Monday, July 13, 2026

Stop Using “It’s a Game” to Protect Weak Boxing Mechanics

 




Fans inventing development logic, the misuse of “gamey,” and the difference between repetition and exploitation.

Stop Using “It’s a Game” to Protect Weak Boxing Mechanics

One of the strangest things in boxing-game discussions is watching ordinary fans suddenly speak like combat designers, gameplay engineers, or animation programmers whenever someone asks for greater realism.

They do not know the game’s source code.

They were not present during design meetings.

They do not know the production budget, technical limitations, staffing decisions, deadlines, or internal priorities.

Yet they confidently declare what developers “have to do.”

“They have to make it gamey.”

“They can’t make it too realistic.”

“That wouldn’t work in a videogame.”

“You have to sacrifice realism for fun.”

Based on what?

Most of the time, these are not informed development arguments. They are personal preferences being presented as technical facts.

Some fans enjoy simplified gameplay, exaggerated exchanges, easy offense, forgiving defense, and mechanics that produce constant action. That is their right. But they should say that honestly instead of pretending realistic boxing systems are impossible to develop.

There is a major difference between saying, “I prefer a faster and more accessible game,” and saying, “A boxing game has to work this way.”

The first is an opinion.

The second is a claim that requires evidence.

“Gamey” Is Often a Cover for Poor Design

Every videogame converts real-world actions into controls, animations, calculations, and rules. That conversion does not automatically require the final product to feel artificial.

The controller is the abstraction.

The sport should still provide the logic.

A boxing game does not become better simply because it feels more like a traditional fighting game. Artificial stun loops, exaggerated combinations, repetitive power punching, excessive punch tracking, unreliable defense, and unrestricted movement do not become acceptable because someone labels them “gamey.”

That word has become a shield.

Whenever a mechanic fails to represent boxing properly, someone says it was necessary to make the game entertaining.

Whenever realism exposes a weakness in the design, someone claims realism would ruin the fun.

Whenever knowledgeable boxing fans ask for more control, more consequences, or better defensive responses, they are told to remember that they are playing a game.

They already know that.

What they are questioning is why the game repeatedly abandons boxing’s own solutions.

Boxing Already Has Its Own Gameplay Balance

Boxing does not need developers to invent an artificial answer for every tactical problem. The sport already contains balance through positioning, timing, fatigue, anticipation, risk, and consequence.

A boxer who repeatedly throws the same punch can become predictable.

A boxer who attacks recklessly can walk into a counter.

A boxer who applies nonstop pressure can become tired, smother their own work, or lose defensive responsibility.

A boxer who constantly retreats can surrender ground, get trapped near the ropes, or allow the opponent to control the ring.

A boxer who relies too heavily on head movement can be attacked to the body.

A boxer who remains behind a tight guard can be moved, framed, clinched, split through the middle, or attacked around the elbows.

These are not arbitrary videogame counters. They are boxing counters.

A serious boxing game should try to recreate those relationships instead of replacing them with invisible cooldowns, forced vulnerability windows, animation priority, predetermined combo rules, or artificial penalties.

The closer the game gets to boxing’s natural cause-and-effect structure, the less it needs to manufacture balance outside the sport.

Repetition Is Not Automatically Spamming

The word “spam” is also used far too casually in boxing games.

Throwing the same punch repeatedly is not automatically an exploit.

Using the jab throughout a fight is not spam.

Returning to the body is not spam.

Throwing repeated hooks against an opponent who refuses to protect the side of the head is not spam.

Pressuring someone who cannot fight going backward is not spam.

Continuing to counter the same predictable entry is not spam.

Boxers are supposed to repeat what works until the opponent takes it away.

That is not cheap. That is tactical discipline.

The real issue is whether the game gives the opponent a legitimate boxing response.

Can the punch be slipped, caught, blocked, parried, smothered, crowded, stepped away from, or countered?

Can the defender change distance?

Can the defender disrupt the attacker’s rhythm?

Can the defender control the lead hand?

Can the defender pivot away from the attack?

Can the defender punish predictable repetition?

Can fatigue, balance, accuracy, and defensive exposure naturally change the effectiveness of the tactic?

When the answer is no, the problem is not merely that the player is repeating an action. The problem is that the game failed to build the necessary interaction around that action.

Cheese Exists, but It Is Created by the System

This does not mean boxing games cannot have exploits.

They absolutely can.

Cheese occurs when the game rewards behavior that would not remain effective under believable boxing conditions.

A punch becomes cheese when it bypasses defense because of a broken animation or targeting issue.

Movement becomes cheese when a boxer can glide around the ring without planting, slowing down, losing balance, or being cut off.

Pressure becomes cheese when stamina and defensive vulnerability are not properly modeled.

Counterpunching becomes cheese when the game provides exaggerated bonuses that overpower positioning and timing.

Blocking becomes cheese when one defensive input protects too many targets without realistic openings.

Combination punching becomes cheese when animation chains override spacing, collision, and physical interruption.

The player may abuse the weakness, but the system created the weakness.

That distinction matters because it changes the conversation.

Instead of demanding that developers restrict players with artificial limits, the community should demand stronger underlying boxing systems.

Do not simply weaken a punch because people use it often.

Make its risks, counters, range requirements, recovery, accuracy, and tactical purpose believable.

Do not punish pressure because some players cannot defend it.

Build better pivots, clinches, counters, frames, lateral movement, stamina consequences, and inside-fighting mechanics.

Do not punish defensive movement with invisible restrictions.

Improve ring cutting, foot placement, timing, pursuit angles, and rope positioning.

Good design does not erase tactics. It creates meaningful answers to them.

Casual Accessibility Does Not Require Boxing to Be Hollow

Some fans speak as though casual players can only enjoy boxing when the sport is heavily reduced.

That underestimates casual players.

A person does not need decades of boxing knowledge to understand that throwing too many punches can make a boxer tired.

They do not need amateur experience to understand that missing badly can leave someone exposed.

They do not need coaching credentials to recognize that moving toward the ropes limits escape routes.

They do not need to understand every technical term before learning that one defense may open another target.

Games teach players complicated systems all the time.

Racing games teach braking points, tire wear, traction, and vehicle balance.

Military games teach recoil, positioning, ammunition management, and weapon roles.

Role-playing games teach resistances, status effects, character builds, crafting systems, and resource economies.

Boxing games can teach boxing.

Accessibility should help players enter the simulation. It should not be used as a reason to remove the simulation.

Assisted controls, tutorials, optional indicators, adjustable timing windows, difficulty settings, casual presets, and separate gameplay rules can support new players without forcing every player into the same shallow design.

Fans Should Demand Explanations, Not Manufacture Them

A consumer does not need to defend every design choice made by a studio.

Enjoying a game does not require pretending its weaknesses are unavoidable.

Supporting developers does not mean inventing technical excuses on their behalf.

And preferring casual gameplay does not give anyone the authority to declare that deeper boxing mechanics cannot work.

Let studios explain their decisions.

Let them explain why a mechanic was simplified.

Let them explain why an important boxing interaction was excluded.

Let them explain why a defensive answer does not exist.

Let them explain why something must feel “gamey.”

Then players can judge the explanation based on evidence, results, and the quality of the final product.

Until then, “it’s just a game” proves nothing.

The question has never been whether a boxing videogame is a game.

The question is why being a game is repeatedly used as permission for it to understand less about boxing.

This version separates itself from the earlier post by focusing less on defending simulation generally and more on uninformed fan authority, artificial balance, tactical repetition, and system-created cheese.

Sunday, July 12, 2026

Is UFC 6 Really the Best Combat Videogame Ever, or Is That Recency Bias Talking?

 

Is UFC 6 Really the Best Combat Videogame Ever, or Is That Recency Bias Talking?

Every time a major combat game releases, a section of its fanbase immediately tries to crown it the greatest ever made.

That is now happening with UFC 6.

Some fans are not merely calling it the best game in the EA UFC series. They are calling it the best combat videogame ever created.

That is an enormous claim.

There is nothing wrong with loving UFC 6. There is nothing wrong with calling it your favorite combat game, the most enjoyable UFC game, or even the best MMA game you have personally played. Personal enjoyment does not require permission.

But “my favorite” and “the greatest ever” are not interchangeable statements.

To call any game the best combat videogame ever, it must be compared against the entire history of combat-based game design—not merely UFC 5, the previous EA UFC release, or whatever other sports game happens to be popular right now.

What Does “Best Combat Game Ever” Actually Mean?

The phrase “combat videogame” covers several different categories.

It includes traditional competitive fighting games such as:

  • Street Fighter

  • Tekken

  • Virtua Fighter

  • SoulCalibur

  • Mortal Kombat

It includes mechanically demanding action games such as:

  • Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice

  • Devil May Cry 5

  • Ninja Gaiden Black

  • Sifu

  • God Hand

It also includes combat-sports games such as:

  • UFC Undisputed 3

  • Fight Night Champion

  • Victorious Boxers

  • EA Sports MMA

  • The EA UFC series

These games are not all attempting to accomplish the same thing. Some prioritize competitive balance. Some prioritize mechanical expression. Some emphasize simulation, physics, spectacle, storytelling or accessibility.

That is why the title of “best combat videogame ever” cannot be awarded simply because a new game has powerful-looking strikes, modern graphics and impressive knockdown animations.

The standard must be much higher.

The Historical Benchmark: Street Fighter II

If the question is which game has the strongest overall claim to being the greatest combat videogame ever, Street Fighter II remains one of the safest answers.

It did not merely become popular. It helped establish the language of modern competitive combat games.

