Saturday, July 18, 2026

Will Boxing Ever Receive a Truly Authentic Videogame?

 

Will Boxing Ever Receive a Truly Authentic Videogame?

Yes, I believe it will eventually happen. But it will not happen automatically, and it may not come from a company whose primary objective is creating a competitive online fighting game.

The greater danger is that boxing continues receiving games that look like boxing, borrow boxing terminology and license famous boxers, while fundamentally operating like conventional arcade fighting games.

That is what “cosplaying as boxing” means:

  • Authentic trunks, gloves, arenas and ring walks
  • Recognizable champions and legends
  • Television-style presentation
  • Marketing built around “the Sweet Science”
  • But underneath everything, standardized movement, symmetrical balancing, exploitable combinations, simplified defense and limited boxer individuality

That is not a simulation of boxing. It is a fighting game wearing boxing equipment.

The Difference Between Looking Authentic and Being Authentic

A boxing game can feature photorealistic Muhammad Ali, Canelo Álvarez or Sugar Ray Leonard and still fail to represent how any of them actually boxed.

Visual authenticity asks:

Does this resemble a boxing broadcast?

Systemic authenticity asks:

Does the game understand why these boxers move, react, attack, defend, tire, adjust and make decisions differently?

The industry has become much better at the first question than the second.

Steel City Interactive continues to describe Undisputed as an authentic boxing experience, highlighting licensed boxers, unique punch sets and strategic control. Its own studio language says its objective is to deliver an authentic game that does justice to boxing.

But calling something authentic does not establish that it has successfully simulated boxing. As of July 18, 2026, the Steam version still carries “Mixed” English-language user reviews, despite being marketed as the most authentic boxing game to date. That does not prove every criticism is correct, but it demonstrates a significant gap between the game’s positioning and how a large portion of its audience experienced the finished product.

Why Developers Keep Drifting Toward Competitive Arcade Design

1. Competitive balance becomes more important than boxing reality

Competitive games are usually designed around fairness, readability and predictable counters.

Boxing is not naturally symmetrical.

Some boxers are:

  • Faster than nearly everyone they face
  • Unusually powerful for their division
  • Extremely difficult to hurt
  • Awkward because of their stance or dimensions
  • Poorly equipped to fight at certain distances
  • Technically limited but physically overwhelming
  • Brilliant against one style and vulnerable against another

A simulation must embrace those inequalities.

A competitive fighting game often tries to smooth them out so that every matchup remains manageable. Once that happens, the boxer’s identity becomes secondary to the player’s command execution.

Boxing is not fair. It is explainable.

A realistic game should explain the advantages and disadvantages through ratings, tendencies, physical measurements, tactical preparation and consequences. It should not erase them for artificial parity.

2. Developers confuse accessibility with simplification

A realistic game does not have to be inaccessible.

Accessibility can come through:

  • Assisted defensive controls
  • Optional combination assistance
  • Simplified corner instructions
  • Training overlays
  • Tactical tutorials
  • Adjustable reaction windows
  • Casual, hybrid and simulation presets
  • Extensive gameplay and AI sliders

The solution is not to weaken the simulation foundation. The solution is to allow different players to interact with that foundation at different levels.

This is why options and sliders are so important. A company does not have to force one experience on everyone. It can build one boxing engine and provide several rule and assistance layers.

3. Online competition begins controlling the entire game

Once ranked online play becomes the design center, developers start worrying about:

  • Match duration
  • Spectator excitement
  • Controller responsiveness
  • Counter windows
  • Exploits
  • Repetitive tactics
  • Win-rate balance
  • Immediate feedback
  • Constant offensive activity

Those concerns are legitimate for an online mode. They should not dictate every offline mode, every CPU boxer, career mode, simulation setting and exhibition match.

A ranked competitive environment can have its own contracts, presets and restrictions. Offline simulation should not be sacrificed because ranked players require standardized conditions.

4. Punch volume is mistaken for entertainment

Boxing’s tension does not come solely from punches being thrown.

It comes from:

  • A boxer attempting to establish lead-foot position
  • A jab slowly taking away an opponent’s confidence
  • One boxer refusing to enter the other’s preferred range
  • A pressure boxer cutting off escape routes
  • A counterpuncher conditioning an opponent into making a mistake
  • Fatigue changing the viability of a game plan
  • A damaged hand reducing punch selection
  • A trainer recognizing that the original strategy has failed
  • A boxer surviving a dangerous round and changing the contest

A game that does not understand these moments may need constant punching to remain exciting. A true boxing simulation would make positioning, hesitation, probing and adjustment meaningful.

What a Real Boxing Simulation Would Require

It would not simply need more animations. It would require a different design philosophy.

A simulation-first boxing engine

The foundational systems should calculate:

  • Distance
  • Reach
  • angle of attack
  • Weight transfer
  • Momentum
  • balance
  • foot placement
  • stance alignment
  • punch trajectory
  • defensive positioning
  • visibility
  • anticipation
  • accumulated damage
  • localized fatigue
  • neurological disruption
  • recovery
  • confidence
  • strategic adaptation

The game should determine the result first according to boxing logic, then present the correct animation. It should not select an attractive animation and reverse-engineer the outcome afterward.

Genuine boxer identity

Two boxers should not feel different merely because one has an 87 jab rating and the other has an 82.

