Wednesday, June 24, 2026

No More Excuses: Debunking the Industry Narratives Used to Shortchange Boxing Videogame Fans

No More Excuses: Debunking the Industry Narratives Used to Shortchange Boxing Videogame Fans

For too long, boxing videogame fans have been handed excuses dressed up as development realities. Every time the community asks for deeper gameplay, a real career mode, better creation tools, realistic boxer identity, smarter AI, proper clinching, inside fighting, better referees, CPU vs CPU, or a true simulation option, the same industry language gets recycled:

“It’s too hard.”

“It’s not fun.”

“Boxing is too niche.”

“Licensing is impossible.”

“Casual players won’t understand it.”

“We have to balance realism with fun.”

“We’re listening to the community.”

At some point, fans have to stop accepting these lines at face value. Not every limitation is a lie. Game development is difficult. Budgets matter. Time matters. Licensing matters. But there is a difference between an honest limitation and an excuse used to lower expectations. There is a difference between technical reality and corporate convenience.

Boxing fans are not asking for magic. They are asking for the sport they love to be represented with the same seriousness other sports games receive.

And that is where the excuses start falling apart.


Excuse #1: “Boxing Is Too Hard to Make Into a Videogame”

Boxing is hard to make well. That part is true.

But “hard” is not the same as “impossible.”

Football is hard. Basketball is hard. MMA is hard. Racing is hard. Open-world RPGs are hard. Military shooters with destruction, vehicles, ballistics, weather, squads, and massive online lobbies are hard. Yet companies keep building those games because they believe there is money and value in doing so.

Boxing is not uniquely impossible. It is uniquely neglected.

A boxing game does not need to fake complexity. The sport already has layers:

Foot placement.
Distance control.
Punch selection.
Feints.
Clinch fighting.
Ring generalship.
Body work.
Styles.
Trainers.
Judges.
Referees.
Momentum.
Fatigue.
Damage.
Adjustments.
Tendencies.
Fear.
Confidence.
Experience.

The issue is not that boxing lacks videogame depth. The issue is that companies often refuse to build systems deep enough to capture that depth.

When developers say boxing is too difficult, the real question should be:

Too difficult compared to what?

Compared to building massive open worlds?
Compared to motion-capturing thousands of animations?
Compared to online matchmaking systems?
Compared to yearly sports titles with hundreds of athletes, arenas, commentary lines, and modes?

No. Boxing is not too hard. Boxing has simply not been prioritized properly.


Excuse #2: “Realism Isn’t Fun”

This is one of the most dishonest arguments in sports gaming.

Realism is not the enemy of fun. Bad design is.

When people say “realism isn’t fun,” they usually mean one of two things. Either they do not understand how to make realism playable, or they are trying to justify a shallow system designed around speed, spam, and online balance.

Realism does not mean slow, boring, complicated, or inaccessible. Realism means the game respects the logic of the sport.

A realistic boxing game can still be fun. In fact, for real boxing fans, realism is the fun.

It is fun to break down a pressure fighter.
It is fun to time a counter.
It is fun to survive a dangerous round.
It is fun to use a jab to control range.
It is fun to go to the body and see it pay off later.
It is fun to notice a boxer getting tired because you invested in the right strategy.
It is fun when styles actually matter.

The problem is that some companies define “fun” through the eyes of the most casual player only. They want fast exchanges, simple reads, quick knockdowns, easy offense, and limited punishment for bad decisions.

But boxing is not just two people throwing hands until someone falls down.

If a game rewards reckless punch volume, ignores footwork, weakens defense, removes clinching, makes every boxer move similarly, and treats stamina like an arcade meter, that is not “fun for everyone.” That is fun for one type of player at the expense of the sport.

The honest solution is options.

Casual mode.
Hybrid mode.
Simulation mode.

Let players choose the experience. Stop using “fun” as a weapon against realism.


Excuse #3: “Casual Players Won’t Understand Deep Boxing Systems”

This excuse insults casual players.

Casual players learn deep systems all the time. They learn RPG builds. They learn fighting game combos. They learn shooter recoil patterns. They learn card-game metas. They learn sports game controls. They learn open-world crafting, skill trees, stealth systems, and economy systems.

The idea that casual players cannot understand boxing depth is not true. They simply need good onboarding.

A proper boxing game should teach:

Why the jab matters.
Why body shots matter.
Why foot position matters.
Why you cannot throw nonstop punches.
Why clinching exists.
Why some boxers fight tall.
Why some fight low.
Why styles create advantages and problems.
Why not every block is the same.
Why judges score differently.
Why trainers give different advice.

That is not too much. That is called teaching the sport.

A game that explains boxing properly can make casual fans smarter. It can turn a casual player into a hardcore fan. That should be the goal.

Companies should stop pretending that depth scares new players away. Depth only scares players away when it is poorly explained, poorly tuned, or forced without options.


Excuse #4: “Licensing Boxers Is Too Hard”

Licensing real boxers can be difficult. Nobody serious should deny that.

But it is not a valid excuse for making a shallow boxing game.

A great boxing game does not need every famous boxer to be great. Licensed names help marketing, but systems create longevity.

Fans will play a boxing game with fictional or editable boxers if the gameplay, career mode, creation suite, and presentation are strong enough. The community has already proven for decades that it will create rosters, recreate fighters, share sliders, build leagues, and fill in the gaps.

That means licensing cannot be used as a shield for weak mechanics.

A company can build:

A deep Create-A-Boxer mode.
Editable records.
Editable styles.
Editable tendencies.
Editable trunks, robes, boots, gloves, brands, gyms, trainers, promoters, belts, and arenas.
A share system.
A fictional career ecosystem.
Regional circuits.
Generated prospects.
Created legends.
Community-made divisions.

If the game has depth, the community will help expand it.

Licensed fighters are a bonus. They are not the foundation.

The foundation is gameplay, identity, modes, creation, and replay value.


Excuse #5: “We’re Listening to the Community”

This phrase means nothing without evidence.

Every company says it. Every developer says it. Every publisher says it. But listening is not proven by slogans. It is proven by action.

Who are they listening to?
How many people were surveyed?
Were hardcore boxing fans included?
Were former boxers included?
Were offline players included?
Were creators included?
Were career-mode players included?
Were sim players included?
Were casual players included?
Were results made public?
Was feedback categorized?
Was criticism separated from trolling?
Was the data independent?

If the answer is vague, then “we’re listening” is just public-relations language.

A Discord server is not a full community.
A handful of content creators is not a full community.
A private feedback group is not public data.
An influencer event is not research.
A loud online circle is not proof of what boxing fans want.

A serious company should welcome a third-party survey with public results.

Not controlled results.
Not cherry-picked comments.
Not private claims.
Public data.

If companies are confident they know what fans want, they should have no fear of transparent community research.


Excuse #6: “The Hardcore Fans Are Just a Loud Minority”

This is another lazy deflection.

Hardcore fans are not always the majority, but they are often the foundation.

They are the ones who keep games alive after launch.
They buy DLC.
They build communities.
They make rosters.
They host leagues.
They make videos.
They write feedback.
They test mechanics.
They notice what casual players miss.
They keep talking when the marketing cycle ends.

Calling hardcore fans a “loud minority” is often a way to avoid answering serious criticism.

Hardcore fans are not always right about everything. But when experienced boxing fans repeatedly point out missing clinching, weak inside fighting, poor stamina logic, bad AI tendencies, unrealistic blocking, generic boxer movement, and shallow career mode design, that is not noise.

That is expertise.

A company does not have to obey every hardcore demand. But dismissing the most knowledgeable section of the community is reckless.

Especially in boxing, where authenticity depends on understanding details.


Excuse #7: “We Have to Balance Realism and Accessibility”

This sounds reasonable, but it is often used to justify removing depth entirely.

Balance does not mean stripping boxing down until everyone fights the same. Balance does not mean weakening defense because offense is easier to sell. Balance does not mean making stamina forgiving so players can spam punches. Balance does not mean removing realistic systems because some players may not use them.

Real balance means building layers.

Beginner players can use assists.
Casual players can use simplified controls.
Hybrid players can use moderate realism.
Simulation players can use deeper systems.
Offline players can adjust sliders.
Online players can use rulesets.
Leagues can set contracts.
Ranked modes can have restrictions.

That is balance.

A company that removes depth instead of giving options is not balancing realism and accessibility. It is choosing accessibility over realism and hoping fans do not notice.


Excuse #8: “Online Is Where the Money Is”

Online can make money. That is true.

But boxing games cannot survive on online alone.

A strong offline foundation gives the game long-term value. Career mode, creation suite, universe mode, CPU vs CPU, custom leagues, historical matchups, tournaments, gyms, belts, arenas, and downloadable community content all give players reasons to keep coming back.

Offline players also buy DLC.

They buy alternate versions of boxers.
They buy eras.
They buy venues.
They buy gear.
They buy career expansions.
They buy legends.
They buy customization packs.
They buy because the world they are building has value.

Online-only thinking often leads to shallow design because everything gets filtered through competitive balance. That can hurt boxer individuality. It can hurt realism. It can hurt career depth. It can hurt presentation.

A boxing game should not be designed only for ranked matches.

Boxing is bigger than online head-to-head.


Excuse #9: “A Tier System Is Better Than Attributes”

A tier system may work for certain competitive online structures, but it is not enough to represent boxing.

Boxers are not just S-tier, A-tier, B-tier, and C-tier characters.

A boxer has layers:

Hand speed.
Foot speed.
Power.
Timing.
Chin.
Heart.
Recovery.
Stamina.
Defense.
Balance.
Inside fighting.
Outside fighting.
Ring IQ.
Composure.
Punch variety.
Counterpunching.
Body punching.
Clinch ability.
Cut resistance.
Swelling resistance.
Adaptability.
Discipline.
Aggression.
Punch accuracy.
Feint usage.
Jab dependency.
Combination rhythm.