It popularized or refined concepts such as:

  • Character-specific combat styles

  • Light, medium and heavy attacks

  • Special-move commands

  • Combination attacks

  • Cancels

  • Spacing

  • Zoning

  • Footsies

  • Recovery punishment

  • Matchup knowledge

  • Competitive one-on-one play

Its influence stretches far beyond its own franchise.

Generations of fighting games were built upon principles that Street Fighter II helped establish. Its basic controls were accessible enough for newcomers, while its deeper mechanics allowed experienced players to study timing, distance, tendencies, counters and matchups for years.

That is one of the most important lessons combat-sports developers can learn:

Accessibility does not require the removal of depth.

A game can be approachable without being shallow. It can welcome casual players without sacrificing the systems that serious combat fans want to master.

The Best Focused Melee System: Sekiro

When the discussion shifts from historical influence to focused moment-to-moment combat design, Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice becomes one of the strongest candidates.

Its sword combat is built around direct engagement.

The player is encouraged to attack, deflect, counter and maintain pressure rather than repeatedly running away or relying on passive defense. The posture system turns every exchange into a battle for control.

Success requires:

  • Reading animations

  • Recognizing attack types

  • Maintaining composure

  • Deflecting accurately

  • Understanding rhythm

  • Applying pressure

  • Choosing the correct counter

  • Punishing hesitation

The brilliance of Sekiro is not that it contains hundreds of disconnected systems. Its greatness comes from how tightly its systems support one central combat philosophy.

Everything works together.

That coherence is something many licensed sports games lack. They often have numerous features, meters and animations, but those elements do not always combine into one believable representation of the sport.

The Deepest Combat Expression: Devil May Cry 5

Devil May Cry 5 deserves recognition for a different reason.

It offers one of the highest ceilings for individual combat expression.

Players can switch weapons, chain attacks, cancel animations, launch enemies, maintain aerial sequences and create combinations that reflect their own imagination and technical ability.

The goal is not merely to win.

The goal is to demonstrate mastery and style.

That gives Devil May Cry 5 a level of creative freedom that very few combat games can match. Two skilled players can approach the same encounter in completely different ways and still succeed.

That is another important standard when discussing greatness: Does the combat system allow players to develop a personal style, or does everyone eventually discover and repeat the same dominant strategy?

Other Legitimate Contenders

There are many other games with stronger historical arguments than a newly released UFC title.

SoulCalibur revolutionized three-dimensional weapon combat through fluid eight-way movement, spacing, weapon range and responsiveness.

Tekken 3 combined accessibility, presentation, character individuality, movement and technical depth into one of the most complete fighting-game packages of its generation.

Ninja Gaiden Black created intense combat through aggressive enemies that pressured, interrupted, repositioned and punished hesitation.

Virtua Fighter built its reputation around disciplined movement, timing, counters and technical precision.

Sifu turned martial-arts combat into a demanding study of positioning, defense, crowd control and adaptation.

These games have been analyzed, played competitively, criticized and revisited over many years. Their reputations were not established during a release-week celebration.

They survived scrutiny.

That matters.

What UFC 6 Can Reasonably Claim

UFC 6 may represent a meaningful improvement over previous EA UFC games.

Its supporters can reasonably praise areas such as:

  • Improved strike contact

  • Better-looking hit reactions

  • More convincing knockdowns

  • Greater emphasis on range and timing

  • More distinct athlete behavior

  • Stronger counter-striking

  • Improved presentation

  • Expanded offline or career content

  • More satisfying moment-to-moment striking

Those improvements deserve recognition.

A game should not be dismissed merely because it is new. If UFC 6 improves the series, that should be acknowledged honestly.

But improving upon UFC 5 does not automatically place it above every combat game ever created.

That is the central problem with the argument.

Some fans are judging UFC 6 against a very limited field. They may be comparing it only to the recent EA UFC games. Others may primarily play sports titles and have little experience with the deeper combat systems found in traditional fighting games or action games.

When the comparison pool is small, a strong new release can appear revolutionary.

But once the comparison expands across several decades of combat design, the claim becomes much harder to defend.

Best EA UFC Game Is Not the Same as Best Combat Game Ever

There are several separate claims that people keep blending together:

  1. UFC 6 is my favorite combat game.

  2. UFC 6 is the best EA UFC game.

  3. UFC 6 is the best MMA game.

  4. UFC 6 is the best combat-sports simulation.

  5. UFC 6 is the greatest combat videogame ever.

Each statement requires more evidence than the one before it.

The first claim is entirely personal.

The second requires comparison with the EA UFC series.

The third requires comparison with games such as UFC Undisputed 3 and EA Sports MMA.

The fourth requires serious analysis of realism, artificial intelligence, controls, physics, athlete identity and strategic depth.

The fifth requires comparison with nearly every major combat game ever created.

Fans often jump from the first or second claim directly to the fifth.

That is not serious evaluation. It is excitement.

The Grappling Question Cannot Be Ignored

An MMA game cannot claim to be the greatest combat game ever if a major part of mixed martial arts remains underdeveloped.

Mixed martial arts is not merely kickboxing inside a cage.

It includes:

  • Wrestling entries

  • Takedown timing

  • Takedown chains

  • Cage wrestling

  • Underhooks

  • Overhooks

  • Clinch positioning

  • Trips

  • Throws

  • Scrambles

  • Guard work

  • Half guard

  • Mount

  • Back control

  • Submission transitions

  • Ground striking

  • Defensive grappling

  • Positional awareness

If the striking system receives the majority of the innovation while grappling remains repetitive, simplified or inherited from earlier games, then the overall simulation remains incomplete.

A combat system must be judged by its weakest major discipline, not only by its most visually impressive one.

A brutal knockout animation can create excitement, but it does not prove that the complete MMA system is deep.

Does UFC 6 Simulate Athletes—or Reward Videogame States?

Another issue is the use of meter-based momentum systems and temporary performance boosts.

Rewarding an athlete for behaving like the real person is a good idea. Athlete identity should matter.

A pressure striker should gain advantages by successfully applying intelligent pressure. A counter-striker should become more dangerous when drawing mistakes. A wrestler should benefit from wearing opponents down through clinching and takedowns.

But ideally, those results should emerge organically through interconnected systems such as:

  • Attributes

  • Tendencies

  • Conditioning

  • Confidence

  • Damage

  • Timing

  • Positioning

  • Tactical success

  • Opponent reactions

  • Fatigue

  • Momentum

  • Psychological pressure

The concern begins when those outcomes are converted into a visible or activated videogame boost.

A temporary powered state may be entertaining, but it also pushes the game toward a hybrid design. The athlete becomes stronger because a mechanic has activated, rather than because the simulation naturally recognizes the developing circumstances of the contest.

That does not automatically make the feature bad.

It does, however, complicate claims that the game is the ultimate combat simulation.

The Real Questions UFC 6 Must Answer

Before calling UFC 6 the greatest combat videogame ever, its supporters should be able to explain where it ranks in the following areas:

Striking

Does it have the most technically complete striking system ever created?

Does it accurately represent short strikes, long strikes, shifting attacks, angle changes, stance changes, feints, defensive responsibility, foot positioning and individual striking styles?

Grappling

Does it offer the deepest wrestling, clinching, scrambling, positional grappling and submission system ever placed in a videogame?

Defense

Does defense require reading, timing, positioning and anticipation, or does it depend too heavily on basic blocking, meters and predetermined animations?

Movement

Does movement reflect foot placement, balance, stance, cage awareness and realistic directional limitations?

Physics

Are the physics consistent and mechanically meaningful, or do they mainly produce dramatic visual results?

Artificial Intelligence

Can the CPU recognize patterns, create game plans, adjust between rounds, exploit weaknesses and behave like different athletes?

Athlete Identity

Do individual athletes truly compete differently, or are their differences primarily ratings, animations and perks layered over a universal base?

Competitive Integrity

Can players exploit a handful of dominant techniques, or does the system consistently reward sound MMA knowledge?

Skill Ceiling

Can players continue discovering deeper strategies after hundreds of hours, or does the combat eventually collapse into familiar patterns?

Historical Influence

Has the game changed the direction of combat design, or is it a polished continuation of an existing formula?

If those questions cannot be answered convincingly, then the phrase “best combat game ever” is premature.

Recency Bias Is Powerful

New games benefit from several psychological advantages.

They have the newest graphics. Their animations look more advanced. Their presentation feels current. Their online communities are active. Content creators are producing constant coverage. Players are still discovering mechanics.

The weaknesses may not yet be fully understood.

Exploits may not have spread through the online community. Balance problems may not have been documented. Career-mode repetition may not have become obvious. Artificial intelligence patterns may still feel unpredictable because players have not spent enough time exposing them.

This is why greatness requires time.

The greatest combat games are not merely impressive during the honeymoon period. They remain mechanically respected after players have taken them apart.

Enjoyment Is Not the Same as Design Excellence

A person can enjoy UFC 6 more than Street Fighter II, Sekiro, Tekken, SoulCalibur or Devil May Cry 5.

That enjoyment is real.

But personal enjoyment does not erase historical influence, mechanical depth, competitive longevity or innovation.

Someone may prefer a new action movie to every classic film ever made. That does not automatically make it the greatest film in history.

The same principle applies here.

Fans should not be afraid to say:

“UFC 6 is the combat game I enjoy the most.”

That is a completely defensible statement.

The exaggeration begins when personal excitement is presented as objective proof of all-time superiority.

The Verdict

UFC 6 may become the best game in the EA UFC series.

It may become one of the better licensed combat-sports games of its generation.

It may offer the most satisfying MMA striking many players have experienced.

Those are meaningful accomplishments.

But calling it the greatest combat videogame ever is currently an unproven coronation driven largely by recency bias, limited comparison and release-period enthusiasm.

The historical overall crown still belongs more comfortably to a transformative game such as Street Fighter II.