Identity must come from the interaction between:

  • Attributes
  • tendencies
  • capabilities
  • traits
  • physical dimensions
  • stance
  • posture
  • punch mechanics
  • defensive habits
  • preferred ranges
  • combination logic
  • risk tolerance
  • conditioning
  • ring intelligence
  • emotional response
  • trainer influence
  • injury history

A player controlling Joe Frazier should be encouraged by the systems to pressure, slip, close distance and attack the body. A player controlling Thomas Hearns should naturally understand the value of length, leverage and straight-punch positioning.

The game should not merely allow players to imitate those styles. It should make those styles emerge from the boxers’ identities.

Real consequences for bad boxing

A player should not be able to disregard fundamentals without consequences.

Examples include:

  • Crossing the feet and losing balance
  • Squaring the stance and becoming vulnerable
  • Punching without proper range
  • Retreating in straight lines
  • Repeatedly leaning in the same direction
  • Throwing combinations without resetting
  • Switching stances without the necessary skill
  • Blocking excessive punishment without guard deterioration
  • Missing power punches without stamina and positional consequences
  • Ignoring body damage
  • Fighting through severe cuts without impairment
  • Using identical tactics against every opponent

The game must teach boxing through consequences, not merely through tutorial text.

A living boxing ecosystem

Authenticity cannot stop when the bell rings.

A complete boxing simulation should include:

  • Amateur development
  • matchmaking
  • managers
  • promoters
  • trainers
  • cutmen
  • judges
  • referees
  • sanctioning organizations
  • rankings
  • mandatory challengers
  • contractual negotiations
  • purse splits
  • regional circuits
  • rival promotions
  • injuries
  • weight management
  • replacement opponents
  • media narratives
  • gym relationships
  • sparring partners
  • boxer aging and decline
  • CPU-generated prospects
  • changing tactical trends

Career mode should simulate the sport, not merely provide a menu connecting one fight to the next.

The Most Realistic Commercial Path

The first major authentic boxing game probably will not advertise itself as an uncompromising simulation that ignores casual players.

A more practical model would be:

One authentic foundation

Punch mechanics, movement, stamina, damage, AI and boxer identities are built according to boxing principles.

Three experience lanes

Simulation

Minimal assistance, realistic consequences, greater boxer asymmetry, deeper officiating and authentic pacing.

Hybrid

The same foundation with wider defensive windows, clearer feedback, moderate assistance and more forgiving movement.

Casual

Simplified controls, stronger assistance, faster pacing, reduced punishment for technical mistakes and presentation designed for immediate enjoyment.

None of these modes would need to destroy the others.

The mistake is building an arcade foundation and attempting to create a “simulation mode” by slowing punches, increasing stamina costs and removing the HUD. That does not create simulation. It creates a slower arcade game.

Does the Undisputed Sequel Represent Hope?

It represents an opportunity, but not proof.

Steel City Interactive confirmed in April 2026 that production had begun on a sequel, with development shifting to a new Unreal Engine foundation. Ash Habib said the original game was a learning period, that the sequel would be built with a new foundation and that developers with experience at companies including EA Sports, Rockstar and 2K had joined the studio.

Early secondhand reports describe substantially reworked movement, simultaneous slipping and punching, improved online synchronization and a complete rebuild rather than a modest upgrade. Those impressions remain preliminary, however. There is no finished product available by which to determine whether the sequel will simulate boxing more deeply or simply deliver a smoother, more visually advanced competitive fighting game.

A new engine can improve animation, responsiveness, networking and visuals. It cannot decide the design philosophy.

The essential questions remain:

  • Will boxers possess genuinely different tactical intelligence?
  • Will attributes, tendencies and traits materially change behavior?
  • Will the game accept realistic matchup inequality?
  • Will footwork operate as boxing footwork rather than unrestricted locomotion?
  • Will blocking, clinching, inside fighting and officiating become complete systems?
  • Will offline simulation be protected from competitive balancing?
  • Will users receive serious sliders and customization?
  • Will career mode represent boxing as an ecosystem?
  • Will knowledgeable boxers, trainers and hardcore boxing gamers influence development before the systems are locked?

Until those questions are answered through gameplay and systems, “authentic” remains a marketing promise.

My Honest Prediction

Boxing will eventually receive an authentic and realistic videogame.

But it may require one of three developments:

  1. A studio intentionally building a simulation engine before worrying about esports.
  2. A major publisher recognizing that simulation, hybrid and casual audiences can coexist through modes, assists and sliders.
  3. A smaller boxing-focused project proving there is a market for depth, forcing larger companies to follow.

The technology is capable. The audience exists. The knowledge exists. The problem is not that boxing is impossible to simulate.

The problem is that companies repeatedly ask:

“How do we convert boxing into a familiar competitive fighting game?”

The breakthrough will happen when a company asks:

“How do we convert the intelligence, inequality, physicality, danger, patience and strategic depth of boxing into playable systems without stripping away what makes boxing boxing?”

Until then, we will continue receiving games that perform the appearance of authenticity while protecting an arcade fighting-game structure underneath.

But that outcome is not inevitable. A realistic boxing game can still be entertaining, accessible and commercially successful. It simply needs developers willing to treat authenticity as the foundation rather than a presentation layer.

Can Undisputed Ever Become a Realistic Boxing Simulation While Competitive Balance Controls Everything?

 

Can Undisputed Ever Become a Realistic Boxing Simulation While Competitive Balance Controls Everything?

How can Undisputed become a realistic boxing simulation, or even a genuinely authentic boxing game, when Steel City Interactive appears to be designing the entire experience around competitive balancing?