A tier can tell you where a boxer sits competitively. It cannot tell you who that boxer is.

Attributes, tendencies, traits, capabilities, and style logic are necessary if the game wants boxer identity. Without them, boxers become skins with different stats and animations.

That is not boxing representation. That is character selection.

A serious boxing game needs deep attributes and tendencies. A tier system can exist for online sorting, but it should never replace boxer identity.


Excuse #10: “Deep Career Mode Is Too Much”

This excuse does not hold up anymore.

Sports games, RPGs, management games, and simulation games have shown that players love long-term progression when it is designed well.

A boxing career mode should not be a thin ladder of fights with menus in between. Boxing has one of the richest career structures in sports.

A real career mode can include:

Amateur background.
Regional circuits.
Promoters.
Managers.
Trainers.
Gyms.
Sanctioning bodies.
Rankings.
Belts.
Mandatory challengers.
Negotiations.
Weight classes.
Catchweights.
Rematches.
Injuries.
Training camps.
Sparring.
Media.
Rivalries.
Judges.
Referee assignments.
Comebacks.
Decline.
Legacy.
Hall of Fame.
Generated prospects.
CPU boxer careers.

That is not “too much.” That is the sport.

The truth is, career mode is often neglected because it requires design commitment. It requires systems thinking. It requires a team that understands boxing beyond the ring.

But career mode is where a boxing game can become legendary.


Excuse #11: “Creation Modes Are Just Extras”

Creation is not an extra in boxing. Creation is survival.

Because licensing is difficult, the creation suite becomes one of the most important systems in the entire game.

A revolutionary boxing game should let players create:

Boxers.
Trainers.
Referees.
Judges.
Promoters.
Managers.
Gyms.
Arenas.
Belts.
Organizations.
Stables.
Robes.
Trunks.
Boots.
Gloves.
Walkout gear.
Logos.
Fictional brands.
Records.
Rivalries.
Styles.
Signature punches.
Defensive shells.
Commentary names.
Nicknames.

That is how a game lives beyond its licensed roster.

Creation gives the community power. It gives offline players value. It gives content creators material. It gives leagues identity. It gives the game a longer lifespan.

When companies treat creation as a side mode, they are showing they do not understand boxing gaming culture.

A boxing game without a deep creation suite is already limiting itself.


Excuse #12: “The Technology Isn’t There”

This excuse is weaker than ever.

Modern engines can handle advanced animation systems, motion matching, physics blending, procedural movement, body deformation, AI behavior trees, large customization systems, dynamic commentary triggers, and deep simulation logic.

That does not mean everything is easy. It means the tools exist.

A proper boxing game can use modern technology for:

Weight transfer detection.
Punch impact zones.
Guard wear.
Dynamic swelling and cuts.
Foot placement logic.
Rope interaction.
Clinching.
Referee positioning.
Judge tendencies.
Trainer advice systems.
Style-based AI.
Signature punches.
Stamina modeling.
Realistic knockdowns.
Era-specific presentation.
Creation sharing.
Procedural commentary.

So when fans ask for deeper features, the answer should not automatically be “that can’t be done.”

The better question is:

Did the company budget for it, hire for it, design for it, and prioritize it?

Because “we can’t do it” often really means “we did not build the team or system for it.”


Excuse #13: “We Need to Keep Every Boxer Balanced”

Boxers are not supposed to feel equal.

They should be fair within the rules of the game, but they should not be flattened into sameness.

A slick boxer should not feel like a pressure fighter.
A heavyweight should not move like a lightweight.
A defensive master should not defend like a brawler.
A body puncher should not fight like an outside jabber.
A tired boxer should not behave like a fresh boxer.
A damaged boxer should not react like nothing happened.

The obsession with online balance can destroy sports authenticity.

The answer is not to make every boxer equal. The answer is to create rulesets, matchmaking filters, stamina consequences, weight-class logic, and competitive divisions.

Offline should not suffer because ranked online needs tighter control.

A boxing game should respect imbalance where imbalance is realistic. Some boxers are dangerous. Some are limited. Some are specialists. Some are flawed. Some are great but vulnerable to certain styles.

That is boxing.


Excuse #14: “Influencers Know What the Community Wants”

Some influencers do. Many do not.

Being a content creator does not automatically make someone a boxing expert. Being invited to events does not make someone a representative of the community. Having access does not mean having insight.

Companies often use influencers because influencers are useful for marketing. That is fine. But marketing access should not be confused with community research.

A boxing game needs input from:

Former boxers.
Trainers.
Hardcore boxing fans.
Offline players.
Online players.
Career-mode players.
Creation-community players.
Modders.
Commentators.
Historians.
Gameplay designers.
AI programmers.
Animation specialists.
Sports simulation consultants.

If a company only listens to people who praise the game, promote the game, or protect their access, then the feedback loop is already corrupted.

Real feedback includes uncomfortable voices.


Excuse #15: “Fans Don’t Know Game Development”

Fans may not know every technical detail of game development, but that does not mean they cannot identify what is missing.

A boxing fan does not need to be a programmer to know clinching is absent.
A former boxer does not need to be an animator to know footwork looks wrong.
A career-mode player does not need to be a designer to know the mode is shallow.
A hardcore fan does not need to be an AI engineer to know every boxer behaves too similarly.

Developers understand implementation. Fans understand experience.

The best games respect both.

A company should not hide behind technical language to dismiss obvious criticism. If something cannot be added, explain why. If it can be added but was not prioritized, say that. If it was attempted and failed, be honest. If it is planned, show the roadmap.

But do not talk down to the people who know the sport.


Excuse #16: “This Is Just the First Game”

A first game does not have to be perfect.

But “first game” cannot excuse missing the foundation.

A first boxing game can be rough. It can lack polish. It can have bugs. It can have limited content. But it should still show that the core philosophy is right.

If the foundation ignores clinching, inside fighting, boxer identity, realistic stamina, smart AI, career depth, creation depth, and proper boxing logic, then the problem is not simply that it is a first game.

The problem is the blueprint.

A limited game with the right foundation can grow.
A shallow game with the wrong foundation may need to be rebuilt.

Fans understand growing pains. What they reject is being told to lower their standards while companies market ambition.


Excuse #17: “We’ll Add It Later”

“Later” is not a design plan.

Sometimes features genuinely need to be patched in after launch. But when major boxing fundamentals are missing, fans have every right to question the priorities.

Clinching is not a bonus.
Referees are not a bonus.
Inside fighting is not a bonus.
Stamina logic is not a bonus.
Boxer identity is not a bonus.
Career depth is not a bonus.
Creation depth is not a bonus.

These are core pillars.

If a company launches without the pillars and promises improvement later, fans should ask:

Was the game released too early?
Were the systems unfinished?
Were fans misled by marketing?
Was the design aimed at a different audience?
Was realism sacrificed for speed?
Was feedback ignored?

“Later” becomes meaningless when the missing features are the very things that define boxing.


Excuse #18: “The Community Is Divided, So We Can’t Please Everyone”

No company can please everyone. That is true.

But this is exactly why options matter.

The community does not have to agree on one style of gameplay. A serious boxing game can support multiple experiences.

Casual players can have assists.
Hardcore players can have simulation sliders.
Online players can have ranked rules.
Offline players can customize everything.
League players can set contracts.
Career players can shape their universe.
Creation players can build rosters and worlds.

The excuse that “everyone wants something different” only works if the company refuses to build flexible systems.

A boxing game does not need one rigid vision. It needs a strong foundation with adjustable rules.

That is how you respect a divided community.


Excue #19: “Authentic” Means the Same Thing as Realistic

No, it does not.

“Authentic” has become a safe marketing word. It sounds serious, but it can mean almost anything.

Authentic presentation.
Authentic licenses.
Authentic venues.
Authentic gloves.
Authentic commentary.
Authentic boxer scans.

All of that can exist while the gameplay still fails to represent boxing realistically.

A game can look authentic and play arcade.
A game can have real boxers but generic styles.
A game can have licensed gloves but weak footwork.
A game can have real arenas but no clinching.
A game can have commentary but shallow career mode.

Realism is about behavior and consequence.

Does the boxer move correctly?
Does stamina matter correctly?
Does damage matter correctly?
Does defense matter correctly?
Does style matter correctly?
Does strategy matter correctly?
Does the AI understand boxing?
Do judges and referees behave believably?

Authenticity without realism is presentation without substance.


Excuse #20: “The Game Sold, So the Criticism Doesn’t Matter”

Sales do not erase criticism.

A game can sell well because fans are starving for the sport. A game can sell because there are no alternatives. A game can sell because marketing was strong. A game can sell because people hoped it would improve.

That does not mean the game fully satisfied the audience.

Boxing fans have been waiting for a serious modern boxing game for years. Strong sales can prove demand, but they do not automatically prove quality.

In fact, strong sales should raise expectations.

If fans showed up, bought the game, supported the vision, and proved there is a market, then companies owe the sport more ambition, not more excuses.


The Real Issue: Boxing Games Need a Better Standard

The problem is not one missing feature. It is the pattern.

Too many boxing games are judged by the lowest possible standard:

“At least it exists.”

That is not good enough anymore.

A boxing videogame should not be praised simply because it has gloves, a ring, and licensed fighters. Boxing deserves the same depth that other sports and simulation genres fight for.

A serious boxing game should have:

Realistic movement.
Different boxer identities.
Deep tendencies.
Meaningful attributes.
Real stamina.
Real body punching.
Real clinching.
Real inside fighting.
Realistic blocking variations.
Smart AI.
Referees with presence.
Judges with tendencies.
Deep career mode.
Deep creation suite.
Strong offline modes.
Fair online rules.
Community sharing.
Simulation options.
Transparent feedback channels.

