things should not define the core of a boxing videogame.

Boxing fans have watched this happen too many times. Companies say they want realism, then they water it down. They say they want authenticity, then they build a hybrid. They say they are listening to the community, then they treat the hardcore fans like a problem when those fans ask for deeper boxing systems.

That cannot be the standard.

The hardcore boxing fan is not the enemy of fun.

The hardcore boxing fan is usually the person trying to protect the sport from being misrepresented.

A proper boxing videogame can still be fun. It can still sell. It can still bring in casual players. But it should not have to sacrifice the sport’s identity to do it.

Casual fans can learn boxing through a real boxing game.

They do not need the sport dumbed down before they even get a chance to respect it.

ESBC had people believing boxing was finally going to be respected.

That is why the early version matters.

It is not nostalgia.

It is not people imagining something that was never there.

It is about what the project represented.

ESBC represented the possibility of a boxing videogame built with boxing knowledge at the center. It looked like a game where boxers, trainers, coaches, and hardcore boxing fans had real influence.

That is why people were excited.

That is why people promoted it.

That is why people defended it.

That is why people believed in the studio.

The disappointment did not come from fans wanting the impossible. It came from fans watching the vision shift away from what made them believe in the first place.

When a game markets itself as realistic, simulation, authentic, and built for boxing fans, the people who actually understand boxing are going to hold it to that standard.

That is not hate.

That is accountability.

Boxing people need to be involved from start to finish.

It is not enough to bring boxing people in early for promotion, motion capture, interviews, or credibility.

They need to have influence throughout development.

They need to be in the room when movement is designed.

They need to be in the room when stamina is tuned.

They need to be in the room when punch tracking is built.

They need to be in the room when clinching, inside fighting, footwork, defense, judging, referee behavior, boxer tendencies, and career systems are discussed.

Because boxing is too detailed to fake.

A developer can be talented and still not understand boxing.

A gamer can love combat games and still not understand boxing.

A content creator can have a platform and still not represent the hardcore boxing audience.

That is why real boxing people matter.

That is why the ESBC version stood out.

It looked like the sport itself had a seat at the table.

Undisputed should have protected that original boxing-first identity.

The biggest mistake was not that the game changed names.

The biggest mistake was that the spirit seemed to change.

ESBC had a boxing-first identity.

Undisputed needed to protect that.

Instead, many fans feel like the game became another example of the industry trying to meet everyone halfway and ending up with something that does not fully satisfy the people who cared the most from the beginning.

That is what happens when a boxing game starts chasing the casual arcade fighter audience too hard.

The sport gets flattened.

Styles start feeling less distinct.

Movement becomes too universal.

Depth gets replaced with surface-level accessibility.

And the hardcore fans who were promised something serious get told they are asking for too much.

But they are not asking for too much.

They are asking for boxing.

Final Word

The ESBC version of Undisputed looked like a game being shaped by boxing people.

That is why it mattered.

That is why the early hype was real.

That is why the hardcore fans believed.

It did not look like a casual arcade fighter with boxing gloves. It looked like the beginning of a real boxing videogame project where the sport had influence, where boxers had a voice, and where the people behind the game understood that boxing deserves more than a hybrid experience dressed up as authenticity.

That original direction should not be ignored.

It should be studied.

It should be respected.

And if there is ever going to be an Undisputed 2, or any serious boxing videogame after this, the lesson is simple:

Put boxing people back at the center.

Not just for marketing.

Not just for credibility.

Not just for interviews.

For the actual game.

Because boxing fans can tell the difference.

Did SCI Push Boxers Out of the Room During Undisputed’s Development?

 

Did SCI Push Boxers Out of the Room During Undisputed’s Development?

When eSports Boxing Club first appeared, it looked different.

It did not look like another generic combat sports game. It looked like a boxing project. It looked like something built around rhythm, footwork, timing, range, identity, and the small details only real boxing people understand. The early ESBC version felt like boxers had a serious voice in the room.

That is why the final version of Undisputed raises such a serious question:

What happened to the boxing voices?

Because SCI did not lack access to boxing people. They had names around the project. They had people like Sunny Edwards, Josh Taylor, and Ben Davison connected to the game. These are not random names being used for marketing decoration. These are people with real boxing knowledge.

Sunny Edwards understands distance, rhythm, feints, positioning, timing, and defensive IQ.

Josh Taylor understands physical boxing, southpaw angles, pressure, inside work, rough fighting, and championship-level adjustments.