That is not a minor question. It affects the foundation of the game.

Competitive online play usually demands standardized rules, restricted variables, predictable outcomes, simplified systems and constant adjustments intended to keep every matchup reasonably “fair.” Authentic boxing does not operate that way. Boxing is filled with physical, stylistic, tactical and psychological inequalities.

Some boxers are faster.

Some hit dramatically harder.

Some have better stamina, stronger chins, longer reaches, superior reflexes or more intelligent footwork.

Some styles are naturally difficult for other styles.

Some matchups are competitive on paper but become completely one-sided in the ring.

That is boxing.

When developers prioritize competitive balance above authenticity, there is a danger that every boxer will be forced into the same artificial gameplay structure. Power must be controlled. Movement must be normalized. Defensive advantages must be reduced. Reach differences must be softened. Style mismatches must become easier to overcome. Signature strengths must be limited so that no boxer feels “unfair.”

At that point, the game may feature licensed boxers, authentic arenas and realistic graphics, but the underlying experience is still being structured like a competitive fighting game.

Is the Entire Game Being Designed Around Online Competition?

Steel City Interactive needs to explain whether competitive online play is one part of Undisputed or whether it is the foundation controlling every other part of the game.

Those are two completely different design philosophies.

If ranked online competition determines the global punch speeds, stamina consumption, damage values, movement systems, boxer ratings, defensive mechanics and style effectiveness, then offline players are not receiving an independent boxing experience. They are receiving an offline version of a game tuned primarily for online competition.

Career Mode, exhibition fights, CPU-versus-CPU contests and offline tournaments should not be imprisoned by ranked-online balancing.

Offline players should be able to experience boxing without every mechanic being restricted because something might be considered overpowered in competitive multiplayer.

A devastating puncher should feel devastating.

An elite defensive boxer should be extraordinarily difficult to hit.

A boxer with exceptional reach should be able to control distance when used intelligently.

A pressure boxer should be able to exhaust an opponent through physical and mental pressure.

A technically limited boxer should not suddenly become equally capable because competitive balance demands that every selectable character have a fair opportunity against everyone else.

Authenticity requires meaningful differences. Competitive balancing often tries to reduce those differences.

Boxing Is Not Supposed to Be Perfectly Fair

There is a major difference between fair game mechanics and equalized boxers.

The controls should be responsive. The rules should be consistent. Exploits should be removed. Online connections should be stable. Players should not lose because of broken tracking, input delay, animation failures or defective judging.

That is legitimate competitive fairness.

However, the boxers themselves should not be artificially equalized.

Muhammad Ali should not be slowed down merely because his movement creates a difficult matchup.

George Foreman’s power should not feel ordinary because players might complain that he is overpowered.

Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s defensive intelligence should not be weakened because some players struggle to hit him.

Thomas Hearns’ reach and right hand should not be reduced to make shorter boxers easier to use against him.

Competitive balance should address broken mechanics and exploits. It should not erase authentic advantages, disadvantages or stylistic identities.

Offline Players Need Their Own Design Lane

A serious boxing game should have separate gameplay lanes.

Ranked Competitive Mode could use standardized settings, specific balancing rules, controlled sliders and clearly defined matchmaking regulations.

Authentic Simulation Mode could prioritize boxer identity, realistic damage, style mismatches, physical advantages, fatigue, injuries, tactical depth, referee behavior, judging tendencies and unpredictable boxing outcomes.

Custom or Hybrid Mode could allow players to adjust the experience through sliders, gameplay presets and individual boxer tuning.

This would allow competitive players to have the controlled environment they want without forcing every offline player, career player, simulation fan and boxing purist into the same structure.

Options and sliders exist precisely because different audiences want different experiences.

There is no legitimate reason why ranked-online balancing must dictate offline boxing. The two modes can share the same core technology while using different tuning profiles, rule contracts, AI priorities and simulation values.

Do Offline Players Matter to Steel City Interactive?

Offline players have a right to ask whether they are being treated as a secondary audience.

Are Career Mode players central to the design process, or is Career Mode simply being built around mechanics created for online competition?

Are simulation fans being heard, or are they being dismissed as a “loud minority” because their requests conflict with a competitive esports-oriented direction?

Are boxing enthusiasts being asked what authenticity means to them, or is the studio deciding that competitive balance automatically equals good boxing gameplay?

Calling dissatisfied players a loud minority does not answer their criticism. It avoids it.

A group can be smaller than another group and still identify serious design problems. More importantly, nobody has produced credible public evidence proving that players seeking deeper offline gameplay, authentic boxer identities, realistic simulation systems and extensive customization are merely an insignificant minority.

Without independent surveys, transparent research and meaningful audience segmentation, the studio cannot accurately claim to know what most boxing fans want.

Social-media comments, Discord activity, content-creator feedback and online match data do not represent the entire potential audience. They especially do not represent players who stopped participating because they felt ignored, disappointed or alienated.

Authenticity Cannot Be Cosmetic

Authenticity is not created by scanning licensed boxers, reproducing branded trunks, adding recognizable venues or presenting cinematic ring walks.

Those elements support authenticity, but they do not define it.