That is not fantasy. That is a blueprint.


The Bottom Line

The boxing videogame community does not need more corporate language.

It needs honesty.

Stop saying something cannot be done when it really was not prioritized.
Stop saying fans do not want realism when no public data proves that.
Stop calling hardcore fans a loud minority to avoid serious criticism.
Stop hiding behind “fun” when the real issue is shallow design.
Stop using licensing as an excuse for weak creation tools.
Stop pretending influencers equal the whole community.
Stop treating offline players like they do not matter.
Stop using “authentic” as a substitute for realistic.
Stop asking boxing fans to be grateful for less.

Boxing is not too hard.

The fans are not asking for too much.

The technology is not the main obstacle.

The real obstacle is whether companies have the vision, respect, budget, staff, boxing knowledge, and courage to build the game the sport deserves.

A real boxing game does not need excuses.

It needs a real commitment.


More Excuses Boxing Game Companies Use — And Why They Don’t Hold Up

The biggest problem with boxing videogames is not always technology. It is the language companies use to manage expectations, delay accountability, and make fans accept less than what the sport deserves.

They do not always come out and say, “We do not want to build a deep boxing game.”

Instead, they soften it.

They say it has to be “accessible.”
They say it has to be “fun.”
They say the community is “divided.”
They say the hardcore fans are “too demanding.”
They say licensing is complicated.
They say career mode takes time.
They say creation is hard.
They say realism can hurt balance.
They say “maybe later.”

That is how expectations get lowered.

Not by one big lie — but by a thousand small excuses repeated until fans start believing depth is unreasonable.

It is not unreasonable.


Excuse #21: “We Don’t Want the Game to Be Too Complicated”

This is one of the most overused excuses in sports gaming.

Companies act like depth automatically means confusion. That is false.

A game can be deep underneath and still simple on the surface. That is what good design is.

A casual player does not need to understand every stamina calculation, footwork angle, punch trajectory, judging tendency, or AI decision tree. But those systems should still exist underneath the hood.

When a player throws too many power shots and slows down later, they do not need to see the entire stamina formula. They just need to feel the consequence.

When a boxer keeps leaning into the same side and gets countered, the player does not need an engineering diagram. They just need to learn, “I am being read.”

When a fighter keeps getting trapped on the ropes because his footwork rating is low, the player does not need to understand every locomotion system. They just need to recognize that footwork matters.

Depth does not have to overwhelm the player.

Depth creates believability.

The real issue is not complication. The real issue is whether the company knows how to teach the game properly.

Tutorials.
Training camps.
Coach feedback.
Visual cues.
Beginner assists.
Optional overlays.
Simulation sliders.
Difficulty layers.

That is how deep games stay playable.

“Too complicated” is often code for “we do not want to build the systems.”


Excuse #22: “Most Players Just Want to Pick Up and Play”

Yes, some players do.

So give them that option.

But do not design the entire game around the shallowest possible experience.

A boxing game can let someone pick up and play while still giving serious players depth. These things are not opposites.

NBA 2K can let someone play a quick game while also having deeper franchise systems, tendencies, badges, sliders, custom rosters, and modes. Racing games can offer assists while still having simulation options. Fighting games can offer simple inputs while still having advanced mechanics.

So why does boxing always get told depth is too much?

A pick-up-and-play mode should exist. But it should not be the ceiling.

That is the trick companies use. They take the beginner doorway and turn it into the entire house.

A casual-friendly boxing game is fine.
A casual-only boxing game pretending to be authentic is the problem.


Excuse #23: “Simulation Players Are Too Small of an Audience”

This is a business excuse that needs to be challenged hard.

Simulation players may not always be the biggest group, but they are often the group that gives a sports game its credibility, longevity, and community depth.

They create rosters.
They run leagues.
They make sliders.
They test mechanics.
They write long-form feedback.
They keep forums alive.
They buy yearly content.
They notice whether boxers feel different.
They defend the game when it earns respect.

Casual players may drive early sales, but hardcore players often drive long-term life.

And here is the part companies do not like to admit:

A great simulation foundation does not scare away casual players when the game has options. But a shallow foundation absolutely pushes away hardcore players.

That means the smarter business move is not to ignore the simulation crowd. The smarter move is to build a strong boxing foundation and then layer accessibility on top of it.

You can simplify depth.

You cannot deepen emptiness without rebuilding the foundation.


Excuse #24: “We Have Real Boxers, So the Game Is Authentic”

Having real boxers is not enough.

A licensed boxer without proper identity is just a costume.

If Muhammad Ali does not move, think, jab, feint, control range, dance, conserve energy, and react like Ali, then the license is surface-level.

If Mike Tyson does not explode from range, slip inside, throw compact power, attack the body, and create fear with pressure, then he is not truly represented.

If Joe Frazier does not pressure behind rhythm, head movement, hooks, and body work, then he is just a name.

If George Foreman does not feel heavy, awkwardly powerful, physically imposing, and destructive with clubbing punches, then the game is missing who he was.

Real boxers require more than scans and trunks.

They require:

Movement identity.
Punch identity.
Defensive identity.
Ring IQ.
Tendencies.
Signature rhythm.
Stamina profile.
Power delivery.
Weaknesses.
Strengths.
Era context.
Style matchups.

A boxing game should not sell legends and then make them behave like generic characters with different ratings.

That is not respect. That is marketing.


Excuse #25: “Animations Are Expensive”

Yes, quality animation is expensive.

But this cannot be used as a permanent excuse for generic boxing.

Boxing is animation-heavy by nature. If a company wants to make a boxing game, then punches, defense, movement, footwork, clinching, knockdowns, ropes, fatigue, and reactions are not optional luxuries. They are the sport.

A boxing game needs animation variety because real boxers do not throw everything the same way.

Not every jab looks the same.
Not every hook has the same arc.
Not every uppercut is thrown from the same position.
Not every body shot is a clean textbook punch.
Not every block is a high guard.
Not every fighter slips the same way.
Not every fighter gets hurt the same way.

Some punches are sharp.
Some are looping.
Some are short.
Some are digging.
Some are awkward.
Some are lazy but effective.
Some are technically ugly but dangerous.

If a game cannot represent variation, then it cannot represent boxing identity.

The honest answer is not “animations are expensive.”

The honest answer is:

“We did not invest enough in the animation library and blending systems required for real boxing variety.”

That is a very different statement.


Excuse #26: “Motion Capture Solves Everything”

No, it does not.

Motion capture is a tool. It is not a full design philosophy.

A company can mocap real boxers and still build a game that does not understand boxing. Why? Because capturing movement is not the same as implementing boxing logic.

A boxer can perform beautiful punches in a studio, but the game still has to know:

When that punch should be thrown.
How stamina affects it.
How range affects it.
How foot position affects it.
How damage affects it.
How balance affects it.
How style affects it.
How AI chooses it.
How defense responds to it.
How judges perceive the result.
How the opponent adapts.

Without proper systems, mocap becomes visual decoration.

That is why a game can look good in clips but feel wrong during a full fight.

The question is not simply, “Did they mocap boxers?”

The question is:

Did they build the gameplay architecture to make those animations behave like boxing?


Excuse #27: “We Have Consultants”

Having consultants means nothing if their input is ignored, watered down, or brought in too late.

Companies love to name-drop consultants. A boxer visited the studio. A trainer gave feedback. A commentator recorded lines. A former fighter tested the game.

That sounds good.

But fans should ask deeper questions:

Were the consultants involved early?
Did they shape the mechanics?
Did they help build tendencies?
Did they review AI behavior?
Did they test career mode?
Did they influence blocking, clinching, footwork, stamina, and judging?
Were their criticisms implemented?
Were they only used for marketing?

A consultant is not a magic stamp of authenticity.

If a company brings in boxing people but still launches with missing boxing fundamentals, then either the wrong people were used, the advice was ignored, or the consultants were not given real influence.

Boxing consultation must be integrated into design, not sprinkled on top for credibility.


Excuse #28: “We’re Building From the Ground Up”

This phrase sounds powerful, but it needs proof.

“Ground up” should mean more than a new engine, new graphics, new menus, and a new marketing cycle.

Building from the ground up should mean the foundation changes.

It should mean the game is rethinking:

Movement.
Punch physics.
Stamina.
Damage.
AI.
Styles.
Tendencies.
Career structure.
Creation tools.
Referees.
Clinching.
Inside fighting.
Judging.
Presentation.
Online rules.
Offline depth.

If the same shallow philosophy remains, then “ground up” is just a slogan.

A new engine does not automatically create a better boxing game. A new engine can help, but only if the design priorities are different.

Fans should not be hypnotized by “new engine” language.

The real question is:

What systems are being rebuilt, and why?


Excuse #29: “Unreal Engine Will Make It Better”

Unreal Engine can help. It is powerful. It can support beautiful graphics, animation systems, physics, lighting, environments, and large-scale production pipelines.

But Unreal Engine is not a boxing brain.

It will not automatically create realistic footwork.
It will not automatically understand clinching.
It will not automatically make AI fight like real boxers.
It will not automatically build a deep career mode.
It will not automatically create judge personalities.
It will not automatically make body shots matter.
It will not automatically stop punch spam.
It will not automatically create boxer identity.

The engine gives developers tools.

The team still needs vision.

So when a company says it is moving to a new engine, fans should not automatically celebrate. They should ask:

Who is designing the boxing systems?
Who is programming the AI?
Who is building the animation logic?
Who is creating the career ecosystem?
Who is responsible for boxer identity?
Who is testing realism?
Who is representing the hardcore boxing fan?

A powerful engine in the wrong hands still produces shallow results.


Excuse #30: “We Have Former EA, 2K, or Rockstar Developers”

Experienced developers can be valuable. No question.