The strongest argument for focused melee combat belongs to a game such as Sekiro.

The argument for expressive mechanical freedom belongs to Devil May Cry 5.

The argument for elite three-dimensional weapon combat belongs to SoulCalibur.

And the argument for the greatest MMA game must still include serious comparisons with UFC Undisputed 3 and other respected combat-sports titles.

UFC 6 deserves fair praise.

It deserves serious analysis.

It deserves recognition for whatever it genuinely improves.

But it does not deserve to be declared the greatest combat videogame in history simply because it is new, popular and visually impressive.

A real all-time champion must defeat the entire field, not merely its immediate predecessor.

Boxing Fans Do Not Owe Undisputed Their Loyalty

 

Boxing Fans Do Not Owe Undisputed Their Loyalty

Let us make this clear:

A boxing fan is not required to like Undisputed simply because it calls itself a boxing game.

The existence of a boxing ring, licensed fighters, gloves, trunks, belts, commentary, and recognizable arenas does not automatically make a game worthy of praise. It does not excuse shallow systems. It does not erase missing mechanics. It does not obligate hardcore fans to lower their standards.

A boxing game should be judged by how well it represents boxing.

Not by how badly fans wanted a new title.

Not by how few alternatives exist.

Not by how many famous fighters appear on the roster.

Not by how often the word “authentic” is repeated in interviews and marketing.

A boxing game must earn respect.

Boxing Fans Are Customers, Not Hostages

The boxing videogame market has been starved for years.

That scarcity has created a dangerous attitude: fans should accept whatever they are given because they may not get anything else.

That is not support.

That is consumer captivity.

Boxing fans are told to be grateful. They are told to stop criticizing. They are told that the game is better than nothing. They are told to celebrate the simple fact that boxing has returned to consoles.

But “better than nothing” is not the standard for a full-priced sports game.

Scarcity does not turn mediocrity into greatness.

A lack of competition does not make an incomplete product complete.

Fans should not be emotionally blackmailed into defending a game because the genre has been neglected.

Players paid money. They invested time. Many supported the project before release. They watched the footage, followed the development, promoted the game, submitted feedback, and believed the promises.

They are customers.

They are not unpaid members of the marketing department.

Using Boxing’s Name Comes With Responsibility

A company cannot build attention by invoking realism, authenticity, boxing knowledge, and respect for the sport, then act surprised when knowledgeable boxing fans evaluate the finished product by those standards.

You cannot use boxing credibility to sell the dream and then dismiss boxing criticism once the product is in people’s hands.

Hardcore fans are going to examine whether the game understands:

  • distance

  • timing

  • rhythm

  • balance

  • leverage

  • foot placement

  • angles

  • defense

  • body punching

  • ring generalship

  • inside fighting

  • clinching

  • fatigue

  • damage

  • style matchups

  • tactical adjustments

These are not optional decorations.

These are boxing.

A game does not deeply represent boxing merely because the punches are motion-captured or because the fighters have accurate tattoos.

Likeness is not identity.

Presentation is not simulation.

Licensing is not depth.

A Roster Is Not a Boxing System

A fighter’s name, face, rating, and signature stance are not enough.

Muhammad Ali should not merely look like Muhammad Ali. His timing, rhythm, reactions, footwork, improvisation, confidence, tactical intelligence, and unique vulnerabilities should shape the fight.

Joe Frazier should not simply be a shorter pressure fighter with a strong left hook. His head movement, physical pressure, inside rhythm, punch layering, conditioning, and ability to force exchanges should be part of his identity.

A defensive specialist should not feel like every other fighter with a higher defense rating.

A pressure fighter should not fight like an outfighter with adjusted speed and power.

A boxer’s identity should emerge through behavior, tendencies, capabilities, traits, movement, punch selection, reactions, decision-making, and strategy.

Without that depth, the roster becomes a collection of licensed shells.

Hardcore fans notice the difference.

“It’s Fun” Is Not a Shield Against Criticism

Some people enjoy Undisputed.

That is fine.

Enjoyment does not prove accuracy.

Enjoyment does not prove realism.

Enjoyment does not prove completeness.

Enjoyment does not erase mechanical flaws.

One person having fun does not cancel another person’s informed criticism.

The phrase “it’s fun” is often used to end discussions that should be happening.

Fun is subjective. System quality is not entirely subjective.

Players can examine whether mechanics are consistent, whether strategies are balanced, whether fighters behave distinctly, whether the AI adapts, whether the career mode has depth, whether movement reflects real weight, and whether boxing knowledge is rewarded.

A game can be fun and flawed.

A game can be popular and shallow.

A game can be licensed and inaccurate.

A game can be called authentic and still play like a compromise.

“Authentic” Has Become a Convenient Escape Word

Authentic is one of the safest words in sports-game marketing.

It sounds serious without requiring a precise commitment.

Authentic can mean real fighters.

Authentic can mean branded gloves.

Authentic can mean licensed belts.

Authentic can mean commentary, arenas, ring walks, music, robes, tattoos, and television-style presentation.

But none of that guarantees realistic boxing.

A game can look authentic while functioning like a hybrid.

A game can reproduce the image of boxing while failing to reproduce its logic.

That is why hardcore fans ask harder questions.

Does foot positioning matter?

Does balance matter?

Does punch trajectory matter?

Does a badly planted punch carry consequences?

Can an inside fighter work properly?

Can a boxer clinch with tactical purpose?

Can fighters smother punches?

Can a corner change the fight?

Can the AI recognize patterns and adjust?

Can fatigue affect judgment, reactions, posture, defense, and technique?

Do styles create real matchup problems?

Does boxing intelligence provide an advantage?

If the answer is no, weak, or inconsistent, then “authentic” is not a meaningful defense.

Hardcore Fans Are Not the Problem

The most passionate fans are often treated as difficult because they refuse to clap for the minimum.

They are called negative.

They are called impossible to please.

They are called a loud minority.

They are told that they ask for too much.

But many of these fans understand boxing and videogames at a level most consumers do not.

They notice when fighters slide instead of planting.

They notice when punches lack proper leverage.

They notice when distance becomes inconsistent.

They notice when defensive styles blend together.

They notice when inside fighting is missing or underdeveloped.

They notice when stamina is treated like a simple energy bar instead of a full-body performance system.

They notice when the AI repeats patterns instead of reading the opponent.

They notice when real boxing tactics fail because the game does not support them.

Knowledge is not negativity.

Expertise is not toxicity.

High standards are not harassment.

A fan who asks for better boxing representation is not attacking the sport.

That fan may be one of the few people truly defending it.

Stop Telling Fans to Be Grateful

Fans should not have to choose between silence and exile.

They should not be told:

“At least we have a boxing game.”

“You should support it so we get another one.”

“It is just a videogame.”

“Nothing will ever be perfect.”

“Developers cannot add everything.”

Those statements are usually used to shut down criticism rather than answer it.

No serious critic is demanding perfection.

They are demanding meaningful progress.

They are demanding a boxing game that evolves beyond old limitations.

They are demanding systems that reflect the sport instead of merely decorating the screen with boxing imagery.

They are demanding options.

That is not unreasonable.

Options Would End Many of These Arguments

Casual players should have an accessible experience.

Hybrid players should have a balanced competitive experience.

Simulation players should have a demanding, realistic experience.

These audiences do not need to fight over one compromised ruleset.

A properly designed boxing game could provide distinct lanes with different settings for:

  • damage

  • stamina

  • punch assistance

  • defensive complexity

  • referee behavior

  • clinching

  • injuries

  • recovery

  • AI intelligence

  • judging

  • movement

  • control assistance

  • tactical consequences

Casual players would not be forced into a simulation.

Simulation players would not be forced into an arcade-leaning compromise.

Everyone could play the type of boxing game they value.

When a company refuses to provide meaningful options, it chooses the conflict.

Supporting Boxing Games Does Not Mean Supporting Every Decision

Real support is not blind praise.

Real support is demanding better.

A fan can appreciate the effort behind Undisputed while still rejecting the result.

A fan can recognize the difficulty of game development while still criticizing design decisions.

A fan can respect individual developers while holding the company accountable.

A fan can want the game to succeed while refusing to pretend it already has.

Support without standards is surrender.

Loyalty without accountability is exploitation.

Disliking Undisputed Is Justified

Hardcore boxing and videogame fans are justified in disliking what Undisputed became.

They are justified if they believe the game does not adequately represent boxing’s depth.

They are justified if they believe important systems are missing.

They are justified if they believe fighters lack sufficient individuality.

They are justified if they believe the gameplay rewards exploits more than boxing intelligence.

They are justified if they believe the final product does not match the expectations created around it.

They are justified if they simply do not find the game good enough.

No fan owes a product admiration.

No customer owes a company silence.

No boxing fan must accept shallow representation simply because the genre has been neglected.

The Final Word

Undisputed does not deserve automatic loyalty because it is a boxing game.

It deserves the same scrutiny any sports game should receive.

Does it represent the sport deeply?

Does it reward knowledge?

Does it offer meaningful options?

Does it respect boxer individuality?

Does it provide the systems expected from a modern boxing title?

Does it justify the trust, money, and patience of the audience?

Those are the real questions.

Hardcore boxing fans are not obligated to lower their standards to protect a company from criticism.

They are not required to celebrate a game that does not represent the sport the way they believe it should.

They are not wrong for demanding more.

Boxing fans waited too long to be told that merely having a game should be enough.

It is not enough.

The ring is not enough.

The roster is not enough.

The licenses are not enough.

The word “authentic” is not enough.

A boxing game must understand boxing.

Until it does, hardcore fans have every right to keep speaking.

Friday, July 10, 2026

Why the Blocks SCI?!? I'm not Aggressive!