Authenticity must exist in:

  • Footwork and balance

  • Punch mechanics

  • Weight transfer

  • Defensive styles

  • Inside fighting

  • Clinching

  • Boxer tendencies

  • Signature punches

  • Ring positioning

  • Reach management

  • Stamina and recovery

  • Damage accumulation

  • Referee behavior

  • Judging

  • Trainer influence

  • Tactical adjustments

  • Career progression

  • Style matchups

  • Boxer intelligence

  • Physical and psychological differences

When these systems are simplified or standardized for competitive balance, visual realism becomes a costume covering arcade-oriented foundations.

A boxing game cannot claim authenticity while being afraid of the inequalities that make boxing authentic.

SCI Must Decide What Undisputed Is

Steel City Interactive needs to provide a clear answer.

Is Undisputed intended to be a competitive fighting game based on boxing?

Is it a hybrid boxing game attempting to serve multiple audiences?

Or is it supposed to be an authentic boxing simulation?

The studio cannot continue using the language of authenticity while allowing competitive balancing to dominate every mode and every boxer.

A hybrid game is not automatically a problem. The problem comes when the hybrid structure is presented as a simulation while the simulation audience receives no independent tuning, no deep customization and no way to escape online-focused design decisions.

The solution is not to eliminate competitive play. The solution is to stop treating competitive play as the only legitimate way to structure the entire game.

Build ranked competition for competitive players.

Build an authentic simulation environment for boxing purists.

Build extensive sliders and customization for players who want something in between.

Give offline players deep Career, Universe, Promoter, Tournament, CPU-versus-CPU and sandbox experiences that are not controlled by esports balancing.

A game with separate modes, presets, sliders and rule structures does not have to choose only one audience. It can serve several audiences without forcing one philosophy on everyone.

But if every part of Undisputed continues to be governed by competitive balancing, then Steel City Interactive should stop pretending that offline simulation players are receiving an authentic boxing game.

They are receiving a competitive fighting game that is cosplaying as one.

Ash Habib Needs to Make Up His Mind: Does Steel City Interactive Want Fan Feedback or Not?

 

Steel City Interactive owner Ash Habib needs to provide a clear and consistent explanation of how fan feedback will influence the next Undisputed boxing game.

On one hand, Ash has suggested that Steel City Interactive listened to too many competing voices during the development of the first game and moved away from its original foundation. His comments appeared to imply that the studio should have trusted its initial vision instead of repeatedly changing direction to satisfy different sections of the audience.

On the other hand, Steel City Interactive is once again asking fans to provide feedback, suggestions, and ideas for the sequel.

That creates an obvious contradiction.

Is Ash returning to his original vision and reducing the community’s influence over development?

Or does Steel City Interactive still want the community to help shape the game?

Both approaches can exist together, but Ash and SCI need to explain how.

The company cannot criticize fan influence when development decisions fail, then promote community feedback when it needs renewed excitement and support for the sequel.

Listening to Fans Was Never the Real Problem

The problem was not that Steel City Interactive listened to fans.

The problem was how the studio collected, interpreted, prioritized, and implemented the feedback it received.

Listening to fans does not mean blindly agreeing with every comment posted on Discord, YouTube, Reddit, X, Steam, or social media. It does not mean changing the combat system every time one vocal group complains. It does not mean allowing popular content creators, competitive online players, casual players, or arcade fighting-game fans to speak for the entire boxing community.

A responsible studio should collect feedback from different audiences, identify repeated concerns, compare those concerns with gameplay data, consult people who understand boxing, test multiple solutions, and determine whether a proposed change supports the game’s established design philosophy.

That requires leadership and structure.

If the game’s foundation is supposed to be realistic and authentic boxing, then every major gameplay decision should be evaluated against that foundation.

Does the change make boxing styles more distinctive?

Does it improve the relationship between footwork, balance, positioning, defense, and punching?

Does it make stamina, damage, recovery, timing, and ring generalship more believable?

Does it improve responsiveness without removing tactical consequences?

Does it solve a legitimate gameplay problem, or does it merely make the game easier for one section of the audience?

Steel City Interactive should never stop listening. It should become more disciplined about who it listens to, what evidence it considers, and how it applies that information.

Options and Sliders Exist for a Reason

Different players wanting different experiences should not be treated as an impossible development problem.

That is precisely why videogames have options, sliders, assists, difficulty settings, simulation presets, customizable rules, control configurations, offline settings, and separate online environments.

A modern sports game does not have to force every player into the exact same experience.

A realistic boxing fan should be able to choose a demanding simulation experience with:

  • Realistic stamina consumption and recovery

  • Boxer-specific physical and technical advantages

  • Punishing footwork and positioning mistakes

  • Difficult defensive timing

  • Authentic injuries and accumulated damage

  • Intelligent clinching and inside fighting

  • Realistic knockdowns and recovery

  • Strong matchup disadvantages

  • Minimal visual indicators and assists

  • Strict referee, judging, and rule settings

A casual player could choose:

  • Simplified controls

  • Stronger defensive assistance

  • More forgiving stamina

  • Easier movement and recovery

  • More visible gameplay indicators

  • Reduced injury severity

  • Faster pacing

  • More balanced boxer ratings

  • Less punishing tactical mistakes

A hybrid player could choose an experience between those two approaches.

That is not an unrealistic demand. That is intelligent sports-game design.

The studio should establish a deep and authentic boxing foundation, then allow players to customize how demanding, accessible, realistic, or forgiving that foundation becomes.

Steel City Interactive does not need to combine every audience into one compromised default system.

It can provide separate simulation, hybrid, and casual presets. It can provide gameplay sliders. It can provide assists. It can provide customizable rule contracts. It can separate realistic online matchmaking from more accessible competitive matchmaking.