But hiring people from big studios does not automatically mean the boxing game will be deep, realistic, or respectful to the sport.

A developer who worked on a major sports game may understand production pipelines, animation systems, UI, online infrastructure, or monetization. That is useful.

But boxing is its own sport.

A basketball developer does not automatically understand clinching.
A football developer does not automatically understand judging.
An MMA developer does not automatically understand the rhythm of a 12-round boxing match.
An open-world developer does not automatically understand boxer tendencies.
A general gameplay programmer does not automatically understand ring generalship.

Big-name resumes are not a substitute for boxing knowledge.

The right staff matters. But the right staff must be paired with the right philosophy.

A boxing game needs:

Combat sports designers.
Boxing historians.
Former boxers.
Trainers.
AI programmers.
Animation specialists.
Career-mode designers.
Sports simulation designers.
Physics programmers.
Community researchers.
Offline-mode advocates.

Hiring from big companies is not enough.

The question is whether those hires are building a real boxing simulation or just a better-looking arcade/hybrid product.


Excuse #31: “Damage and Blood Have to Be Toned Down”

There are ratings boards, sponsors, platforms, and licensing partners to consider. That part is true.

But companies should not use that as an excuse for weak damage representation overall.

Realistic damage does not have to mean excessive gore.

A boxing game can show damage through:

Swelling.
Cuts.
Bruising.
Fatigue.
Breathing changes.
Guard deterioration.
Reduced vision.
Slower reactions.
Worse footwork.
Corner urgency.
Doctor checks.
Referee concern.
Commentary reaction.
Strategic vulnerability.

Damage is not just blood.

In boxing, damage affects performance, tactics, judging, psychology, and risk. A fighter with a swollen eye may struggle to see the right hand. A boxer with body damage may stop moving as well. A fighter with a broken nose may breathe differently. A cut can change urgency.

So even if blood has to be moderated, the consequences of damage should still matter.

When companies blame rating concerns while also ignoring deeper damage systems, that excuse becomes suspicious.

The issue is not only how damage looks.

The issue is whether damage changes the fight.


Excuse #32: “Clinching Would Slow the Game Down”

Clinching is supposed to slow the game down sometimes. That is part of boxing.

It is not a mistake. It is a tactic.

A hurt boxer clinches to survive.
A veteran clinches to break rhythm.
A stronger boxer clinches to impose physicality.
An inside fighter fights out of clinch positions.
A referee separates when needed.
A dirty fighter may hold, hit, lean, or roughhouse.
A tired fighter may use clinching to steal recovery time.

Removing or weakening clinching because it “slows the game down” is like removing defense from basketball because it stops scoring.

The point of a sports game is not constant action. The point is believable action.

Clinching can be balanced with:

Referee warnings.
Point deductions.
Stamina costs.
Strength checks.
Positioning battles.
Break commands.
Dirty boxing risk.
Style-based effectiveness.
Online rulesets.

The problem is not clinching. The problem is lazy clinch design.

A boxing game without proper clinching is missing one of the sport’s core survival and control mechanics.


Excuse #33: “Inside Fighting Is Too Messy to Implement”

Inside fighting is messy in real life.

That is exactly why it needs to be represented.

Boxing is not only long-range jabs and clean mid-range combinations. Some fights are won chest-to-chest, shoulder-to-shoulder, forehead-to-forehead, with short punches, body work, frames, bumps, pivots, and rough physical positioning.

Inside fighting should include:

Short hooks.
Short uppercuts.
Body digging.
Shoulder pressure.
Head positioning.
Frame control.
Arm trapping.
Leaning.
Turning.
Breaking away.
Smothering punches.
Referee intervention.

Without inside fighting, pressure fighters lose their identity. Body punchers lose value. Stronger fighters lose a weapon. Defensive fighters lose a survival layer.

A boxing game that avoids inside fighting because it is difficult is avoiding the sport itself.


Excuse #34: “Manual Blocking Is More Skill-Based”

Manual blocking can be skill-based, but that does not automatically make it realistic.

Real boxing defense is not just choosing high, low, left, or right like a minigame. Defense includes:

Guard position.
Glove placement.
Elbow placement.
Shoulder position.
Head movement.
Distance.
Footwork.
Parrying.
Catching.
Rolling.
Smothering.
Framing.
Clinching.
Reading rhythm.
Anticipation.
Reflexes.
Style.

A five-point blocking system may create game skill, but it does not represent every form of boxing defense.

The danger is when companies confuse “more buttons” with “more realism.”

A realistic boxing game should allow different defensive systems and styles. A high guard fighter should not defend like a shoulder-roll specialist. A cross-arm guard should not behave like a Philly shell. A slick counterpuncher should not defend like a basic beginner.

Manual blocking can be an option.

But forcing one defensive philosophy onto every boxer damages realism.


Excuse #35: “Sliders Are Too Much for Players”

Sliders are not too much. They are optional.

Nobody is forced to use them.

Sliders are one of the best tools for sports games because they let the community tune the experience. They allow offline players to adjust stamina, damage, speed, AI aggression, punch accuracy, referee strictness, judging behavior, injury frequency, clinch tolerance, knockdown frequency, and more.

A boxing game without deep sliders tells the player:

“You must play our version of boxing.”

A boxing game with sliders says:

“Shape the experience.”

That matters because boxing fans are not one group. Some want faster fights. Some want gritty simulations. Some want era-based realism. Some want CPU vs CPU. Some want cinematic knockouts. Some want tactical 12-round chess matches.

Sliders help everyone.

The only reason to fear sliders is if the game’s systems are too shallow to expose.


Excuse #36: “CPU vs CPU Does Not Matter”

CPU vs CPU absolutely matters.

It matters to sim players.
It matters to league creators.
It matters to roster makers.
It matters to testing.
It matters to YouTubers.
It matters to fantasy fight players.
It matters to people who want to watch their created universe unfold.

CPU vs CPU is not just watching the game play itself. It is a diagnostic tool.

It shows whether boxer identity is real.

If two CPU fighters behave the same, the game’s AI is exposed. If a pressure fighter does not pressure, the tendency system is exposed. If a counterpuncher does not counter, the style system is exposed. If stamina does not matter over 12 rounds, the simulation is exposed.

That may be why some companies avoid it.

CPU vs CPU removes the human player as an excuse.

It shows what the game actually understands.


Excuse #37: “Career Mode Players Don’t Spend Money”

This is shortsighted.

Career mode players spend money when the game gives them a reason.

They will buy:

New venues.
New eras.
New gear.
New belts.
New organizations.
New commentary packs.
New boxer packs.
New trainer packs.
New career expansions.
New historic rulesets.
New amateur tournaments.
New gyms.
New customization items.

But career players need a world worth investing in.

If career mode is shallow, of course they will not spend as much. The company created the problem by giving them less reason to stay.

A deep career mode turns DLC into world-building.

A shallow career mode turns DLC into a roster menu.

That is a massive difference.


Excuse #38: “The First Priority Has to Be Online Balance”

Online balance matters, but it should not control the entire identity of a boxing game.

When online balance becomes the top priority, developers often start flattening boxer differences. They reduce extremes. They make styles safer. They weaken physical advantages. They normalize stamina. They make defense predictable. They make risky mechanics less powerful.

That may help ranked play, but it can hurt boxing realism.

The solution is not to sacrifice offline depth for online balance.

The solution is separation.

Offline simulation can be deep.
Ranked online can have stricter rules.
Unranked online can have custom rules.
League play can have contract settings.
Career mode can have full realism.
Arcade modes can be faster.

One universal tuning model will never satisfy everybody.

A boxing game needs rule separation, not one-size-fits-all compromise.


Excuse #39: “The Game Needs to Appeal to Esports”

Esports should never be the foundation of a boxing game.

A game can have competitive play. It can have ranked modes. It can have tournaments. It can have leaderboards. But if the design starts chasing esports before it captures boxing, the sport gets distorted.

Esports thinking often favors:

Fast readability.
Repeatable mechanics.
Tight balance.
Limited randomness.
Reduced ambiguity.
Clear counters.
Controlled character differences.

Boxing is not always clean like that.

Judging can be subjective.
Styles can be awkward.
Damage can change a fight suddenly.
A tired boxer can still be dangerous.
A lesser boxer can win with the right plan.
A cut can shift momentum.
A flash knockdown can alter scoring.
A referee can affect the rhythm.

That does not mean a boxing game should be unfair. It means boxing has natural chaos and personality.

If esports requires stripping out too much boxing, then the game is not becoming more competitive. It is becoming less authentic.


Excuse #40: “The Community Asked for This”

This is one of the most dangerous excuses because it hides behind the fans.

Companies may say “the community asked for this” without showing which community, how many people, what data, what survey, what demographic, what mode preference, what experience level, or what platform.

A few comments do not equal community demand.

A few influencers do not equal community demand.

A Discord poll does not automatically equal community demand.

A loud social media trend does not equal community demand.

A real community claim should be backed by real data.

That means:

Public survey results.
Player segmentation.
Mode preference breakdowns.
Offline vs online data.
Casual vs hardcore data.
Creation community data.
Former boxer input.
Regional feedback.
Transparent methodology.

Without that, “the community asked for this” can become a shield for decisions the company already wanted to make.

Fans should demand receipts.


Excuse #41: “We Can’t Talk About That Yet”

Sometimes companies genuinely cannot reveal details. Contracts, marketing schedules, and internal plans exist.

But silence can also be used to avoid accountability.

When fans ask about core features like clinching, career depth, creation tools, CPU vs CPU, referee presence, sliders, boxer tendencies, and simulation options, vague silence becomes a problem.

A company does not have to reveal everything.