Ben Davison understands game plans, corner strategy, preparation, fighter tendencies, and how a boxer is supposed to think through a fight.

So the issue was never, “Did SCI know any boxing people?”

The issue is much deeper than that.

The real issue is this:

Did the boxing people actually have authority, or were they only used for access, credibility, scanning, promotion, and surface-level authenticity?

That is the question hardcore boxing fans deserve an answer to.

ESBC Looked Boxer-Led

The early ESBC version gave off the impression that boxing minds were helping shape the foundation. The language was different. The expectations were different. The game looked like it was trying to translate real boxing into videogame form.

It was not just about having licensed boxers on a roster.

It was about movement.
It was about footwork.
It was about mannerisms.
It was about boxer identity.
It was about career consequences.
It was about trainers, gyms, promoters, traits, styles, weight management, injuries, and the ecosystem around the sport.

That version of the game looked like it understood boxing was more than throwing punches.

Boxing is positioning. Boxing is rhythm. Boxing is deception. Boxing is timing. Boxing is distance control. Boxing is controlling space before a punch is even thrown.

The ESBC version looked like it was being built from that understanding.

That is why so many fans followed the project. That is why so many hardcore boxing fans believed in SCI early. ESBC felt like the boxing game fans had been waiting for since Fight Night disappeared.

But somewhere along the way, the identity changed.

Undisputed Felt Studio-Led, Not Boxer-Led

By the time ESBC became Undisputed, the final product felt less like a boxer-guided simulation and more like a studio-managed hybrid.

That does not mean every developer was careless. That does not mean nobody at SCI cared about boxing. But caring about boxing and building a true boxing simulation are not the same thing.

The final game raised major concerns:

Where was the deep clinch system?

Where was true inside fighting?

Where was the realistic referee interaction?

Where was the layered stamina punishment?

Where was the grounded footwork?

Where was the proper ring-cutting logic?

Where were the boxer-specific tendencies?

Where were the tactical adjustments?

Where was the corner influence?

Where was the physicality of boxing?

Where was the ugly, strategic, uncomfortable part of boxing that makes the sport real?

That is where the disconnect becomes impossible to ignore.

You cannot say the game had strong boxing voices in control and then release a product where so many core boxing systems are missing, shallow, or simplified.

That is why the question is not whether boxers were involved.

The question is whether boxers were listened to when it mattered.

Boxers May Have Been Pushed Out Functionally

When people say boxers were “pushed out,” that does not have to mean someone physically removed them from SCI’s studio. The more accurate criticism is that boxers may have been pushed out functionally.

They may have been close to the project early.

They may have helped with feedback.

They may have helped with promotion.

They may have helped with authenticity language.

They may have helped the studio gain credibility.

But when the difficult gameplay decisions came, their influence appears to have been reduced.

That is the difference between being involved and having power.

A boxer can tell a developer, “This does not look like boxing.”

A trainer can explain, “This fighter would never move like that.”

A coach can say, “That stamina system is wrong.”

A real boxing mind can say, “You cannot remove clinching and still call this a serious boxing simulation.”

But if the final decision belongs to product leads, balance teams, online designers, executives, or people trying to make the game more accessible, then boxing knowledge becomes optional.

That is how boxing people get pushed out without ever officially being removed.

They are still around the project, but their influence no longer controls the direction.

Access Is Not Authority

This is the part SCI and other sports game companies need to understand.

Having access to athletes does not automatically make a sports game authentic.

Having boxers on the roster does not mean the game represents boxing correctly.

Having trainers involved does not mean the mechanics are trainer-approved.

Having boxing names in interviews does not mean boxing logic controls the product.

Access is not authority.

A company can have real boxers in the building and still make design decisions that betray the sport.

That is why fans should stop being impressed by names alone. The real question is not, “Who did you bring in?”

The real question is, “What power did they have?”

Did Sunny Edwards have influence over footwork and defensive rhythm?

Did Josh Taylor have input on pressure fighting, southpaw positioning, and inside physicality?

Did Ben Davison have influence over corner systems, tactical AI, opponent tendencies, and fight preparation?

And if they did give serious input, what happened to it?

Was it implemented?

Was it rejected?

Was it watered down?

Was it delayed?

Was it impossible for SCI to build?

Was it sacrificed for online balance?

Was it removed because casual players complained?

Was it cut because the studio did not have the experience, budget, technology, or time to finish it?

These are fair questions.