 



A company like SCI might block Poe not because he is abusive, but because sustained, informed criticism can be uncomfortable—especially when it comes from someone with real boxing experience, gaming history, and a detailed record of what he believes the game is missing.

Possible reasons include:

  • Controlling the public narrative. Poe’s criticism challenges marketing language such as “authentic boxing” by asking what that actually means in gameplay.

  • Avoiding difficult questions. It is easier to block a critic than explain missing mechanics, abandoned features, design compromises, or changes from the original vision.

  • Mistaking persistence for aggression. Repeated criticism can be perceived as hostile even when the language itself is not disrespectful.

  • Protecting morale. Developers may personally take criticism of the game as criticism of their talent or effort.

  • Reducing reputational risk. A knowledgeable critic can influence other players and provide them with specific language for discussing the game’s shortcomings.

  • Internal group dynamics. Once one senior person views someone as a problem, others may adopt the same position without independently judging that person’s behavior.

  • Preference for cooperative influencers. Companies often have warmer relationships with creators who promote updates, attend events, and avoid challenging leadership publicly.

Poe’s biggest “offense” may simply be that he does not treat boxing representation as a superficial matter. He knows the sport, remembers earlier promises, compares the game to what is technically and creatively possible, and refuses to pretend that “authentic” automatically means realistic.

That does not prove why any specific SCI employee blocked him. Only those individuals know their motives. But blocking a respectful critic does not automatically invalidate the criticism. Sometimes it suggests the company would rather remove the discomfort than seriously engage with the substance of the concerns.

When Boxers Treat the Game Like a Check, Developers Control the Truth




When Boxers Treat the Game Like a Check, Developers Control the Truth

The sad reality is that many professional boxers do not care enough about boxing videogames to help developers represent the sport correctly. For some, being included in a game is simply an honor, a publicity opportunity, and another check. They provide their likeness, attend a promotional event, take a few pictures, and assume their involvement has helped create an authentic boxing experience.

But appearing in the game is not the same as protecting the integrity of boxing within the game.

When a boxer says, “It’s just a videogame,” it reveals how disconnected many athletes are from the gaming industry and from the expectations of modern sports-game consumers. A boxing videogame may be entertainment, but it is also an interactive representation of the sport. For millions of players—especially younger fans—it may shape how they understand footwork, defense, stamina, styles, scoring, strategy, training, matchmaking, and even boxing history.

Game companies understand that many boxers are not deeply involved in videogames. Some companies exploit that lack of knowledge. They place recognizable fighters in promotional materials, call them consultants or ambassadors, and use their presence as proof that the game is authentic. Meanwhile, those boxers may have little influence over the actual combat systems, artificial intelligence, career structure, judging, clinching, inside fighting, movement, damage, or stamina model.

A boxer may approve how his face looks without ever testing whether his jab behaves correctly.

He may praise the graphics without questioning why every boxer moves alike.

He may celebrate being licensed without noticing that his real tendencies, defensive habits, punch mechanics, rhythm, weaknesses, and ring intelligence are missing.

That is the difference between likeness approval and meaningful boxing consultation.

Developers need boxers who are willing to sit down with combat designers, animators, artificial-intelligence programmers, and gameplay engineers. They need athletes who will explain why a punch feels wrong, why a defensive reaction is unrealistic, why a boxer would not move a certain way, and why certain situations require more than a canned animation. They need former fighters, trainers, cutmen, referees, judges, matchmakers, and serious boxing historians who are prepared to challenge bad design decisions—not merely promote the product.

The athletes also need to understand their responsibility. Their name and reputation can be used to legitimize a game that may not represent boxing with depth. When they publicly praise a product they barely examined, they give companies cover. Fans are then told, “Real boxers worked on the game,” even when those boxers may have contributed little beyond motion capture, interviews, facial scans, or marketing appearances.

A company should not be allowed to hide shallow boxing systems behind famous names.

Being punched professionally does not automatically make someone a good game designer. But lived boxing experience becomes invaluable when it is paired with serious involvement, honest feedback, and developers who are willing to listen. The goal is not to let boxers design the entire game. The goal is to ensure that the people building the game cannot casually misrepresent the sport while using boxers as promotional shields.

Boxers should demand more than a check and a character model. They should ask what kind of boxing game their image is helping sell. They should test the mechanics, question the systems, speak to knowledgeable players, and insist that the sport be represented with intelligence and respect.

Because when boxers do not care enough to get involved, companies are free to define boxing however they choose—and then market that definition as authenticity.


The Obsession: A Manifesto for a Realistic Boxing Video Game

 


The Obsession: A Manifesto for a Realistic Boxing Video Game

Call it an obsession.

Call it demanding.

Call it unrealistic.

Call it whatever makes it easier to avoid the truth:

Boxing has never received the video game it deserves.

For decades, boxing fans have been expected to accept shallow mechanics, limited career modes, generic boxer behavior to accept shallow mechanics, limited career modes, generic boxer behavior, weak defensive systems, missing fundamentals, and arcade design disguised with words like “authentic.”

We are tired of it.

We are tired of being told that realistic boxing would not be fun.

We are tired of being told that the sport is too complicated to represent.

We are tired of being told that features found in older games, other sports games, and modern simulation systems are somehow impossible when boxing fans request them.

We are tired of being treated as though wanting boxing to look, feel, and function like boxing is an unreasonable demand.

It is not unreasonable.

It is the minimum standard.

Boxing Is Not a Generic Fighting Game

Boxing is not two characters standing in front of one another trading combinations until a health bar disappears.

It is not magnetic punch tracking.

It is not universal movement shared by every boxer.

It is not endless combinations without physical consequences.

It is not a block meter replacing actual defensive intelligence.

It is not exaggerated weaving, automatic counters, canned knockdowns, or damage systems built around manufactured drama.

Boxing is positioning.

It is range.

It is balance.

It is timing.

It is leverage.

It is rhythm.

It is pressure.

It is fear.

It is fatigue.

It is adaptation.

It is knowing when to punch, when not to punch, when to hold, when to move, when to exchange, and when to survive.

A boxing game that does not meaningfully represent those things is not a deep boxing simulation.

It is a fighting game wearing boxing gloves.

Stop Using “Fun” as an Excuse for Shallow Design

Whenever boxing fans ask for realism, someone immediately claims that realism would ruin the fun.

Whose fun?

The player who wants to throw one hundred power punches without consequences?

The player who depends on exploits?

The player who refuses to learn distance, defense, timing, stamina management, or ring positioning?

The player who wants boxing stripped of its intelligence so that every matchup becomes an exchange of animations?

That cannot remain the only definition of fun.

There is fun in studying an opponent.

There is fun in setting traps.

There is fun in breaking a boxer down over several rounds.

There is fun in surviving while hurt.

There is fun in adjusting after losing the early rounds.

There is fun in controlling the ring without throwing constantly.

There is fun in making an opponent miss by inches.

There is fun in landing a short counter that came from correct positioning rather than an animation advantage.

There is fun in boxing.

The industry must stop treating actual boxing as the obstacle.

The Sport Must Matter More Than the Template

Too many boxing games begin with a conventional fighting-game structure.

Then developers add licensed boxers, arenas, gloves, commentary, and presentation around it.

That is backwards.

A true boxing game must begin with the sport.

It must begin with foot placement, stance, weight distribution, punching mechanics, defensive responsibility, physical endurance, ring geography, boxer psychology, and tactical decision-making.

The boxer should not be forced into the game’s template.

The game should be built around the boxer.

A pressure boxer should not feel like a counterpuncher with different ratings.

A tall outside boxer should not feel like a short inside boxer with longer reach.

A fading veteran should not behave like an undefeated prospect.

A heavy-handed puncher should not simply receive a higher power number.

A defensive specialist should not be represented by faster head movement and a stronger block meter.

Boxer identity must be built through tendencies, capabilities, traits, mannerisms, signature movements, decision logic, emotional responses, stamina behavior, punch mechanics, defensive habits, and tactical preferences.

Licensed faces are not enough.

Ratings are not enough.

Cosmetic authenticity is not enough.

Missing Boxing Fundamentals Are Not Minor Features

Inside fighting is not a bonus feature.

Clinching is not a bonus feature.

Rope fighting is not a bonus feature.

Proper ring positioning is not a bonus feature.

Short punches are not a bonus feature.

Body punching is not a bonus feature.

Parrying, catching, framing, tying up, pivoting, slipping, rolling, smothering, and fighting off the ropes are not optional decorations.

They are boxing.

When those mechanics are missing, the sport is incomplete.

When developers remove them or fail to develop them, they are not merely cutting content.

They are cutting pieces of boxing itself.

Fans should not have to beg for the fundamentals of the sport to exist in a boxing game.

Stop Reducing Realism to Graphics

Realism is not sweat.

It is not skin detail.

It is not a famous arena.

It is not accurate trunks.

It is not facial scanning.

It is not a broadcast camera.

Those things can improve presentation, but they do not create a realistic boxing experience.

Realism is cause and effect.

A boxer should tire because of pace, tension, poor conditioning, inefficient movement, body damage, missed punches, excessive power, age, weight cutting, and accumulated punishment.

A knockout should happen because of timing, leverage, placement, vulnerability, balance, fatigue, damage, and the boxer’s ability to recover.

A punch should miss because the opponent moved correctly, controlled range, changed angle, slipped at the right moment, or caused the attacker to misjudge distance.

A boxer should struggle because the opponent’s style creates a real tactical problem.

That is realism.

Not surface detail.

Not marketing language.

Not presentation covering shallow mechanics.

Career Mode Must Become a Living Boxing World

A boxing career is not a menu followed by another fight.