But it can still say:

“Yes, this is a priority.”
“No, this is not planned.”
“We are exploring it.”
“We tried it and it needs more work.”
“We are not ready to show it, but it is part of the design.”
“This will not be in the game at launch.”
“This is post-launch.”
“This is not our direction.”

That kind of honesty builds trust.

Constant vagueness does not.

When companies market ambition but avoid specifics, fans should be cautious.


Excuse #42: “Wait Until Launch”

No.

Fans have heard that too many times.

“Wait until launch” often becomes “wait for the patch.”
Then “wait for the roadmap.”
Then “wait for the sequel.”
Then “wait for the new engine.”
Then “wait for the next interview.”

At some point, waiting becomes a business strategy used against the customer.

Fans are allowed to ask hard questions before launch. Especially when they are being asked to preorder, promote, support, or believe in the product.

A company that wants trust should show enough substance before launch to justify confidence.

Not everything. But enough.

Show the systems.
Show the modes.
Show the AI.
Show the creation suite.
Show the sliders.
Show the career loop.
Show boxer differences.
Show damage consequences.
Show clinching.
Show inside fighting.
Show referee behavior.

Do not tell boxing fans to wait while asking them to buy.


Excuse #43: “Post-Launch Support Will Fix It”

Post-launch support can improve a good foundation.

It cannot always save a bad one.

Patches can adjust stamina.
Patches can tune damage.
Patches can fix bugs.
Patches can add content.
Patches can improve balance.

But deep missing systems are harder.

If the game was not built with clinching architecture, adding it later is difficult. If AI was not built around tendencies, adding deep boxer identity later is difficult. If career mode was built as a shallow ladder, turning it into a living boxing ecosystem later is difficult.

That is why fans should be skeptical when companies promise long-term support without showing the foundation.

Post-launch support is not a substitute for proper design.

A house with no foundation does not become a mansion because you keep painting the walls.


Excuse #44: “Fans Are Being Negative”

Criticism is not negativity when it is grounded in the sport.

A fan saying “this does not represent boxing” is not automatically hating. A former boxer pointing out bad footwork is not being toxic. A career-mode player asking for depth is not attacking the company. A creation-community member wanting better tools is not being unrealistic.

Companies and loyalist communities often blur the line between criticism and negativity because it protects the product.

But real negativity is not the same as accountability.

Negativity says, “This game should fail.”

Accountability says, “This game should be better.”

Those are different.

Hardcore fans are often the ones fighting hardest for the game to reach its potential. They criticize because they care. They demand more because they know what boxing can be in videogame form.

A company that cannot handle serious criticism is not ready to build a serious sports simulation.


Excuse #45: “You’re Not a Developer, So You Don’t Understand”

This is a weak argument.

A person does not need to be a chef to know the food is undercooked.
A person does not need to be a mechanic to know the car will not start.
A person does not need to be a film director to know the movie has bad acting.
A person does not need to be a developer to know a boxing game has no clinching.

Players may not know the internal code, but they understand the result.

A boxing fan can identify when:

Movement is wrong.
Punches lack weight.
Stamina is unrealistic.
AI is generic.
Defense is shallow.
Career mode is empty.
Boxers feel the same.
Body shots do not matter.
The referee is cosmetic.
The game rewards spam.

Developers know implementation.

Fans know whether the experience represents the sport.

Both forms of knowledge matter.

A smart company listens instead of hiding behind credentials.


Excuse #46: “That Feature Would Only Be Used by a Small Group”

This excuse can be used to kill almost any deep feature.

CPU vs CPU? Small group.
Sliders? Small group.
Create-a-referee? Small group.
Judge tendencies? Small group.
Amateur career? Small group.
Custom belts? Small group.
Era rules? Small group.
Trainer chemistry? Small group.
Promoter mode? Small group.

But this is how deep sports games become great: many smaller features combine into a powerful ecosystem.

Not every player uses every feature. That is normal.

Some players only play online.
Some only play career.
Some only create boxers.
Some only run tournaments.
Some only watch CPU fights.
Some only recreate historical matchups.
Some only build fictional universes.

A game becomes rich when it supports different types of players.

Calling every deep feature “niche” is how companies justify building a thin product.


Excuse #47: “The Budget Was Limited”

Budget matters. But budget is also about priorities.

A limited budget does not excuse poor direction. It does not excuse misleading marketing. It does not excuse ignoring core boxing fundamentals. It does not excuse spending resources in the wrong areas while claiming essential systems are too difficult.

If the budget is limited, then the company should be honest about scope.

Do not market revolution and deliver basic.
Do not promise authenticity and skip fundamentals.
Do not court hardcore fans and then dismiss their standards.
Do not sell depth with vague language and hide missing systems.

A smaller budget can still produce a focused, honest, well-designed boxing game.

Fans respect transparency.

What they reject is ambition in marketing and minimalism in delivery.


Excuse #48: “It’s Better Than Nothing”

This may be the most damaging excuse of all.

Boxing fans have been starved for games for so long that companies know many people will accept less just because something finally exists.

But “better than nothing” is not a standard.

It is a hostage situation.

Fans should not have to choose between no boxing game and a shallow boxing game. The sport deserves better than gratitude for scraps.

Imagine telling basketball fans, “At least you have a basketball game,” while removing franchise depth, player identity, advanced tendencies, proper defense, realistic fatigue, and core rules.

They would not accept it.

Boxing fans should not accept it either.

A game existing does not make it above criticism.

Existence is the beginning of the conversation, not the end.


Excuse #49: “We Know What Boxing Fans Want”

Then prove it.

Show the data.

Not private impressions.
Not influencer opinions.
Not selective comments.
Not controlled feedback.
Not vague community claims.

Show public evidence.

What percentage of fans want deeper career mode?
What percentage want CPU vs CPU?
What percentage want simulation sliders?
What percentage want deeper creation?
What percentage want online focus?
What percentage want offline universe tools?
What percentage want realistic clinching?
What percentage want optional arcade settings?
What percentage want licensed boxers over fictional depth?

If a company truly knows what fans want, a third-party survey should not scare them.

The fear of public results tells its own story.


Excuse #50: “Trust Us”

Trust is earned.

It is not owed.

A company earns trust by being transparent, specific, consistent, and honest. It earns trust by showing progress. It earns trust by admitting limitations. It earns trust by listening to the right people. It earns trust by respecting criticism. It earns trust by building what it claimed to value.

“Trust us” is not enough when fans have heard years of vague promises, missing features, delayed explanations, and marketing language that does not match the final product.

Trust without evidence is not trust.

It is blind loyalty.

And boxing fans should not be expected to be blindly loyal to any company.

The loyalty should be to the sport first.


The Pattern Is Bigger Than One Game

This is not just about one company, one title, one developer, or one publisher.

This is about a repeated industry pattern.

Boxing fans are sold potential.
Then they are told to be patient.
Then features are missing.
Then criticism is dismissed.
Then “hardcore fans” are blamed.
Then “casual fun” is used as a defense.
Then “post-launch support” becomes the answer.
Then the sequel becomes the new promise.

That cycle has to stop.

A boxing videogame should not need fans begging for the basics.

Clinching should not be a luxury.
Inside fighting should not be a dream.
Career mode should not be shallow.
Creation should not be limited.
CPU vs CPU should not be ignored.
Referees should not be cosmetic.
Boxer identity should not be generic.
Simulation options should not be treated like a threat.

These are not unreasonable demands.

These are the building blocks of the sport.


What Fans Should Demand Going Forward

Fans should stop accepting vague words and start demanding specific answers.

Do not ask, “Will the game be authentic?”

Ask:

How does stamina work over 12 rounds?
How does body damage affect movement and output?
How does clinching work?
Can fighters fight inside?
Do referees physically exist in the ring?
Do referees have different tendencies?
Do judges score differently?
Do boxers have individual AI tendencies?
Can CPU vs CPU be used?
How deep are sliders?
Can we edit attributes and tendencies?
Can we create trainers, referees, promoters, belts, gyms, and organizations?
Does career mode have rankings, mandatories, negotiations, injuries, and CPU careers?
Are there separate casual, hybrid, and simulation settings?
Are offline and online tuned separately?
Will public survey data be used?
Who is testing the boxing realism?

That is how fans cut through marketing.

Specific questions force specific answers.

And if companies refuse to answer, fans should remember that silence is also information.


Final Word: The Excuse Era Needs to End

Boxing videogame fans are not asking companies to do the impossible.

They are asking companies to stop pretending the possible is impossible.

They are asking for a game that respects boxing as a sport, not just as a brand. They are asking for systems that reflect what happens in the ring. They are asking for career depth, creation freedom, realistic consequences, and boxer identity.

The industry wants fans to believe this is too much.

It is not.

What is too much is asking boxing fans to accept shallow design while being told it is authentic.
What is too much is using casual players as an excuse to deny simulation options.
What is too much is hiding behind licensing while underbuilding creation.
What is too much is calling hardcore fans a loud minority while relying on their passion to keep the game alive.
What is too much is selling the dream of boxing while avoiding the truth of boxing.

No more soft language.

No more empty promises.

No more “wait and see.”

No more “trust us.”

No more blaming the fans.

The sport deserves better. The community deserves better. And any company that wants boxing fans’ money, loyalty, and advocacy should be ready to answer one simple question:

Are you building a real boxing videogame, or are you building another excuse?

Why a 3rd-Party Survey Is Greatly Needed for a Boxing Videogame, Even If It Proves Fans Like Poe Wrong

 

Why a 3rd-Party Survey Is Greatly Needed for a Boxing Videogame, Even If It Proves Fans Like Poe Wrong

A serious boxing videogame needs more than Discord chatter, influencer opinions, selective feedback, developer assumptions, and vague statements about what “the community wants.” Boxing fans are not one single group. The audience includes casual players, hardcore boxing fans, simulation players, online ranked players, offline career-mode players, creators, modders, former boxers, coaches, boxing historians, and sports-gaming fans.

