Criticism Isn’t Hate. It’s a Demand for Better Boxing
There’s a narrative floating around that needs to be addressed head-on:
If you criticize Steel City Interactive or Undisputed, you must want the game to fail.
That’s not just wrong. It’s dangerously misleading.
Criticism Comes From Investment, Not Malice
People who are speaking up are not outsiders throwing rocks.
They are the very audience that carried the idea of a modern boxing game for over a decade.
They waited.
They supported early builds.
They promoted the vision.
And most importantly, they believed in what this game said it would be.
Criticism, in this context, is not sabotage.
It is accountability.
The Real Issue: A Growing Disconnect
The frustration isn’t about nitpicking. It’s about a widening gap between:
- What was promised
- What was marketed
- What is actually being delivered
When players see:
- Saturation-level marketing pushes
- Core mechanics that feel underdeveloped or inconsistent
- Modes that lack depth or long-term engagement
- Extended periods of silence when clarity is needed most
…it creates a sense that priorities may be misaligned.
And that’s where criticism becomes unavoidable.
“It’s Their First Game” Isn’t a Shield
Yes, this is their first title.
That matters, but it doesn’t excuse everything.
Why?
Because this wasn’t presented as a small, experimental indie release.
It was positioned as a serious attempt at a modern boxing simulation, backed by:
- Real fighters
- Real marketing campaigns
- Real expectations
When you step into that arena, the standard changes.
You don’t get evaluated as “just a first try.”
You get evaluated based on what you claim to be.
Blind Defense Helps No One
There’s another side to this conversation that needs honesty.
Some defenders reduce everything to one point:
“At least we have a boxing game.”
That mindset is exactly how standards slip.
Accepting:
- Broken systems
- Incomplete features
- Lack of communication
…just because the genre has been dormant is not support. It’s surrender.
If anything, boxing as a sport deserves more care in its digital representation, not less.
Silence Is Louder Than Criticism
One of the biggest issues isn’t even the gameplay itself. It’s the lack of consistent, transparent communication.
When players feel unheard, they don’t just get frustrated.
They start questioning trust.
And once trust is damaged, no amount of marketing can repair it overnight.
What People Actually Want
Let’s be clear about something.
The majority of critics are not asking for perfection.
They are asking for:
- Honest communication
- Systems that reflect real boxing principles
- Depth that supports long-term play
- A clear direction that aligns with the original vision
That’s not unreasonable.
That’s the baseline for a game that positions itself as authentic.
Wanting Better Is Not Wanting Failure
No one benefits from a failed boxing game.
Not the developers.
Not the players.
Not the sport.
But success built on ignoring flaws isn’t real success.
It’s temporary.
The people speaking up are doing so because they don’t want another missed opportunity.
They’ve seen what happens when issues are brushed aside.
Final Thought
You can support a game and still challenge it.
You can want it to succeed and still demand better.
In fact, those two things go hand in hand.
Because real support doesn’t come from silence.
It comes from holding the standard where it belongs.