It is a world of promoters, managers, trainers, matchmakers, gyms, rankings, sanctioning organizations, negotiations, rivalries, injuries, layoffs, mandatory challengers, regional circuits, rebuilding periods, weight problems, bad decisions, and unexpected opportunities.

The boxing world should move whether the player is watching or not.

Other boxers should rise.

Other boxers should fall.

Prospects should be exposed.

Journeymen should ruin plans.

Champions should avoid dangerous challengers.

Promoters should protect investments.

Trainers should change careers.

Fighters should age, decline, improve, move divisions, suffer injuries, lose confidence, gain confidence, and rebuild.

The player should not feel like the only person who exists.

A real career mode should be an ecosystem.

Anything less is a fight menu with statistics attached.

Stop Telling Simulation Fans to Settle

Simulation fans are constantly told to compromise.

Accept the hybrid design.

Accept the arcade mechanics.

Accept the missing systems.

Accept the limited customization.

Accept the shallow career.

Accept the repeated animations.

Accept the generic AI.

Accept that casual players matter more.

Accept that realism is too difficult.

Accept that depth would divide the audience.

No.

The solution is not forcing everyone into the same simplified experience.

The solution is options.

Casual mode.

Hybrid mode.

Simulation mode.

Assists.

Sliders.

Custom rules.

Online contracts.

Offline customization.

Difficulty settings.

Gameplay presets.

Players should be allowed to decide how deeply they want to experience the sport.

A casual player should not be forced into a hardcore simulation.

A simulation player should not be forced into an arcade game.

Options are not confusion.

Options are respect.

Boxing Knowledge Must Have Value

A knowledgeable boxing fan should have an advantage because they understand boxing.

That should not be controversial.

Knowing how to control range should matter.

Knowing when to attack the body should matter.

Knowing how to cut off the ring should matter.

Knowing how to protect yourself while hurt should matter.

Knowing when to clinch should matter.

Knowing how to pressure without wasting energy should matter.

Knowing how to read tendencies should matter.

Knowing how to exploit stance matchups should matter.

Knowing how to adjust should matter.

A player should not be able to ignore boxing knowledge and dominate through mechanical abuse.

The game should reward understanding of the sport, not just mastery of exploits.

Passion Is Not the Problem

The people who keep demanding more are not the enemy.

The people who write long breakdowns, identify missing mechanics, document boxing styles, propose systems, criticize weak design, and continue pushing for improvement are not destroying the community.

They care enough to refuse mediocrity.

They care enough to imagine what the genre could become.

They care enough to keep speaking after years of being ignored.

Do not label them toxic because they will not stop asking questions.

Do not call them unrealistic because they expect modern technology to produce modern depth.

Do not call them a loud minority without transparent evidence.

Do not use selected creators, controlled spaces, and convenient feedback to define an entire audience.

Conduct independent surveys.

Release the results.

Ask offline players.

Ask simulation players.

Ask former boxers.

Ask trainers.

Ask historians.

Ask longtime sports gamers.

Ask people who understand both boxing and game design.

Then listen.

Technology Is No Longer the Excuse

Modern engines can support complex animation systems, advanced AI, procedural motion, physics-assisted reactions, extensive databases, customizable logic, scalable simulations, and deep creation tools.

The question is no longer whether realistic boxing systems are technically imaginable.

The question is whether a company is committed to building them.

That requires boxing experts with real authority.

It requires experienced combat designers.

It requires animation specialists who understand weight, balance, and punch mechanics.

It requires AI designers who understand tactics rather than scripted aggression.

It requires career-mode designers who understand boxing politics and progression.

It requires testers who can identify when the game does not look or feel like boxing.

It requires leadership willing to prioritize the sport over convenience.

The greatest limitation is not technology.

It is vision.

We Are Not Asking for Perfection

No video game can reproduce every sensation, danger, emotion, and physical reality of stepping into a boxing ring.

That is not the demand.

The demand is believable boxing.

Believable movement.

Believable misses.

Believable stamina.

Believable damage.

Believable defense.

Believable tactics.

Believable careers.

Believable boxer identity.

Believable outcomes created by understandable causes.

The goal is not to reproduce every molecule of reality.

The goal is to stop insulting reality.

This Is the Standard

We want a boxing game where every boxer feels like an individual.

We want footwork connected to stance, balance, style, fatigue, and purpose.

We want punches that require correct range and positioning.

We want defense that goes beyond holding a button.

We want inside fighting, clinching, rope work, pivots, framing, parrying, catching, and short punching.

We want injuries, recovery, judging, referees, trainers, corner strategy, and career politics.

We want deep creation tools.

We want a living boxing universe.

We want casual, hybrid, and simulation options.

We want offline depth and online structure.

We want boxing knowledge to matter.

We want the sport respected.

This is not an obsession with unnecessary complexity.

It is an obsession with finally getting the complete boxing game that fans have been denied for decades.

We are not asking developers to reinvent boxing.

We are asking them to stop removing it.

We are not asking for a fantasy.

We are asking for commitment.

We are not asking for boxing to become less fun.

We are demanding that boxing itself finally be allowed to be the fun.

No more excuses.

No more shallow imitations.

No more calling limited design “authentic.”

No more treating simulation fans like an inconvenience.

Build the sport.

Represent its depth.

Respect its intelligence.

Give boxing the video game it deserves.

This version can be made even more confrontational and directed specifically at boxing-game studios and publishers.

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Unreal Engine 5+ Leaves SCI With No Room for Excuses

 

Unreal Engine 5+ Leaves SCI With No Room for Excuses

Unreal Engine 5+ changes the conversation around Undisputed completely.

With the first Undisputed, Steel City Interactive could lean on certain explanations: small studio, first major boxing game, older foundation, growing pains, limited resources, or systems that were too hard to add after the fact. Some fans accepted that. Some did not. But now, if the sequel is truly being built from the ground up in Unreal Engine, that excuse window is closed.

SCI itself has said its full effort is now going into a sequel “built from the ground up in Unreal Engine,” while also saying the company has grown, gained more structure, and reached nearly 100 people across three sites. Reports also say AAA developers from EA Sports, Rockstar, and 2K have joined the studio. That is not a small-studio-under-pressure narrative anymore. That is a higher-expectation narrative. (Game Republic) (PlayStation Universe)

Unreal Engine 5+ is not magic. It does not automatically create a great boxing game. It does not automatically build smart AI, realistic footwork, deep career mode, accurate punch tracking, or authentic clinching. Developers still have to design, tune, test, and commit to those systems. But that is the point: with UE5+, the question is no longer “Can this be done?” The question becomes “Do they actually want to do it?”

Epic has pushed Unreal Engine 5.6 toward high-fidelity performance, smoother large-scale content handling, improved animation workflows, and more efficient production pipelines. Epic specifically says UE 5.6 was built to help developers create high-fidelity large-scale worlds running smoothly at 60 FPS on current-generation hardware, while also improving animation and rigging workflows inside the engine. (Unreal Engine)

That matters because many of the things boxing fans have been asking for are not fantasy features. They are sports-simulation systems. They are logic systems. They are animation systems. They are AI systems. They are presentation systems. A true boxing game does not need dragons, flying cars, or a thousand planets. It needs a ring, two boxers, physics-aware movement, intelligent reactions, referee logic, career logic, judging logic, stamina logic, damage logic, and identity logic.

Unreal Engine already supports advanced animation workflows such as Motion Matching, which selects animation poses from a database at runtime to create more responsive, reactive character movement. That kind of technology is directly relevant to boxing footwork, slips, pivots, ring cutting, stance movement, punch recovery, knockdowns, and fatigue-based movement changes. (Epic Games Developers)

That means sloppy, floaty, samey movement should not be brushed off anymore. If every boxer moves too similarly, that is not because Unreal Engine cannot handle identity. That is because the game did not build enough identity into its animation data, tuning, attributes, tendencies, traits, and boxer logic.

The same applies to presentation. MetaHuman is a complete Unreal Engine framework for creating, animating, and using fully rigged photorealistic digital humans, and MetaHuman Animator can generate facial and body animation from video, audio, or depth data. (Epic Games Developers) (Epic Games Developers)

So there should be no excuse for lifeless corners, generic reactions, weak post-fight interviews, dull stare-downs, emotionless introductions, basic boxer faces, or presentation that does not feel like boxing. If a studio wants authentic ring walks, referee presence, trainer reactions, commentator emotion, crowd intensity, and believable boxer personality, the tools exist. The decision is whether the studio prioritizes it.

This is why Poe’s Boxing Videogame Blueprint/Wishlist Blog matters. It is not just “asking for too much.” It is a structured vision for what boxing fans have been asking for across decades: realistic/sim options, smarter AI, true boxer identity, deeper creation tools, real career ecosystems, proper referees, authentic clinching, inside fighting, footwork, damage, judging, presentation, offline depth, CPU vs CPU, and sliders that let the player shape the sport.

None of that is impossible in 2026.

A realistic boxing game should have in-ring referees. It should have clinching. It should have inside fighting. It should have real ring cutting. It should have meaningful stamina. It should have punch tracking based on distance, timing, angle, balance, reach, defense, fatigue, and positioning. It should have boxers who do not all behave the same. It should have tendencies, traits, capabilities, styles, strengths, flaws, and adaptability.

If those things are missing again, fans should not be told, “That could not be done.”

They should be told the truth: it was not prioritized.

That is the difference.

When a studio says it now has Unreal Engine, more experience, more structure, nearly 100 people, outside consultants, and developers connected to EA Sports, Rockstar, and 2K, the pressure increases. Those names bring expectations. EA Sports means sports-game experience. 2K means deep franchise, presentation, tendency, and player-identity expectations. Rockstar means animation quality, world detail, immersion, and polish expectations. Once those names are placed near the project, fans are not wrong for expecting more.