All of those groups may want different things.

That is exactly why a real independent 3rd-party survey with public results is greatly needed.

Not a private survey controlled by the company.
Not a closed Discord poll.
Not a content-creator echo chamber.
Not selective “we heard the community” talk.
Not a survey where the results disappear behind company walls.

A proper survey gives companies, investors, publishers, developers, and the gaming community something far more valuable: transparent data.

And here is the part that makes the argument even stronger: a real survey could potentially prove fans like Poe wrong.

That should not be feared. That should be welcomed.

A Survey Should Not Be Built to Prove Poe Right

A 3rd-party survey is not supposed to exist to prove one fan, one group, one creator, or one side of the community right. It should exist to reveal what the broader boxing videogame audience actually wants.

If fans like Poe say offline career mode is the most important mode, the survey could prove otherwise.

If hardcore fans say realistic gameplay is the biggest demand, the survey could show that most players prefer a hybrid or casual experience.

If critics say creation suite, CPU vs CPU, sliders, realistic clinching, referees, inside fighting, body-punching depth, and boxer tendencies are major priorities, the survey could reveal that the wider audience cares more about online ranked, roster size, graphics, knockouts, fast matchmaking, licensed boxers, or quick fights.

That possibility matters.

Because if the results prove Poe wrong, then Poe has to accept that the community is different from what he believed. But if the results prove the company, content creators, or developers wrong, then they have to accept that too.

That is the fairness of independent data.

This Is Not About Ego — It Is About Truth

A proper survey cannot be about protecting anyone’s opinion. It cannot be about protecting Poe. It cannot be about protecting hardcore fans. It cannot be about protecting casual fans. It cannot be about protecting content creators, developers, publishers, or company executives.

It has to be about the truth.

If the data shows the wider audience wants a more casual boxing game, then say that publicly.

If the data shows players want a deep simulation experience, then say that publicly.

If the data shows the audience is split, then that proves the game needs options, presets, sliders, and separate gameplay lanes.

If the data shows online ranked is the main priority, then that matters.

If the data shows offline career mode, creation suite, and customization drive long-term interest, then that matters too.

Either way, public results create clarity.

It Helps Companies Stop Guessing

A boxing videogame company cannot keep guessing what the audience wants and then act surprised when fans reject shallow systems. A 3rd-party survey helps separate loud opinions from actual demand.

It can show:

What fans want most.
What fans will actually pay for.
What features matter to offline players.
What matters to online players.
What mechanics hardcore fans consider non-negotiable.
What casual players need to enjoy the game.
What creation tools would keep the game alive for years.
What career mode depth players expect.
What gameplay options should be sliders, presets, or separate modes.

That kind of information protects the company from building the wrong game around the wrong assumptions.

A company may believe online ranked is the main priority, but a survey may show that career mode, creation suite, CPU vs CPU, sliders, customization, and offline replayability are what give the game long-term value.

Or the survey may show the opposite.

That is the point. Let the data speak.

It Helps Investors See the Real Market

Investors need proof. They do not need hype, social media noise, or carefully selected community reactions. They need evidence that there is a real audience for a boxing videogame and that the audience is large enough to support long-term development.

A public 3rd-party survey can show investors:

How many fans want a realistic boxing game.
How many fans prefer a hybrid or casual experience.
How many feel underserved by current combat sports games.
How many would buy DLC if offline modes were deep.
How important creation tools are to long-term engagement.
How much demand exists for career mode, universe mode, promoter mode, historical eras, legends, and custom boxers.
How many players would support a game even without every major licensed boxer.

That matters because boxing games have been treated like a risky market for years. A serious survey can prove whether the market is truly limited or whether companies have simply misunderstood the audience.

It Helps Publishers Understand the Product

Publishers often look at games through categories: sports, fighting, simulation, live service, competitive, casual, DLC-driven, creator-driven. A boxing game can touch all of those lanes, but only if the vision is clear.

A public survey helps publishers understand whether the game should be built as:

A realistic boxing simulation.
A hybrid game with options.
A casual pick-up-and-play experience.
A deep career-mode sports title.
A creator-community platform.
A competitive online game.
A full boxing universe.

The problem comes when a company tries to make one default style serve everybody. That usually means the hardcore fan loses depth, the casual fan gets a simplified version, and nobody gets the best possible version.

A survey may prove that the answer is not “one size fits all.” The answer may be options, modes, sliders, presets, and separate rule sets.

But again, let the data prove it.

It Helps the Gaming Community Stop Arguing Blindly

A lot of boxing game debates go in circles because people argue from personal preference and call it fact.

One fan says, “Nobody wants a sim.”
Another says, “Everybody wants realism.”
Another says, “Online is all that matters.”
Another says, “Offline is dead.”
Another says, “Career mode does not matter.”
Another says, “Creation mode is niche.”
Another says, “Hardcore fans are just a loud minority.”

A public survey gives the community something real to point to.

It does not end every disagreement, but it changes the conversation. Instead of guessing, fans can say:

Here is what the data shows.
Here is what offline players want.
Here is what online players want.
Here is what creators want.
Here is what former boxers and hardcore fans want.
Here is where casual players and sim players overlap.
Here is where they need separate options.

That is healthier than letting influencers, Discord moderators, or company-friendly voices speak for everybody.

Public Results Create Accountability

The key phrase is public results.

A survey hidden behind closed doors can be twisted. A company can claim the community asked for something without proving it. They can ignore inconvenient answers. They can cherry-pick responses that support what they already planned to do.

Public results make that harder.

If most surveyed players say they want deeper career mode, the company cannot pretend career mode is a minor feature.

If the majority says sliders matter, the company cannot act like sliders are unnecessary.

If players say they want realistic blocking, clinching, inside fighting, referee presence, stamina, damage, footwork, and boxer identity, the company cannot dismiss those things as “too hardcore.”

If players say they want separate casual, hybrid, and sim settings, the company cannot hide behind vague “authentic” wording.

But the accountability goes both ways.

If the survey shows hardcore fans are not the majority, then hardcore fans have to accept that.

If the survey shows casual play is the strongest demand, then people like Poe have to deal with that honestly.

If the survey shows the community cares more about licensed boxers than deep creation tools, then creation-suite advocates have to accept that too.

That is why public data is powerful. It does not protect anybody’s narrative.

It Protects Hardcore Fans From Being Misrepresented

Hardcore boxing fans are often treated like they are the problem. They get labeled as too demanding, too negative, too sim-focused, or impossible to please.

But a serious survey may show that many so-called “hardcore” requests are not extreme at all. They may be basic boxing expectations.

Clinching is not extreme.
Inside fighting is not extreme.
A real referee is not extreme.
Body punching variety is not extreme.
Different guards and defensive styles are not extreme.
Career mode depth is not extreme.
Boxer tendencies are not extreme.
Footwork, weight transfer, stamina, and damage logic are not extreme.

Those are boxing fundamentals.

A public survey can show whether hardcore fans are really asking for an impossible niche product or whether they are simply asking for boxing to be represented properly.

It Also Shows Casual Fans Are Not the Enemy

A good survey would also help casual fans, because it would show what they actually need too.

Casual players may want faster controls, easier defense, forgiving stamina, highlight punches, quick knockouts, clean tutorials, and fast matchmaking. There is nothing wrong with that.

The issue is when the entire game is built around casual simplicity and then marketed as realistic boxing.

The solution is not to attack casual players. The solution is to separate the experience properly.

Casual mode.
Hybrid mode.
Simulation mode.
Custom sliders.
Online rule contracts.
Offline options.
Legacy controls and advanced controls.
Assisted defense and manual defense.
Arcade-friendly settings and realism-focused settings.

A survey helps prove whether the game needs one main direction or multiple lanes.

It Helps Decide What Should Be Prioritized First

Not every feature can be built at once. That is understandable. But priorities should be based on demand and importance, not guesswork.

A survey can help rank features such as:

Career mode depth.
Creation suite.
Gameplay realism.
Online stability.
Boxer roster.
Licensing.
Presentation.
Commentary.
Referees.
Judges.
Trainers.
Gyms.
Promoters.
Universe mode.
CPU vs CPU.
Sliders.
Tendency systems.
Signature punches.
Historical eras.
Walkouts.
Gear customization.
Community sharing.

This helps developers build a roadmap that matches what the audience actually values.

And if the survey shows that some of Poe’s favorite features are lower priority, then so be it. That is still useful information.

It Can Prove Creation Tools Are a Major Selling Point — Or Not

Companies often hide behind licensing problems. They act like a boxing game cannot succeed unless every famous boxer is signed.

A strong public survey could test that belief.

It could show how many fans would support a game with deep creation tools, editable rosters, community sharing, custom belts, custom organizations, custom arenas, custom trainers, custom promoters, custom referees, and created boxers.

It could also show how many fans mainly care about real licensed boxers.

That is important because boxing fans are already used to imagination, history, fantasy matchups, legends, prospects, regional fighters, and “what if” scenarios. A deep creation suite could extend the life of a boxing game for years, especially if licensing is incomplete.

But again, do not guess. Survey it.

It Gives Developers a Real Blueprint

Developers need direction. A 3rd-party survey can become a design compass.

It can tell them:

Which mechanics need the most depth.
Which features are must-haves.
Which features are nice-to-have.
Which systems should be optional.
Which areas fans consider broken or missing.
Which modes create long-term replayability.
Which features drive DLC interest.
Which presentation elements make the game feel like boxing.

This helps developers avoid vague design language like “authentic,” “fun,” or “hybrid” without defining what those words mean.

A survey turns broad talk into actionable design priorities.

It Helps Marketing Become Honest

A boxing game should not be marketed one way and designed another way.