Options are not evidence that a studio lacks direction. Options allow a studio to maintain its direction while respecting different sections of its audience.

The excuse that conflicting fan preferences made the game impossible to design does not hold up when the company did not fully use the customization tools available to solve that exact problem.

SCI Must Define Its Original Foundation

Ash has spoken about returning to his foundation, but what exactly was that foundation?

Fans deserve a specific answer.

Was the original goal to create the most realistic and technically detailed boxing simulation possible?

Was the goal to make an accessible hybrid game that looked authentic but remained easy to play?

Was the goal to create a competitive online fighting game using licensed boxers?

Was the goal to satisfy both hardcore and casual audiences with options and separate gameplay configurations?

The word “authentic” is not enough.

Authenticity must be defined through systems and mechanics.

Does authentic boxing mean realistic stamina, foot positioning, balance, leverage, inside fighting, clinching, feints, parries, defensive shells, punch variation, boxer tendencies, ring generalship, referee involvement, corner strategy, injuries, judging, and style-specific artificial intelligence?

Or does authenticity mainly refer to licensed boxers, recognizable arenas, real organizations, motion capture, broadcast graphics, and visual presentation?

A boxing game can look authentic without playing authentically.

A game can feature championship belts, famous venues, realistic boxer models, television-style presentation, and official licensing while failing to represent the tactical and physical depth of boxing.

Ash cannot simply say that SCI is returning to its foundation. He must define what that foundation includes and what the studio refuses to compromise.

Are Developers Influencing the Direction?

Some fans believe Steel City Interactive’s developers may be influencing Ash away from his original vision.

That belief has not been publicly proven and should not be presented as established fact.

However, it is understandable why the suspicion exists.

Ash originally presented himself as a passionate boxing fan trying to build the boxing game that major companies were unwilling to make. As Steel City Interactive expanded, hired developers from other major studios, added offices, secured investments, signed licensing agreements, and became responsible for a larger commercial operation, the game’s direction appeared to change.

The company’s public communication also became more controlled and corporate.

That does not automatically prove Ash lost control of the project. It does raise legitimate questions about who now has the strongest influence over gameplay decisions.

Is Ash still the person establishing the creative vision?

Does the gameplay director have final authority over the combat system?

Are online competitive designers determining how boxer ratings and styles are balanced?

Are technical limitations shaping design decisions that are later presented as creative choices?

Are publisher expectations, retention targets, accessibility goals, development schedules, and monetization plans influencing the game more than boxing realism?

Are developers with experience in arcade fighting games, wrestling games, football games, or action games applying design philosophies that do not fit a serious boxing simulation?

Hiring experienced developers can strengthen a studio, but experience at a major company does not automatically equal an understanding of boxing.

A developer can possess strong technical ability and still misunderstand the sport being represented.

The public deserves to know who controls the boxing philosophy of the sequel and how conflicts between accessibility, competitive balance, commercial appeal, and realism are resolved.

The Scripted Video Concern

Some fans believe Ash appears to be reading prepared scripts in company videos and does not always remain consistent with those messages afterward.

Reading from a script is not automatically dishonest or suspicious.

Company owners and executives often use prepared statements to avoid revealing confidential information, making inaccurate promises, contradicting legal agreements, or creating confusion about unfinished features.

The real problem is not whether Ash reads from a script.

The problem is whether the message remains consistent after the video ends.

When Ash says the studio listened too much and needs to return to its own vision, fans reasonably interpret that as a reduction in community influence.

When SCI later asks those same fans for more feedback and ideas, the company must explain what has changed.

Is the studio only collecting feedback to identify problems?

Will fans be allowed to influence solutions?

Which ideas will be considered?

Who will evaluate them?

What standards will determine whether an idea fits the game?

Will experienced boxers, trainers, coaches, simulation players, casual players, online competitors, and content creators all be treated equally?

Prepared communication only works when the underlying position is clear and consistent.

Otherwise, every new video begins to feel like a temporary marketing message rather than a dependable development philosophy.

“The Community” Is Not One Group

Steel City Interactive must stop speaking about “the fans” or “the community” as though everyone wants the same boxing game.

The audience includes:

  • Hardcore boxing fans

  • Former and active boxers

  • Trainers and coaches

  • Sports-simulation players

  • Offline career players

  • CPU-versus-CPU players

  • Online competitive players

  • Casual players

  • Arcade fighting-game fans

  • Content creators

  • Modders

  • Creation-suite players

  • Boxing historians

  • Players focused primarily on licensed boxers

  • Players interested in management and promoter systems

  • Players who want accessibility options

These audiences may disagree about almost every part of the game.

An online competitive player may want boxers to be more evenly balanced so every matchup feels fair.

A simulation player may argue that boxing is not fair. Size, reach, speed, power, durability, experience, style, conditioning, age, injury history, and technical skill should create meaningful advantages and disadvantages.

A casual player may want easier movement, simplified defense, forgiving stamina, and faster action.

A boxing technician may want poor positioning, bad balance, predictable combinations, incorrect range, and reckless pressure to produce serious consequences.

A career player may want a deep boxing world with promoters, managers, trainers, rankings, negotiations, injuries, rivalries, sanctioning organizations, and long-term progression.

An online player may be more concerned with responsiveness, matchmaking, exploits, and competitive balance.

One group does not have to defeat or silence the other.

The solution is a layered game with separate presets, options, sliders, assists, rule configurations, and online environments.