SCI cannot use those names for credibility and then lower expectations when boxing fans ask for real depth.

And this is where the “authentic” language becomes dangerous. Authentic cannot just mean licensed boxers, real gloves, scanned faces, and nice lighting. Authentic boxing means the sport behaves like boxing. It means styles clash. It means distance matters. It means a jab controls space. It means inside fighting changes the fight. It means a clinch can save a hurt boxer or frustrate an aggressive one. It means a referee can affect rhythm. It means a boxer’s personality, discipline, habits, toughness, IQ, and conditioning show up in the ring.

A boxing game cannot keep hiding behind surface authenticity while avoiding simulation depth.

That is why Unreal Engine 5+ leaves no room for excuses. The engine gives them the platform. The experience they claim to have gives them the personnel argument. The sequel gives them the reset. The community has already given them years of feedback. Poe’s Blueprint has already laid out systems, modes, options, and boxing-specific ideas that would separate a real boxing simulation from another arcade-leaning hybrid.

So now the burden is on SCI.

If the next Undisputed still does not have proper clinching, inside fighting, referee logic, footwork identity, real punch tracking, deep career, CPU vs CPU, advanced creation, boxer tendencies, offline sliders, and true sim options, then fans should stop accepting “we couldn’t” as an answer.

Because now it is not about impossibility.

It is about design philosophy.

It is about priorities.

It is about whether SCI truly wants to build the most advanced sports combat boxing game possible, or whether they want another safe hybrid product dressed up with better graphics and bigger marketing language.

Unreal Engine 5+ gives them the stage.

The AAA hires give them the pressure.

The boxing community gave them the blueprint.

Now SCI has to prove whether they were really listening.

The strongest line in this whole argument is: “If it is missing now, it was not impossible. It was not prioritized.”

Monday, July 6, 2026

The Boxing Videogame Gatekeepers: How Companies, Developers, and Company-Friendly Community Voices Try to Silence Realistic/Sim Fans

 

The Boxing Videogame Gatekeepers: How Companies, Developers, and Company-Friendly Community Voices Try to Silence Realistic/Sim Fans

There is a dirty little game being played inside the boxing videogame space.

It is not just about mechanics. It is not just about graphics. It is not just about rosters, licenses, animations, or online balance. It is about control.

Control of the narrative.

Control of who gets heard.

Control of which fans are treated as valuable and which fans are treated like problems.

For years, passionate boxing fans have been asking for one simple thing: stop disrespecting boxing. Stop treating a boxing videogame like a generic arcade fighting game with gloves. Stop hiding behind the word “authentic” when what is really being delivered is hybrid, arcade-leaning, limited, incomplete, or shallow. Stop using marketing language to make people believe they are getting a true boxing experience when the systems underneath do not fully represent the sport.

And when fans like Poe speak up with boxing knowledge, gaming history, and a long record of community involvement, the response from certain developers, owners, content creators, and company-friendly defenders is predictable.

They do not debate the blueprint.

They do not debate the mechanics.

They do not debate the lack of public data.

They attack the person.

They try to make Poe look delusional. They try to make it seem like he does not know what he is talking about. They try to make it seem like videogaming is not his era. They try to make him look like an old man yelling at clouds instead of what he actually is: a former boxer, a longtime gamer, a boxing game community veteran, and one of the few people consistently pushing for boxing to be represented with real depth.

That is not criticism.

That is gatekeeping.

“Authentic” Has Become the Industry’s Safe Word

The word “authentic” has become one of the most overused and suspicious words in sports gaming.

It sounds strong. It sounds respectful. It sounds like the developers care about the sport. But in practice, “authentic” can be used to avoid saying “simulation.” It can be used to sell a game to hardcore fans without committing to hardcore systems. It can be used to dress up a hybrid game as something deeper than it is.

That is why realistic/sim fans push back.

Because “authentic” is not enough.

Authentic boxer models are not enough.

Authentic arenas are not enough.

Authentic trunks, gloves, robes, lighting, ring announcers, and commentary are not enough.

A boxing game is not truly representing boxing if the ring does not matter. It is not truly representing boxing if clinching is missing or shallow. It is not truly representing boxing if inside fighting is ignored. It is not truly representing boxing if footwork has no real tactical consequence. It is not truly representing boxing if every boxer feels like the same template with different ratings. It is not truly representing boxing if stamina behaves like a basic videogame meter instead of fight fatigue. It is not truly representing boxing if AI cannot cut off the ring, protect a lead, survive trouble, adjust, foul, clinch, or fight differently based on style.

Real boxing fans know the difference between atmosphere and simulation.

That is why the word “authentic” gets challenged.

And that is exactly why certain people do not want fans like Poe in the room.

They Call Him Delusional Because They Cannot Beat the Argument

Let’s be honest.

Calling Poe “delusional” is lazy.

It is what people do when they do not want to address the work. It is what people do when they cannot answer the design points. It is what people do when they are uncomfortable with someone who has been around the sport, around gaming, and around the community long enough to see through recycled excuses.

Poe is not saying every idea must be added instantly. He is not saying budget does not matter. He is not saying development is easy. He is saying boxing deserves serious systems. He is saying a boxing videogame should be built around boxing logic. He is saying hardcore fans should not be brushed aside while companies market to them. He is saying the community deserves transparency, options, and honest language.

That is not delusion.

That is consumer advocacy.

That is design criticism.

That is sports knowledge.

That is fan leadership.

The people calling him delusional usually do not want to discuss the actual details. They do not want to discuss tendencies, traits, capabilities, realistic punch tracking, referee logic, judging logic, trainer chemistry, ring control, career structure, creation suites, simulation sliders, AI behavior, or realistic movement.

They would rather reduce everything to a personal insult.

Why?

Because if they engage the actual blueprint seriously, they have to admit something uncomfortable: a lot of what Poe and other realistic/sim fans are asking for makes sense.

“You’re Too Old to Play Videogames” Is a Weak, Ignorant Argument

One of the dumbest attacks used against older gamers is the idea that videogames are “for kids.”

That argument is not only disrespectful. It is historically ignorant.

Videogames have existed for generations. The people who grew up with early home consoles, arcades, sports games, fighting games, boxing games, and online communities are adults now. Some are parents. Some are grandparents. Some are developers. Some are streamers. Some are moderators. Some are collectors. Some are competitive players. Some are the very people who helped build the culture these younger fans now enjoy.

Gaming is not a children’s table.

It is a multigenerational medium.

The idea that Poe is somehow outside the gaming era is laughable. Poe’s era includes gaming. Poe’s era helped build gaming culture. Poe comes from the generation that saw gaming grow from simple mechanics into massive sports simulations, open worlds, online leagues, deep career modes, user-generated content, and community-driven development.

So when someone says, “You’re too old to be playing videogames,” what they are really saying is, “Your experience threatens my shallow argument.”

Because older sports gamers remember what was promised before. They remember what older games had. They remember what was removed. They remember when games had more offline depth. They remember when boxing games had systems that modern titles still struggle to match. They remember the difference between progress and excuses.

That memory is valuable.

That memory is dangerous to companies that want consumers to accept less.

The Community Has Too Many Unpaid Defenders Acting Like Company Employees

One of the biggest problems in modern gaming communities is the rise of unpaid company defenders.

These are the people who jump in front of every serious criticism like they work in the studio’s PR department. They excuse everything. They explain away everything. They attack disappointed fans. They act like asking for basic sports features is unreasonable. They tell people to be patient forever. They claim the company has no resources, no manpower, no budget, and no time, while still expecting consumers to pay full price and stay quiet.

They do not demand evidence from the company.

They demand silence from the fans.

That is backwards.

A customer should not have to prove why he deserves a complete product. A boxing fan should not have to apologize for wanting boxing in a boxing game. A community member should not be called toxic for asking why promised or expected systems are missing. A former boxer should not be mocked for explaining how boxing actually works.

But that is what happens when access culture corrupts community discussion.

Some people want to be close to the company. They want replies. They want recognition. They want early news. They want invites. They want their channel, stream, Discord role, or social status protected. So they start defending the company harder than the company defends itself.

They become gatekeepers.

They decide which criticism is “acceptable.” They decide which fans are “too negative.” They decide who gets labeled a real supporter and who gets labeled a hater. They help create the illusion that the community is united behind the company, even when many fans are frustrated, disappointed, or simply tired of being ignored.

This is how criticism gets buried.

Not always by official censorship, but by social pressure.

The “Loud Minority” Label Is Useless Without Public Data

One of the most insulting phrases thrown at hardcore fans is “loud minority.”

It is a convenient phrase because it sounds authoritative without proving anything.

Where is the data?

Where is the independent third-party survey?

Where are the public results?

Where is the methodology?

Where is the breakdown between casual fans, boxing fans, sim players, arcade players, offline players, online players, career mode players, creation suite players, and long-term sports gamers?

Without public data, “loud minority” is not evidence.

It is a dismissal tactic.

It is used to make realistic/sim fans feel smaller than they are. It is used to suggest that their expectations are fringe. It is used to protect a design direction without having to prove that the broader audience actually wants that direction.

And here is the bigger issue: even if realistic/sim fans were a minority, that still would not make them irrelevant.

Hardcore sports fans are often the ones who keep games alive long after casual attention fades. They buy DLC. They create content. They build rosters. They run leagues. They make sliders. They create forums. They test mechanics. They expose flaws. They educate new players. They preserve the game’s reputation or destroy it when the game disrespects the sport.

A company that ignores hardcore fans because they are supposedly a minority is gambling with the game’s long-term credibility.

Poe Adds Value Because He Understands the Sport and the Medium

The idea that Poe adds no value to a boxing videogame project is ridiculous.