If the game is casual, say it is casual.
If it is hybrid, define what hybrid means.
If it is simulation-focused, prove it through mechanics.
If it has options, show them.
If it is built for boxing fans, let boxing fans help define what that means.

A public survey helps align marketing with reality. It reduces the chance of fans feeling misled.

If Companies Truly Believe Their Own Claims, They Should Welcome It

If a company truly believes hardcore fans are a loud minority, a 3rd-party survey is the perfect way to prove it.

If content creators truly believe they know what the wider community wants, a survey is the perfect way to prove it.

If developers truly believe certain features are not worth prioritizing, a survey is the perfect way to prove it.

If publishers believe boxing games only have limited appeal, a survey is the perfect way to test that belief.

If Poe believes hardcore boxing fans are being ignored, a survey is the perfect way to prove that too.

But if anyone avoids a public survey, then the question becomes obvious:

Are they afraid the data will support their claims, or are they afraid it will expose them?

The Fair Position

The fairest position is simple:

Poe could be wrong.
Hardcore fans could be wrong.
Casual fans could be wrong.
Content creators could be wrong.
Developers could be wrong.
Publishers could be wrong.
Investors could be wrong.

That is why the community needs transparent data instead of assumptions.

A 3rd-party survey does not exist to crown a winner. It exists to show the truth, even when the truth is uncomfortable.

Final Thought

A 3rd-party survey with public results is not just a fan request. It is a business tool, a development tool, a publishing tool, an investor tool, and a community trust tool.

It helps companies stop guessing.
It helps investors see the market.
It helps publishers understand the audience.
It helps developers prioritize correctly.
It helps casual and hardcore fans get properly represented.
It helps the gaming community stop arguing from assumptions.
And most importantly, it creates accountability.

The strongest part of the argument is that the survey could prove anybody wrong, including Poe.

That is what makes it fair.

A boxing videogame should not be shaped by closed rooms, influencer circles, company-friendly voices, or selective feedback. It should be shaped by transparent data from the people who actually care about boxing, gaming, creation, career mode, online play, offline depth, and the future of the genre.

If a company truly believes it knows what the boxing game community wants, then it should have no fear of a serious independent survey with public results.

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Why It Is Not False, a Lie, or Far-Fetched to Say Some Developers Are Lazy

 

Why It Is Not False, a Lie, or Far-Fetched to Say Some Developers Are Lazy

It is not automatically false, unfair, or far-fetched to say some developers are lazy. The problem is that people hear the word “lazy” and immediately act like it means every developer is sitting around doing nothing. That is not the argument. The argument is that lazy developmeuynt behavior exists, especially when a studio repeatedly says something “cannot be done” when the truth is closer to: we did not plan for it, we did not prototype it, we did not build the right architecture, we did not hire the right specialists, or we do not want to spend the money and time required to do it properly.

That is a major difference.

A feature being difficult does not mean it is impossible. A feature being expensive does not mean it cannot be done. A feature requiring a smarter system does not mean the technology does not exist. Too often, developers and studios hide behind technical language because they know many gamers do not fully understand engines, animation systems, AI behavior trees, physics layers, databases, procedural systems, or simulation logic. They use that gap in knowledge to make a limitation sound like a law of nature.

That is where the laziness criticism becomes valid.

Lazy development is not just about effort. It can be lazy thinking. It can be lazy design. It can be lazy planning. It can be lazy research. It can be lazy communication. It can be a studio choosing the easiest version of a feature, then acting like the deeper version is unrealistic. It can be building shallow systems, then blaming the audience for wanting more. It can be creating a sports game without studying the sport deeply enough, then telling the hardcore fans they are asking for too much.

That is not ambition. That is avoidance.

In boxing games, this matters even more because boxing is not just two characters throwing punches. Boxing is rhythm, range, timing, balance, leverage, fatigue, fear, IQ, tendencies, styles, trainers, referees, judging, momentum, injuries, pressure, ring generalship, and identity. A developer who reduces all of that to a few generic animations, basic stats, and surface-level gameplay should not act like hardcore fans are being unreasonable for expecting more.

When fans ask for deeper tendencies, better footwork, real clinching, inside fighting, boxer-specific behavior, better AI, realistic stamina, referee interaction, better career structure, and a true creation suite, those are not fantasy requests. Those are design and systems requests. They require planning, data, architecture, testing, and boxing knowledge. That is exactly what a serious sports simulation should be built around.

This is why announcing Unreal Engine creates pressure. Unreal Engine does not magically make a great boxing game by itself, but it does remove a lot of the old excuses. It gives a studio access to stronger tools, better rendering, animation systems, physics workflows, AI tools, modular systems, marketplace support, and a larger talent pool of developers already familiar with the engine. So when a studio says it is moving to Unreal, fans are right to expect more than better lighting and prettier sweat.

The same applies when a company announces major AAA experience. Once you tell the public that you have people from major studios, you are no longer asking fans to judge you like a small team figuring everything out for the first time. You are telling fans that you now have experienced people who should understand pipelines, production structure, animation systems, online stability, gameplay depth, and sports game expectations.

And when a boxing game sells well over 1 million copies, that creates even more pressure. At that point, the excuse that “boxing games do not sell” is weakened. The excuse that “there is no audience” is weakened. The excuse that “hardcore boxing fans are just a loud minority” is weakened. Sales prove interest. Sales prove demand. Sales prove that people are willing to support a boxing game. Now the question becomes whether the company is willing to respect that support with a deeper, more complete product.

That is why fans are not wrong to challenge developers when they say something cannot be done. Sometimes “cannot be done” really means “we did not build the game to support it.” Sometimes it means “our current codebase is too limited.” Sometimes it means “we made early design choices that trapped us.” Sometimes it means “we prioritized the wrong audience.” Sometimes it means “we are protecting our timeline.” Sometimes it means “we do not want to admit we took shortcuts.”

That is not the same as impossible.

Fans also need to understand something: game development is hard, but difficulty does not excuse deception. A studio can honestly say, “This is difficult, expensive, and would require rebuilding major systems.” That is fair. What is not fair is telling fans something cannot be done when other games, older games, modders, indie developers, or modern engines prove that similar systems are possible.

That is where trust breaks.

Hardcore fans are not asking developers to snap their fingers and create magic. They are asking for honesty. They are asking for ambition. They are asking for the sport to be studied properly. They are asking for systems that respect boxing instead of simplifying it into something casual and then calling it authentic. They are asking developers to stop treating depth like a problem.

So yes, it is fair to say some developers are lazy when they use impossibility as a shield for poor planning. It is fair to say some studios play on gamer ignorance when they hide behind technical excuses. It is fair to say that announcing Unreal Engine, hiring AAA experience, and selling over 1 million copies changes the conversation.

At that point, fans are not asking too much.

They are asking the studio to live up to the standard it helped create.

::

When UFC Creators Treat Boxing Fans Like Guests in Their Own Sport

 


SCI made a major marketing decision with Undisputed: bring combat-sports content creators into the fold, give them access, put them around the game, and let them help sell the idea that this was the boxing game fans had been waiting for. On paper, that makes sense. Boxing and MMA share some audience overlap. A UFC creator may have a gaming audience that could be introduced to boxing. That is not the issue.

The issue is what happens when the people chosen to represent a boxing game do not appear to understand boxing deeply enough to challenge the game when it fails boxing.

That is where the frustration begins.

EA officially launched UFC 6 on June 19, 2026, marketing it around “true-to-life fighter movement and striking,” while reviews have already praised it as a major step forward for MMA authenticity, even as some reviewers still criticize things like roster gaps, unchanged grappling, and certain arcade-feeling mechanics. (UFC) That matters because the contrast is obvious: when it is UFC/MMA, many creators suddenly become detailed, demanding, technical, and protective of the sport. They notice what looks wrong. They complain when mechanics do not represent MMA correctly. They dissect fighter individuality, transitions, ground game, movement, damage, roster accuracy, and realism.

But when hardcore boxing fans did the same thing with Undisputed, too many of those same types of voices acted like criticism was hate.

That is the double standard.

SCI and WBC hosted creator-driven Undisputed events, including the Undisputed & WBC Creator League Finals at the HyperX Arena in Las Vegas, promoted as an event for gaming, boxing, and esports fans. (World Boxing Council) Virgin Media O2 also described an Undisputed Gamepad takeover with Steel City Interactive as a weekend built around gaming and boxing energy. (LinkedIn) So the company clearly understood the power of creators as marketing tools. But if the creators brought in are not deeply rooted in boxing, then they should not be treated as the voice of boxing fans.

There is a difference between promoting a game and protecting a sport.

A creator can be entertaining, popular, and good at content while still not being qualified to speak over people who actually know boxing. That is not disrespect. That is common sense. If someone does not know boxing footwork, clinch fighting, inside work, punch variation, ring generalship, judging tendencies, referee behavior, stamina pacing, trainer adjustments, style clashes, and how real boxers actually move, then they should not be dismissing the people who do.

Hardcore boxing fans were not asking for the impossible. They were asking for boxing.

They asked why clinching was missing or shallow.
They asked why inside fighting did not feel like real inside fighting.
They asked why boxers lacked individual identity.
They asked why everyone moved too similarly.
They asked why career mode did not feel like a living boxing ecosystem.
They asked why referee interaction felt underdeveloped.
They asked why created boxers, sliders, tendencies, traits, and offline depth were not treated as pillars.
They asked why a third-party survey was such a problem if SCI and creators truly “knew what the fans wanted.”

That is not toxicity. That is accountability.

The frustrating part is watching certain content creators become experts when the subject is UFC, then become dismissive when the subject is boxing. With UFC, they can demand precision. With boxing, they tell hardcore fans to be grateful. With UFC, they protect the identity of the sport. With boxing, they excuse missing fundamentals. With UFC, they critique like fans. With boxing, they market like employees.