SCI should not blend every preference into one watered-down experience and later claim that satisfying different fans was impossible.

Not Every Fan Suggestion Should Be Treated Equally

Steel City Interactive should listen to everyone, but listening does not mean every opinion carries the same technical value.

A boxer with years of experience may notice problems with foot placement, weight transfer, punch mechanics, defensive posture, range, balance, and ring positioning that an average player would never recognize.

A trainer may understand tactical adaptation, corner instructions, conditioning, recovery, opponent preparation, and style matchups at a much deeper level.

A longtime sports-simulation player may understand sliders, tendencies, attributes, progression systems, franchise logic, artificial intelligence, and customization better than someone who mainly plays arcade fighting games.

An experienced online competitor may identify exploits, input problems, latency issues, animation abuse, and balancing problems that an offline player would not see.

Each group offers different expertise.

SCI should categorize feedback instead of mixing all comments into a single community bucket.

Feedback should be separated into areas such as:

  • Boxing authenticity

  • Combat mechanics

  • Artificial intelligence

  • Online balance

  • Responsiveness

  • Accessibility

  • Career depth

  • Presentation

  • Creation tools

  • Technical performance

  • Rules and officiating

  • Boxer identity

  • Controls

  • Difficulty

  • Customization

The studio should then evaluate suggestions using people qualified to understand each category.

Popularity should not be the only measurement of value.

An idea does not become correct because a major content creator supports it. A technically important issue does not become irrelevant because only a smaller group of knowledgeable players recognizes it.

Feedback Should Not Mean Discord Alone

SCI should also explain how it plans to collect feedback.

A Discord server is not a scientific representation of the entire audience.

YouTube comments are not a controlled survey.

Social-media engagement is not reliable market research.

Content creators do not automatically represent offline players, simulation players, older boxing fans, former boxers, international audiences, disabled players, or people who left the community because they felt ignored.

A structured independent survey could provide SCI with much better information.

The survey should ask players:

  • What type of boxing game they prefer

  • Which modes they play

  • Whether they prioritize realism, accessibility, or competitive balance

  • Which mechanics they believe are missing

  • Which features they want customizable

  • How much career and management depth they expect

  • Whether they play online, offline, or both

  • Which control schemes they use

  • Which aspects of boxing they understand

  • Whether they have boxing, coaching, development, or sports-game experience

  • Why they stopped playing the first game

  • What would convince them to buy the sequel

The results should be published so the community can see what different audiences actually want.

That would be more credible than repeatedly claiming that SCI knows what the fans want while refusing to independently measure the audience in detail.

Ash Should Answer These Questions Directly

Instead of offering another broad request for ideas, Ash should answer specific questions about SCI’s development philosophy:

  1. What was the original foundation of Undisputed?

  2. Which parts of that foundation were changed because of fan feedback?

  3. Which sections of the community influenced those changes?

  4. Which changes does Ash now believe damaged the original vision?

  5. What is the non-negotiable foundation of the sequel?

  6. Is the default experience intended to be a simulation, a hybrid sports game, or an accessible competitive boxing game?

  7. Will the sequel include separate simulation, hybrid, and casual presets?

  8. How extensive will the gameplay sliders and accessibility options be?

  9. Will offline players have control over stamina, damage, speed, movement, artificial intelligence, referee behavior, judging, injuries, knockdowns, recovery, and boxer tendencies?

  10. Will online simulation and casual matchmaking use separate rule configurations?

  11. Who has final authority over combat design?

  12. Who determines whether a mechanic accurately represents boxing?

  13. How are boxers and trainers involved in evaluating gameplay systems?

  14. How is feedback from knowledgeable boxing fans weighed against feedback from casual and competitive players?

  15. Will SCI use a structured third-party survey?

  16. What does SCI mean when it uses the word “authentic”?

  17. Will the company publish a design philosophy so fans understand what feedback fits the project?

  18. How will SCI prevent the sequel from changing direction every time a vocal group complains?

These are not unreasonable or hostile questions.

They are accountability questions for a company asking players to trust it with another boxing game.

Fans Should Not Become the Excuse

Ash should not use the community as an explanation for every design failure in the original game.

Developers make the final decisions.

Fans may request changes, complain about mechanics, demand balancing adjustments, or suggest new ideas, but the studio decides what enters the game.

If a change damages the game’s identity, that is ultimately a leadership and development decision.

SCI could have rejected the suggestion.

SCI could have tested it more thoroughly.

SCI could have limited it to a casual preset.

SCI could have created a slider.

SCI could have made it an optional assist.

SCI could have separated the online and offline implementations.

SCI could have preserved the original mechanic in simulation mode.

The company had choices.

Fans should not be blamed because SCI failed to create a system capable of supporting different preferences.

Threats, harassment, and personal attacks are unacceptable. Those actions should be condemned without hesitation.

However, the behavior of a small number of abusive individuals should not be used to dismiss legitimate criticism from knowledgeable fans.

Constructive feedback and abusive behavior are not the same thing.

SCI must separate them instead of treating all criticism as a danger to the studio’s vision.

A Strong Vision and Player Choice Can Exist Together

Ash does not have to choose between having a clear vision and listening to the community.

A strong studio can do both.

The foundation should come from a clearly defined understanding of boxing.

The customization should allow different audiences to shape the experience around that foundation.

The studio should decide that footwork, positioning, timing, balance, stamina, style identity, defense, ring generalship, and tactical consequences are essential.