A serious boxing videogame project needs more than programmers and artists. It needs boxing minds. It needs sports-game historians. It needs community voices. It needs people who understand what fans have been asking for across decades. It needs people who can explain why a boxer does not feel like himself. It needs people who can identify when movement, stamina, punching, defense, clinching, and AI are not representing the sport correctly.

Poe brings that.

He has boxed.

He has played boxing games for decades.

He has been part of boxing game communities.

He has written extensively about what a serious boxing game could become.

He understands the difference between arcade fun, hybrid compromise, and simulation depth.

He is not just saying, “Make the game better.”

He is explaining how.

That is exactly the kind of person a serious studio should want around the table, even if only as a community consultant, feedback reviewer, design reference, or advisory voice.

But some people do not want Poe valued because valuing Poe means admitting that the community had answers before the company claimed it needed more time, more money, more staff, or more feedback.

It means admitting that passionate fans were not just complaining.

They were warning.

The Real Problem Is Not Poe’s Tone; It Is the Industry’s Comfort With Low Standards

Whenever passionate fans push hard, people love to shift the conversation to tone.

“He’s too aggressive.”

“He says too much.”

“He keeps repeating himself.”

“He needs to calm down.”

“He should be more respectful.”

Tone policing is often used to avoid substance.

Because the real question is not whether Poe’s delivery makes everybody comfortable. The real question is whether the boxing game space has accepted low standards for too long.

Why are basic boxing systems treated like luxury requests?

Why is realistic clinching treated like an impossible dream?

Why is inside fighting missing or minimized?

Why are referee systems treated like decoration?

Why are career modes shallow?

Why are creation suites limited?

Why are boxer identities not deep enough?

Why are sim fans told to compromise while arcade and hybrid players are treated as the default audience?

Why does boxing, one of the most tactical and dramatic sports in the world, keep getting reduced to surface-level exchanges?

Those are the questions people do not want to answer.

So they attack the fan asking them.

“It’s Just a Game” Is What People Say When They Have No Respect for the Sport

Another tired line is, “It’s just a game.”

That phrase sounds harmless, but in sports gaming, it becomes an excuse for disrespect.

Nobody says “it’s just a game” when they want realism in football, basketball, racing, golf, soccer, or baseball. Fans expect rules, tactics, presentation, physics, ratings, strategy, franchise depth, career systems, and accurate player identity. They expect the sport to be respected.

But when boxing fans ask for the same seriousness, suddenly it is “just a game.”

That is hypocrisy.

A boxing videogame is not just a toy to the people who love the sport. It is interactive representation. It is how new fans learn styles. It is how old fans relive eras. It is how younger players discover legends. It is how communities create dream fights, careers, tournaments, rivalries, and histories that boxing politics often prevents in real life.

Sports games matter because sports matter to the people who play them.

So no, it is not “just a game” when the game is selling the image, names, history, and culture of boxing.

It is a representation of the sport.

And representation deserves standards.

Companies Cannot Use Hardcore Fans for Hype Then Dismiss Them for Accountability

This is the part that needs to be said clearly.

Companies love passionate fans when those fans create hype.

They love the posts, the shares, the speculation, the wish lists, the trailer breakdowns, the community energy, the free promotion, the podcasts, the debates, and the emotional investment.

But once those same fans start asking hard questions, suddenly they are too negative.

That is manipulative.

You cannot benefit from hardcore boxing fan passion during the marketing phase and then dismiss that same passion during the accountability phase. You cannot sell a dream to sim fans and then act shocked when they expect sim substance. You cannot market to boxing purists and then blame them for noticing that the product does not fully respect boxing.

That is not a fan problem.

That is a credibility problem.

If a company wants casual applause, say that. If it wants hybrid gameplay, say that. If it wants arcade accessibility first, say that. But do not dress the product in “authentic boxing” language, attract the hardcore audience, and then call them unreasonable when they ask where the boxing systems are.

The Push to Silence Poe Is Really a Push to Silence Standards

This is bigger than one man.

The attack on Poe is really an attack on standards.

Because Poe represents a standard some people do not want to deal with. A standard that says boxing games should have deep mechanics. A standard that says offline players matter. A standard that says creation suites should be revolutionary. A standard that says career mode should be a living ecosystem. A standard that says boxers should have identity beyond ratings. A standard that says hardcore fans deserve options, not insults.

That standard makes lazy arguments look weak.

It makes vague marketing look weak.

It makes company-friendly community defense look weak.

It makes “be grateful” culture look weak.

That is why they try to make Poe seem crazy. That is why they try to make him seem too old. That is why they try to make him seem irrelevant. That is why they act like his ideas are impossible instead of admitting they are ambitious. That is why they pretend he adds no value instead of recognizing that he has been doing unpaid design thinking that some studios should have been doing from the start.

They are not just trying to silence Poe.

They are trying to silence the expectation that boxing deserves better.

Conclusion: Boxing Fans Are Not the Problem. Low Expectations Are.

The boxing videogame community does not need less passion.

It needs more honesty.

It needs companies to stop hiding behind vague words. It needs developers to stop treating missing systems like fan imagination. It needs owners to stop dismissing hardcore fans while benefiting from their hype. It needs content creators and community members to stop acting like unpaid security guards for companies. It needs serious public data instead of lazy “loud minority” labels. It needs respect for older gamers who helped build the culture. It needs respect for former boxers who understand what the sport should feel like.

Most of all, it needs to stop pretending that fans like Poe are the problem.

Poe is not the problem.

Passionate sim fans are not the problem.

Hardcore boxing fans are not the problem.

The problem is a boxing videogame culture that has allowed too many people to mistake shallow authenticity for true simulation. The problem is a community environment where some people would rather protect company narratives than demand better. The problem is an industry that wants the credibility of boxing without always doing the hard work to represent boxing.

A realistic/sim boxing game is not an impossible fantasy.

It is a standard.

And standards only sound extreme to people who got comfortable accepting less.


Sunday, July 5, 2026

SCI Needs to Stop Using “Community” as a Shield From Boxing Accountability


SCI Needs to Stop Using “Community” as a Shield From Boxing Accountability

SCI has to stop acting like community management is the same thing as boxing knowledge.

There is a major difference between having people who can talk to players, calm down backlash, repeat studio messaging, and defend company decisions, versus having people who actually understand boxing deeply enough to recognize when the game is drifting away from the sport. That difference matters. Especially when the product being sold is supposed to represent boxing.

From the outside, it feels like SCI has leaned on community managers who have very little visible boxing experience, while the actual boxing voices that were once attached to the project seem to have disappeared, been pushed aside, or reduced to marketing memories. That is why many fans keep asking the same question:

What happened to the pro boxers and real boxing people who were involved during the early ESBC days?

Because the game that was originally shown and the game fans ended up with do not feel like they came from the same boxing-first vision.

A community manager can be useful. Nobody is saying the role has no value. But community managers should not become silent mascots who only pop up when it is time to defend SCI, soften criticism, or explain away decisions that made the game feel more like an arcade fighting game than an authentic boxing simulation.

That is the problem.

When serious boxing fans raise concerns about footwork, inside fighting, clinching, referee behavior, punch identity, boxer tendencies, defensive responsibility, stamina realism, damage, presentation, career depth, and overall ring logic, they are not asking for “too much.” They are asking for the basics of the sport to be respected.

Boxing fans are not confused because the game is difficult to make. They are frustrated because SCI marketed authenticity, used the language of boxing, leaned on the excitement of real boxing names, and then delivered a product where too many foundational boxing systems were either missing, shallow, removed, or built around casual fighting-game logic.

That disconnect is exactly why transparency matters.

If SCI wants to claim they are listening to the community, then the company needs to clarify which community they are actually listening to. Are they listening to boxing fans who want a realistic representation of the sport? Are they listening to casual arcade fighting game fans who just want fast exchanges and simplified gameplay? Are they listening to content creators? Discord regulars? Ranked online players? Internal staff? Investors? Publishers?

Because “the community” cannot keep being used as a vague shield.

Real boxing fans are part of the community too. Former boxers are part of the community. Offline players are part of the community. Career mode fans are part of the community. Sim players are part of the community. The people who followed ESBC because they believed it was going to be the boxing game they had waited years for are absolutely part of the community.

So when those people speak up, they should not be treated like a problem, a loud minority, or a group that does not understand game development.

The better question is this:

Why were people with real boxing knowledge not kept closer to the core design of the game?

If pro boxers, trainers, boxing historians, judges, referees, and serious boxing minds were involved from the beginning, why does the final product feel like so many boxing fundamentals were compromised? Why does it feel like the sport got filtered through people who understand gaming conversations better than they understand the ring?

This is not about attacking employees. This is about accountability.

A boxing videogame needs more than marketing, licensing, roster names, and community defense. It needs boxing people with influence. It needs people in the room who can say, “No, that is not how boxing works.” It needs people who can challenge bad design decisions before they become baked into the game.

Because when the wrong voices dominate development, the result is predictable: the game starts serving people who want boxing to behave like an arcade fighting game, while the actual boxing fans are told to lower their standards.

That cannot keep happening.

SCI needs to stop hiding behind community management and start answering real questions about boxing direction, boxing consultation, and who actually has authority over authenticity. If the company truly wants to build an authentic boxing game, then real boxing experience cannot be decorative. It has to be central.

Boxers should not be used for trailers.

Boxing brands should not be used for credibility.

Boxing fans should not be used for hype.

And community managers should not be used as a wall between the company and legitimate criticism.

If SCI wants trust back, they need to be honest about what changed, who is shaping the game now, and why the boxing-first vision many fans believed in appears to have been replaced by something far more casual, simplified, and arcade-driven.

That is not disrespectful to ask.

That is exactly what serious boxing fans should be asking.

This version hits hard but keeps the focus on roles, transparency, and design accountability, not personal insults.