That is why some boxing fans feel like Undisputed was treated like a stepchild.

The game was good enough for content. Good enough for access. Good enough for trips, events, streams, thumbnails, and creator opportunities. But when the hardcore boxing community said, “This does not fully represent boxing,” suddenly those concerns were too negative, too demanding, or too much.

That is backwards.

A boxing game should be judged by boxing standards, not by whether a UFC creator can have fun with it for a weekend. Boxing fans should not have to sit quietly while outsiders tell them their sport is represented well enough. If MMA fans can demand better grappling, better cage behavior, better fighter styles, better damage, better animations, and better authenticity, then boxing fans can demand better footwork, better clinching, better judging, better punch arcs, better ring IQ, better career mode, better creation tools, and better boxer individuality.

Respect has to go both ways.

Creators cannot say they “know what the community wants” while rejecting a third-party survey. If they truly know, then public data should confirm it. If they do not want the data, then maybe the concern is not that hardcore fans are wrong. Maybe the concern is that hardcore fans may be proven right.

That is the real problem.

The boxing community does not need borrowed voices pretending to speak for it. It needs people who understand the sport, respect the sport, and are willing to challenge developers when the game does not represent the sport properly. Promotion is fine. Access is fine. Creator events are fine. But access should not turn into gatekeeping.

Hardcore boxing fans are not trying to ruin the fun.

They are asking one simple question:

Why are UFC fans allowed to demand MMA, but boxing fans are attacked for demanding boxing?

Monday, June 22, 2026

Boxing Robes, Walkout Gear, and Costumes in Undisputed 2: Unreal Engine Leaves SCI With Fewer Excuses


Boxing Robes, Walkout Gear, and Costumes in Undisputed 2: Unreal Engine Leaves SCI With Fewer Excuses

If SCI is truly building Undisputed 2 from the ground up in Unreal Engine, then boxing robes, walkout gear, custom outfits, and deeper presentation should not be treated like some impossible request from fans.

This is not 2004. This is not the PlayStation 2 era. This is not a time where developers can act like clothing, materials, custom logos, layered gear, robe physics, and character customization are some unreachable dream. Modern sports games, fighting games, RPGs, and open-world games already deal with modular clothing, custom outfits, cloth movement, alternate gear, cosmetics, and character-specific presentation.

So the question is simple.

Will SCI use the technology properly, or will fans get another round of excuses?

Robes and Walkout Gear Are Part of Boxing

In boxing, the fight does not begin when the bell rings. The fight begins when the boxer walks out.

The robe matters. The boots matter. The gloves matter. The colors matter. The music matters. The lighting matters. The trainer behind the boxer matters. The flag over the shoulder matters. The nickname on the back matters. The way the boxer looks walking to the ring matters.

That is boxing.

A boxer’s robe is not just clothing. It is part of his identity. It can represent confidence, culture, era, gym, country, personality, arrogance, intimidation, humility, legacy, or showmanship.

Muhammad Ali had presence. Mike Tyson had intimidation. Naseem Hamed had theater. Floyd Mayweather had spectacle. Deontay Wilder made costumes part of his image. Canelo, Crawford, Gervonta Davis, and many others understand that presentation is part of selling the fight.

So when a boxing game ignores robes, walkout outfits, and custom gear, it is not just missing cosmetics. It is missing part of the sport.

Unreal Engine Should Make This Easier, Not Harder

If Undisputed 2 is being built in a newer version of Unreal Engine, SCI should have fewer technical excuses than ever before.

Unreal Engine already supports modular characters, swappable clothing pieces, material systems, cloth simulation, skeletal meshes, layered customization, lighting, animation tools, and high-quality presentation. That does not mean the work is automatic. Developers still have to build the systems. Artists still have to create assets. Designers still have to make smart menus. QA still has to test clipping, performance, and bugs.

But that is development. That is not impossibility.

There is a difference between saying:

“We have to build this carefully.”

and saying:

“This cannot be done.”

One answer is honest. The other sounds like an excuse.

What a Real Boxing Gear System Should Include

A serious boxing game should not stop at trunks, gloves, and boots.

A proper creation suite should allow players to create and customize:

Boxing robes, hooded robes, sleeveless robes, old-school robes, satin robes, velvet robes, champion robes, gym robes, national robes, custom entrance jackets, warm-up suits, hats, masks, crowns, capes, scarves, towels, flags, shoulder pieces, custom walkout costumes, and era-specific gear.

Players should be able to adjust colors, materials, trim, embroidery, patches, sponsors, country flags, gym logos, nicknames, initials, stitching, robe length, hood size, sleeve style, shine, texture, and fit.

That would make the creation community go crazy.

Not because it is just “dress-up,” but because boxing fans understand identity. They understand that a created boxer should not look generic. A champion should not walk out looking the same as a journeyman. A 1980s heavyweight should not look like a 2020s flashy lightweight. A Mexican pressure fighter, a slick Philadelphia boxer, a British champion, an Olympic gold medalist, and a feared knockout artist should all be able to look different before the first punch is thrown.

That is how you make a boxing world feel alive.

This Should Connect to Career Mode

Walkout gear should not be disconnected from career mode. It should evolve with the boxer.

A new amateur boxer should not have the same entrance presentation as a unified world champion. A prospect might start with basic gear from a small gym. A regional champion might unlock better robe options. A star contender might get sponsor patches, custom colors, and better walkout presentation. A world champion should have premium robes, custom lights, special commentary, belt presentation, and a bigger entourage.

That is progression.

That is immersion.

That is how a career mode becomes more than menus, training mini-games, and random fights.

Your boxer should grow visually as his career grows. His gear should tell the story. His robe should show success. His walkout should feel bigger when he becomes bigger.

That is the kind of detail a real boxing career mode needs.

The Creation Community Would Carry This Feature

SCI should understand something very important. A deep gear and robe creator would not just be a feature. It would become a community engine.

Players would create classic robes. Fantasy robes. Gym-branded robes. National team robes. Old-school robes. Modern flashy robes. Villain robes. Humble robes. Tribute robes. Prospect gear. Champion gear. Era-based gear.

If the game had a strong sharing system, the community could rate, download, remix, and showcase custom robes and outfits. Some creators would become known as the best gear designers in the community. Some would become virtual boxing brands inside the game.

That is replay value.

That is free community engagement.

That is the type of system that keeps offline players, career mode players, and creation suite players active for years.

And unlike licensed boxers, robes and gear do not have to depend completely on real-world licensing. SCI could give players the tools to create original designs, fictional brands, fictional gyms, fictional sponsors, and fictional identities.

That destroys the “licensing is too hard” excuse.

The Real Challenges Are Manageable

Yes, there are real challenges.

Robes can clip through arms. Long coats can mess with animations. Cloth physics can hurt performance. Custom logos need moderation. Online play needs synchronization. Some outfits may need to be restricted during actual gameplay. Walkout gear must come off naturally before the fight. Console performance has to be protected.

Those are real issues.

But those are not reasons to leave the feature shallow. They are reasons to build options.

Give players performance settings. Give players simple cloth, advanced cloth, or no cloth physics. Let robes be visible during entrances and removed before the fight. Let custom gear be available offline with moderation rules for online. Let leagues and ranked modes restrict certain items while offline and unranked modes allow more freedom.

That is what options are for.

Gaming companies love acting like one technical problem means the whole feature has to be watered down. That does not hold up anymore. Build the system with settings, restrictions, and modes. Do not punish every player because online ranked needs tighter rules.

Stop Acting Like Presentation Does Not Matter

Some people will say gameplay matters most.

Of course gameplay matters most.

But that does not mean presentation does not matter. That is a lazy argument. A boxing game is not just punches and stamina bars. Boxing is atmosphere. It is walkouts. It is robes. It is corners. It is judges. It is referees. It is commentators. It is crowd reactions. It is belts. It is lights. It is tension. It is identity.

A boxing game without strong presentation feels empty, even if the punches work.

A boxing game with great mechanics and weak atmosphere still feels unfinished.

The best boxing game should make a boxer, former boxer, trainer, hardcore fan, and casual fan all feel like they are inside the sport.

That means the walkout matters.

No More “It’s Too Hard” Talk

If SCI wants Undisputed 2 to be taken seriously, they cannot keep treating deep boxing features like unrealistic fan demands.

Fans are not asking for magic. They are asking for systems that modern games already use in different ways.

We have seen games with massive customization. We have seen games with cloth physics. We have seen games with layered outfits. We have seen games with character creators. We have seen games with community sharing. We have seen games with custom logos, custom gear, and detailed presentation.

So why should boxing fans accept less?

If Undisputed 2 is truly a new game built on better technology, then robes, walkout gear, and custom outfits should be part of the blueprint from the beginning. Not patched in later. Not talked around. Not minimized. Not dismissed as cosmetic fluff.

Put it in the design from day one.

The Bottom Line

Creating boxing robes, walkout gear, and costumes in Unreal Engine should be easier today than it has ever been. The engine can support it. The gaming audience understands customization. The boxing audience understands presentation. The creation community would embrace it. Career mode would benefit from it. Offline players would use it for years.

So if SCI leaves this shallow in Undisputed 2, the issue will not be Unreal Engine.

The issue will be priority.

The issue will be vision.

The issue will be whether they truly understand boxing culture or only understand boxing as punches inside a ring.

Because boxing is bigger than that.

A real boxing game should let a boxer enter the arena like a boxer, look like a boxer, feel like a boxer, and build an identity before the first bell ever rings.

No more excuses.

No More Excuses: Debunking the Industry Narratives Used to Shortchange Boxing Videogame Fans

No More Excuses: Debunking the Industry Narratives Used to Shortchange Boxing Videogame Fans For too long, boxing videogame fans have been h...