Then players should be allowed to customize how demanding those systems become.

A simulation preset can preserve the full consequences.

A hybrid preset can soften selected mechanics.

A casual preset can introduce stronger assists and more forgiving values.

Sliders can allow advanced users to adjust the experience even further.

That is not a lack of direction. It is a deep, flexible design philosophy.

A game does not become less authentic because it includes accessibility options. It becomes less authentic when the default systems lack depth and no option exists to restore it.

Make the Vision Clear and Stand Behind It

Ash Habib needs to make up his mind about Steel City Interactive’s relationship with its audience.

If SCI wants feedback, it should explain how that feedback will be collected, categorized, evaluated, tested, and implemented.

If Ash wants to return to his original foundation, he should clearly define that foundation.

If different audiences want different experiences, the studio should use presets, sliders, assists, customizable rules, and separate gameplay environments instead of forcing everyone into one compromised system.

If developers, executives, consultants, investors, publishers, or competitive players are influencing the direction, SCI should be transparent about who has final creative authority.

Fans do not need another cycle of broad promises, unclear terminology, selective listening, unexplained changes, and retrospective claims that the community pulled the game in too many directions.

Steel City Interactive should listen to fans.

It should listen to boxers and trainers.

It should study gameplay data.

It should test competing ideas.

It should provide meaningful options.

It should protect a realistic boxing foundation.

Most importantly, it should stop presenting player choice and creative direction as though one must destroy the other.

Options and sliders exist so different players can enjoy the same boxing game without forcing one audience’s preferences onto everyone else.

The community is not asking SCI to abandon its vision.

The community is asking SCI to define that vision, build it properly, provide real customization, and remain consistent enough to stand behind it.

Friday, July 17, 2026

Show Us The Failed Realistic/Sim Boxing Game

 

Stop Declaring a Market Failure That Has Never Been Properly Tested

The videogame industry keeps making a serious claim without presenting serious evidence.

We are repeatedly told that a realistic/sim boxing game would not sell.

We are told that boxing realism is too complicated.

We are told casual players would become frustrated.

We are told the audience demanding a deeper boxing experience is too small.

We are told that developers must simplify boxing, artificially balance boxers and make the sport feel more like a conventional arcade fighting game because that is supposedly what the larger market wants.

But where is the data?

Where is the independent research?

Where is the transparent consumer survey?

Where are the retention figures?

Where is the failed realistic/sim boxing game?

Which major company spent the time, money and resources necessary to build a comprehensive boxing simulation, released it in a polished condition, marketed it properly, supported it after launch and watched consumers reject it specifically because it was too realistic?

Name the game.

Do not name a game that had broken online play.

Do not name a game with missing boxing mechanics.

Do not name a game with poor artificial intelligence.

Do not name a game with shallow career systems.

Do not name a game that claimed to be authentic while leaving out major parts of the sport.

Do not name a game whose commercial problems could have been caused by weak marketing, licensing costs, technical failures, unfinished features or poor management.

Show us the boxing game that failed because it represented boxing too accurately.

The industry cannot show us that game because the experiment has never been completed.

Companies and their defenders are announcing the verdict before the trial has taken place.


“It Would Not Sell” Is Not Evidence

Saying something repeatedly does not turn it into market research.

“It would not sell” is a prediction.

“Casual players would not like it” is an assumption.

“Boxing is niche” is a generalization.

“Real boxing would not be fun” is a personal opinion.

None of those statements constitute proof.

A legitimate business conclusion would require actual evidence, including:

  • A clear definition of realistic/sim boxing.

  • A detailed description of the tested gameplay systems.

  • A representative consumer sample.

  • Segmentation between boxing fans, sports gamers and arcade fighting-game fans.

  • Purchase-intent data.

  • Engagement and retention measurements.

  • Pricing research.

  • Production-cost projections.

  • Mode-selection telemetry.

  • Analysis of optional assists and difficulty settings.

  • A comparison between accessible, hybrid and realistic/sim experiences.

Where is that research?

Has any company publicly released a large-scale study showing players a properly functioning realistic/sim boxing experience and measuring their response?

Has any publisher shown participants authentic inside fighting, clinch work, strategic foot positioning, boxer-specific AI, realistic stamina, referee behavior, judging variation and deep career management before determining that players would reject those systems?

Or did somebody in an office decide that realism sounded expensive, complicated or risky?

Those are two completely different situations.

One is market research.

The other is corporate fear disguised as consumer knowledge.


Stop Calling an Untested Product a Commercial Failure

For a realistic/sim boxing game to fail because of realism, a realistic/sim boxing game would first have to exist.

Not a partially realistic game.

Not a hybrid boxing game marketed with words such as “authentic.”

Not an arcade fighting game with realistic graphics.

Not a boxing game with physics-based punches but no meaningful clinching.

Not a game where every boxer moves loosely, reacts similarly and operates from the same fundamental AI template.

Not a game where ratings replace identity.

Not a game where a boxer’s name, face and shorts are more distinctive than his tactical behavior.

A true realistic/sim boxing game would need to represent the sport at a much deeper level.

It would need:

  • Authentic outside, mid-range and inside fighting.

  • Multiple clinch positions and transitions.

  • Hand fighting, framing, smothering and tie-ups.

  • Boxer-specific footwork and movement tendencies.

  • Orthodox and southpaw positional dynamics.

  • Realistic punch trajectories and delivery variations.

  • Weight transfer and balance consequences.