SCI, Stop Selling Authentic Boxing While Avoiding Boxing Fundamentals.


An Open Letter to SCI: Stop Calling It Authentic Boxing If the Boxing Systems Are Missing

Steel City Interactive needs to hear this clearly.

You cannot keep using the language of authentic boxing while delivering a boxing game that still feels built around arcade-minded expectations.

You cannot sell boxing fans on realism, simulation, boxing culture, licensed athletes, official brands, and “made by boxing fans for boxing fans,” then act surprised when real boxing fans judge the product by boxing standards.

That is the part some companies and defenders of Undisputed keep trying to avoid.

Boxing fans are not judging Undisputed unfairly.

They are judging a boxing game by boxing.

That should not be controversial.

The problem is not that boxing fans are too serious. The problem is that too many people want boxing fans to accept less while the game continues to borrow credibility from the sport.

Arcade Fun Is Not the Same as Boxing Fun

A casual arcade combat-game fan may think fun means constant punching, fast movement, quick knockdowns, easy offense, and nonstop action.

That may work for that audience.

But most serious boxing fans do not look at boxing that way.

Boxing fans find fun in timing.

They find fun in distance.

They find fun in rhythm.

They find fun in traps.

They find fun in body work paying off late.

They find fun in a jab controlling a round.

They find fun in a boxer making another boxer miss by inches.

They find fun in pressure that cuts the ring off instead of chasing.

They find fun in a slick boxer controlling pace without running.

They find fun in a heavy-handed boxer making every exchange feel dangerous.

They find fun in rounds that tell a story.

That is boxing fun.

If a boxing game is built mainly around what casual arcade players find exciting, then the sport gets watered down. It becomes a glove game instead of a boxing game.

And that is exactly why so many boxing fans are frustrated.

Stop Treating Serious Boxing Fans Like They Are the Problem

Every time serious boxing fans ask for more realism, more depth, or more complete boxing systems, there is always a group ready to dismiss them.

“You’re asking for too much.”

“It’s just a game.”

“Casual players don’t care about that.”

“That would make the game boring.”

“You’re being negative.”

No.

That response is tired.

Boxing fans are not asking for too much when they ask for clinching.

They are not asking for too much when they ask for inside fighting.

They are not asking for too much when they ask for an in-ring referee.

They are not asking for too much when they ask for realistic stamina.

They are not asking for too much when they ask for better footwork.

They are not asking for too much when they ask for boxer identity.

They are not asking for too much when they ask for real AI tendencies.

They are not asking for too much when they ask for CPU vs. CPU.

They are not asking for too much when they ask for deeper creation tools.

They are not asking for too much when they ask for a career mode that actually feels like the boxing world.

Those are not luxury features.

Those are boxing features.

A company making a boxing game should not treat the actual sport like optional downloadable content.

Licensing Is Not Authenticity

Undisputed has licensed boxers.

That matters.

But licensing alone does not make a boxing game authentic.

A licensed boxer who does not move, punch, defend, react, or behave like himself is not true representation. That is a digital costume.

A real boxing game should make boxers feel different beyond ratings and cosmetics.

A pressure boxer should not feel like a loose outside mover.

A defensive boxer should not feel useless because the game does not reward intelligent defense.

A heavyweight should not move like a lightweight.

A puncher should not feel dangerous only because a number says he has power.

A slick boxer should not be reduced to generic movement.

A body puncher should not lose his identity because body work lacks real long-term impact.

A clinch specialist, inside worker, counterpuncher, rhythm breaker, jab artist, or veteran technician should not be flattened into the same universal gameplay mold.

That is not authenticity.

That is branding over missing depth.

SCI Cannot Keep Hiding Behind Casual Players

Casual players are not the enemy.

A boxing game should welcome them.

It should have tutorials, sliders, assists, difficulty options, accessible controls, and faster settings for people who want a lighter experience.

But casual appeal should never become the excuse for shallow boxing.

The job of a great sports game is not to erase the sport for newcomers. The job is to introduce newcomers to the sport properly.

Madden did not grow football fans by removing football concepts.

NBA 2K did not grow basketball culture by pretending tendencies, spacing, roles, and signature styles do not matter.

A real boxing game should teach casual players why boxing is great.

Teach them why a jab matters.

Teach them why foot placement matters.

Teach them why missing punches has a cost.

Teach them why clinching is part of boxing.

Teach them why defense is not running.

Teach them why styles make fights.

Do not use casual players as a shield every time serious boxing fans ask for a better game.

Stop Calling Missing Boxing Systems “Design Choices”

When key parts of boxing are missing or poorly represented, fans have every right to question the vision.

No true clinch system?

That is not a small detail.

Weak inside fighting?

That is not a small detail.

No real in-ring referee presence?

That is not a small detail.

Poor stamina consequences?

That is not a small detail.

Boxers feeling too similar?

That is not a small detail.

Shallow career structure?

That is not a small detail.

Limited creation depth?

That is not a small detail.

AI that does not truly represent boxer tendencies?

That is not a small detail.

Those things are not minor complaints from picky fans. They are symptoms of a boxing game that does not fully respect the complexity of boxing.

A company cannot cut out the difficult parts of the sport, simplify the rest, and then market the product as authentic.

That is where the criticism comes from.

The Hardcore Boxing Audience Is the Long-Term Audience

Here is what companies need to understand.

Casual players may buy the game, play for a while, chase knockouts, complain when things get difficult, and move on.

The serious boxing fans stay.

They create boxers.

They build rosters.

They test sliders.

They make fantasy matchups.

They run tournaments.

They support DLC.

They compare eras.

They create content.

They debate ratings.

They keep the community alive when the hype cycle dies.

They are the audience that gives a boxing game long-term value.

So why are they so often treated like a burden?

Why is the sim boxing fan treated like an inconvenience?

Why is the offline boxing fan treated like an afterthought?

Why is the creation community not prioritized more?

Why are people who actually understand boxing dismissed when they point out what is missing?

That is bad community management.

That is bad design philosophy.

That is bad business.

Boxers Who Are Not Gamers Need to Understand This Too

Real boxers who do not play sports games may not understand how much this matters.

They may think a video game is just entertainment.

But sports games shape how fans see athletes.

They teach younger fans names, styles, ratings, strengths, weaknesses, rivalries, eras, and history.

A bad boxing game can teach the wrong version of boxing.

It can make casual players think nonstop punching is smart.

It can make them think defense is boring.

It can make them think footwork is running.

It can make them think clinching has no purpose.

It can make them think every boxer should be judged only by speed, power, and aggression.

It can make a skilled boxer look generic.

It can erase what made a real boxer special.

That is why boxers should care.

Their craft should not be reduced to shallow arcade habits.

Their styles should not be flattened.

Their sport should not be repackaged as casual chaos while being advertised as authentic boxing.

The Real Question for SCI

SCI needs to answer one simple question.

Are you making a boxing game, or are you making an arcade combat game wearing boxing gloves?

Because those are not the same thing.

A real boxing game can still be exciting.

It can still be accessible.

It can still have casual settings.

It can still have online competition.

It can still have knockouts.

It can still have drama.

But the foundation must be boxing.

Not arcade comfort.

Not universal movement.

Not missing fundamentals.

Not marketing language without matching mechanics.

Not licensed boxers who feel too similar.

Not a career mode that barely captures the sport.

Not a creation suite that fails to represent the depth of boxing identity.

Not a game where the hardest parts of boxing are treated like problems to avoid.

If the sport is too complex to represent, then stop marketing the game like the definitive authentic boxing experience.

If the game is hybrid, say it is hybrid.

If the game is arcade-leaning, say it is arcade-leaning.

But do not sell authenticity to boxing fans and then blame those same boxing fans for expecting authenticity.

Boxing Deserves a Higher Standard

Boxing is not a side genre.

Boxing is not just two athletes punching.

Boxing is footwork, defense, rhythm, pressure, fear, discipline, pain, fatigue, intelligence, timing, distance, patience, violence, history, and consequence.

A boxing game should capture that.

It should have casual options without disrespecting the sim audience.

It should have online competition without sacrificing offline depth.

It should have licensed boxers without ignoring boxer identity.

It should have accessibility without removing boxing logic.

It should have presentation without using presentation as a substitute for gameplay substance.

It should have fun, but the fun should come from boxing.

That is the point.

Boxing is already fun.

Boxing is already dramatic.

Boxing is already dangerous.

Boxing is already tactical.

Boxing is already emotional.

Boxing does not need to be turned into something else to entertain people.

It needs to be represented properly.

Final Word to SCI

Stop confusing arcade excitement with boxing authenticity.

Stop treating serious boxing fans like they are asking for impossible things.

Stop hiding behind casual players when the criticism is about missing boxing fundamentals.

Stop acting like licensed boxers automatically equal authentic representation.

Stop using boxing language if the systems do not back it up.

The boxing community is not wrong for expecting boxing from a boxing game.

The sim audience is not wrong for wanting options.

The offline audience is not wrong for wanting depth.

The creation community is not wrong for wanting freedom.

The hardcore fans are not wrong for demanding more than surface-level authenticity.

If SCI, Undisputed, or any company wants the respect of boxing fans, then respect the sport first.

Not just in trailers.

Not just in interviews.

Not just in slogans.

Not just in licensing.

Not just in marketing.

Respect it in the gameplay.

Respect it in the systems.

Respect it in the AI.

Respect it in the career mode.

Respect it in the creation suite.

Respect it in the way every boxer feels, moves, thinks, reacts, wins, loses, survives, adjusts, and breaks down.

That is what authenticity means.

Anything less is just boxing branding without the full boxing soul.


Stop Using “It’s a Game” to Protect Weak Boxing Mechanics

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