“Authenticity” Became a Shield

One of the biggest problems in modern sports gaming is how companies use words like “authenticity.”

Authenticity can mean anything.

A licensed boxer is “authentic.”

A real venue is “authentic.”

A real belt is “authentic.”

A scanned face is “authentic.”

Real commentary names are “authentic.”

But none of that automatically creates authentic gameplay.

True boxing authenticity has to live inside the mechanics.

It has to show up in how a boxer moves, thinks, reacts, tires, defends, adjusts, survives, panics, clinches, cuts off the ring, creates traps, and changes rhythm.

If the game looks like boxing on the surface but does not behave like boxing under the hood, then the authenticity is mostly cosmetic.

That is why the ESBC-to-Undisputed shift feels so frustrating. Early ESBC looked like it was chasing boxing authenticity as a system. Final Undisputed often felt like it used authenticity as a marketing word.

That is not the same thing.

The Bigger the Game Got, the Smaller the Boxing Voice Felt

This may be the real story.

As ESBC grew, the project became bigger. More licenses. More investors. More publisher pressure. More platforms. More online expectations. More casual players. More marketing. More deadlines. More technical problems.

And as that happened, the original boxing-first vision may have been diluted.

That is how a project can start with a boxer’s eye and end with a product manager’s compromise.

The early question seemed to be:

“How do we turn real boxing into a videogame?”

The final question felt more like:

“How do we make a boxing-themed game that is accessible, marketable, playable online, and easier to balance?”

That is where many hardcore fans felt betrayed.

Because they did not follow ESBC for another hybrid. They followed ESBC because it looked like the first serious attempt in years to build a real boxing simulation.

This Is Why Fans Need Answers

Ash Habib and SCI should be asked directly:

When ESBC was first shown, the game looked like boxers had a major voice in the direction. By the time it became Undisputed, many of the boxing-first systems looked missing, reduced, or watered down. What changed?

That question matters.

Not as an attack.

As accountability.

Because if SCI had access to real boxing minds, then fans deserve to know how that knowledge was used. If boxer feedback was ignored, say that. If it was rejected for balance, say that. If it could not be implemented because of technical limits, say that. If the studio shifted direction because of publisher pressure, say that. If casual accessibility became more important than simulation, say that.

But do not hide behind “made by boxing fans for boxing fans” while avoiding the hard questions.

Which boxing fans?

Which boxers?

Which trainers?

What did they recommend?

What made it into the game?

What got cut?

Who had final authority?

That is the transparency the boxing gaming community deserves.

Final Word

SCI did not fail because it lacked boxing access.

SCI had boxing access.

SCI had names.

SCI had attention.

SCI had goodwill.

SCI had a community starving for a real boxing game.

The problem is that the final product did not reflect the level of boxing authority fans thought ESBC had in the beginning.

That is the real issue.

Boxers may not have been physically pushed out of SCI, but from the outside looking in, it feels like their influence got pushed out of the final design. The early ESBC version looked like boxing people were helping shape the foundation. Undisputed looked like the boxing voices were reduced to consultation while the studio made the final compromises.

And that is why hardcore boxing fans keep asking the same question:

If SCI had real boxing minds around the project, why didn’t the final game look, move, think, and fight more like real boxing?

Even Shawn Porter Could See Undisputed Did Not Look Like Boxing

 

Even Shawn Porter Could See Undisputed Did Not Look Like Boxing

When a real boxer who does not even play video games can spot the problem, maybe hardcore boxing fans are not the “loud minority” after all.

One of the most important things said about Undisputed did not come from a hardcore gaming critic, a YouTuber breaking down mechanics, or a longtime boxing video game fan analyzing punch animations frame by frame.

It came from Shawn Porter.

And that is what makes it powerful.

Shawn Porter gave what many fans would call a soft interview. He did not press the developers hard. He did not go deep into the missing mechanics. He did not ask the questions that hardcore boxing fans have been asking for years about footwork, clinching, inside fighting, stamina, punch tracking, defensive identity, referee interaction, sliders, boxer tendencies, CPU logic, or why the game moved so far away from the original ESBC vision.

But even inside a soft interview, Porter still said something that exposed the bigger issue.

He said he does not really play video games, but he knew Undisputed did not look like boxing.

That is the receipt.

That is the part that should not be ignored.

Because if a former world champion boxer who does not even play video games can look at Undisputed and recognize that something is off, then how can anyone keep dismissing hardcore boxing fans for saying the same thing in greater detail?

This is the problem with how the conversation around Undisputed has been controlled. When hardcore boxing fans complain, we get labeled as negative. We get called the loud minority. We get treated like we are impossible to please. We get told it is just a game. We get told realism cannot be fun. We get told authenticity is the goal, even when the gameplay does not move, react, or flow like real boxing.

But Shawn Porter’s comment cuts through all of that.

He was not talking about online cheese. He was not complaining about the meta. He was not debating controller layouts. He was not asking for a hardcore simulation mode with 300 sliders.

He simply looked at the game with a boxing eye and recognized that it did not resemble the sport the way it should.

That matters.

A real boxer does not need to understand development language to know when a boxing game does not look like boxing. A boxer can see rhythm. A boxer can see weight transfer. A boxer can see distance. A boxer can see when punches do not have the right commitment. A boxer can see when footwork is floating instead of grounded. A boxer can see when fighters are not setting traps, cutting the ring, fighting inside, using the ropes properly, clinching realistically, or reacting to damage in a believable way.

That is not a gamer complaint.

That is a boxing complaint.

And that is exactly why hardcore boxing fans have been so frustrated.

Undisputed has real boxers. It has licensed names. It has belts. It has arenas. It has presentation. It has the language of authenticity around it. But a boxing game cannot survive on licenses and buzzwords alone. At some point, the action in the ring has to look, feel, and behave like boxing.

That is where the criticism starts.

Not because fans want to hate the game.

Not because fans want to attack the developers.

Not because fans do not understand how hard game development is.

The criticism exists because many of us wanted Undisputed to be the boxing game that finally respected the sport. We wanted the game to build on the original ESBC promise. We wanted a true boxing foundation. We wanted a game that treated boxing as more than punches, movement, health bars, knockdowns, and online balance.

We wanted boxing.

There is a difference.

And Shawn Porter, without even being a video game player, pointed right at that difference.

That should make people uncomfortable.

Because if the developers, publishers, media, and content creators are saying the game is authentic, but real boxers and hardcore boxing fans can see that it does not look like boxing, then someone has to ask the harder questions.

Who is defining authenticity?

Who is deciding what boxing fans want?

Where is the data?

Where is the third-party survey?

Why are hardcore boxing fans being dismissed instead of studied?

Why are soft interviews allowed to replace real accountability?

Why are content creators asking safe questions when the community has been asking detailed questions for years?

This is why the Shawn Porter moment matters. Not because he destroyed the game. Not because he gave a harsh breakdown. Not because he attacked SCI. He did not.

It matters because even in a soft setting, the truth still slipped out.

A man who has lived boxing could tell the game did not look like boxing.

That should have been the opening for a serious conversation.

Instead, too many people continue to dance around the real issue. They keep using words like “authenticity,” “balance,” “fun,” “accessibility,” and “vision,” while avoiding the core question:

Does the game actually represent boxing?

Hardcore boxing fans are not asking for something impossible. We are asking for the sport to be respected. We are asking for boxers to fight like themselves. We are asking for styles to matter. We are asking for footwork to have weight. We are asking for inside fighting, clinching, referee presence, fatigue, ring generalship, defensive identity, and real consequences.

We are asking for the details that make boxing boxing.

That is not being negative.

That is being honest.

And if Shawn Porter can see it without being a gamer, then the criticism is bigger than a few angry fans online.

It proves that the hardcore boxing community has been making a valid point all along.

Undisputed does not just have a content problem. It does not just have a patch problem. It does not just have a marketing problem. It has a boxing identity problem.

That is why soft interviews are not enough anymore.

The next time Ash Habib or SCI talks about Undisputed, somebody needs to ask the real questions. Not the comfortable questions. Not the media-friendly questions. Not the questions that allow the same scripted answers.

Ask why real boxing people can look at the game and say it does not look like boxing.

Ask why the hardcore fans were ignored when they said the same thing earlier.

Ask why the game was marketed around realism, authenticity, and being made by boxing fans for boxing fans, but still missed so many foundational parts of the sport.

Ask why a proper third-party survey has not been done.

Ask why the community is being told what it wants instead of being properly asked.

Because Shawn Porter’s comment was not just a casual opinion.

It was a warning.

If people who do not even play video games can see that Undisputed does not look like boxing, then the issue is not too complicated to understand.

The issue is that too many people do not want to say it out loud.

Hardcore boxing fans have been saying it.

Now a real boxer said it too.

So stop calling it noise.

Start calling it evidence.

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