  • Style-specific defensive reactions.

  • Intelligent stamina management.

  • Accumulating physical damage.

  • Flash knockdowns and knockouts.

  • Referee positioning and intervention.

  • Judge personalities and scoring priorities.

  • Corner strategies and trainer chemistry.

  • Boxer-specific tactical AI.

  • Career matchmaking and promotional politics.

  • Weight management and training decisions.

  • Historical rules and era-specific presentation.

  • Hundreds of traits, tendencies and capabilities.

  • Sliders allowing players to modify the experience.

Where is the game that delivered all of that and failed?

It does not exist.

Therefore, the industry cannot truthfully say the market has rejected it.

The market cannot reject something it has never been given.


The Available Boxing Evidence Does Not Support the Industry’s Excuse

When we examine the commercial history that is publicly available, the evidence does not establish that realism drives customers away.

Electronic Arts reported that Fight Night Round 3 helped drive its fiscal fourth-quarter sales in 2006. EA generated $641 million in quarterly revenue, a 16 percent increase over the previous year, and specifically listed Fight Night Round 3 among the titles driving that performance. The company also reported that six of its titles sold more than one million copies during the quarter. (EA)

That does not prove every possible boxing simulation would succeed. It does prove that a boxing title emphasizing advanced presentation, physics and a more serious interpretation of the sport was commercially valuable to a major publisher.

Fight Night Round 4 continued moving toward physics-based punching, tactical countering and a style of gameplay that rewarded patience and boxing knowledge. Contemporary reception praised its physics and described its boxing as calculated, intelligent and more dependent on tactics than impatient button pressing. Public sales reporting indicates the game ultimately exceeded one million units. (Wikipedia)

Then came Fight Night Champion.

EA did not introduce that game by announcing that it had abandoned simulation to chase arcade fighting-game fans. EA publicly described it as the company’s most dynamic “simulation fighting experience,” with physics-based locomotion, punching and stamina systems. EA also emphasized that the game would remain accessible and user-friendly. (EA)

Read that again.

EA presented simulation and accessibility as compatible.

The company did not claim that realistic boxing mechanics automatically prevented new players from enjoying the game.

It attempted to offer depth while making that depth understandable.

That is what modern boxing developers should be doing.


Undisputed Proved That People Will Buy the Promise of Authentic Boxing

Steel City Interactive’s Undisputed sold more than one million copies shortly after its full release. It reached that milestone approximately one week after moving from Early Access to its multiplatform launch. (Game Republic)

What was the game selling to the public?

Was it promoted as Rock ’Em Sock ’Em Robots?

Was it marketed as a simple arcade fighting game for people who did not care about boxing?

No.

Its official marketing described it as an authentic boxing experience with true-to-life visuals and unprecedented control inside the ring. (Steam Store)

Whatever anyone thinks about how successfully the finished product fulfilled those promises, the commercial message is obvious:

People purchased the promise of authentic boxing.

They did not run away from that promise.

They showed up for it.

They spent money on it.

They demonstrated that a boxing game from a first-time independent studio could attract enormous attention after the major publishers had left the genre underserved for more than a decade.

That should have destroyed the argument that serious boxing games have no market.

Instead, some people attempted to use the game’s problems to justify making future boxing games even less realistic.

That conclusion is backward.

When players complain that an allegedly authentic boxing game lacks major boxing mechanics, the lesson is not that players dislike authenticity.

The lesson is that they expected more of it.

If customers buy a product because it promises authentic boxing and then criticize it for missing authentic boxing systems, that is not a rejection of realism.

It is a demand for the promise to be fulfilled.


Where Is the Controlled Comparison?

No publisher has publicly demonstrated a fair comparison between three properly developed boxing experiences:

  1. Accessible.

  2. Hybrid.

  3. Realistic/Sim.

Where is the test in which players were allowed to choose between those modes?

Where is the telemetry showing how long each group played?

Where is the evidence showing which players purchased downloadable content?

Where is the data showing which players remained active six months later?

Where is the information showing whether beginners gradually moved toward more realistic settings as they learned the sport?

Where is the evidence showing that realistic/sim players were less engaged, less loyal or less profitable?

It has not been presented.

Instead, the industry frequently assumes that the most simplified experience automatically has the largest commercial potential.

That assumption ignores one of the most important realities of sports gaming:

Depth creates longevity.

A simple game may be easy to understand during the first hour.

A deep game can remain interesting during the five-hundredth hour.

A boxing game with shallow systems may provide immediate action, but once players recognize the patterns, discover the exploits and realize that most boxers behave similarly, the experience begins to collapse.

A realistic/sim game can continue revealing new tactical situations because styles, positioning, stamina, damage, psychology and career circumstances create different problems.

That is not a commercial weakness.

That can become the foundation of retention.


“Boxing Is Niche” Is a Lazy Corporate Escape Hatch

Whenever the evidence becomes uncomfortable, somebody says boxing is niche.

Compared with global football or basketball, boxing may attract a smaller consistent gaming audience. That still does not prove a boxing game cannot be profitable.

A product does not have to sell 30 million copies to justify being made.

The correct financial question is not:

“Is boxing the largest sport in the world?”

The correct questions are:

  • What is the reachable audience?

  • What is an appropriate budget?

  • What is the break-even point?

  • How can licensing costs be controlled?

  • How can a creation suite expand the roster?

  • How can long-term content support increase revenue?

  • How can historical eras broaden the audience?

  • How can career, universe and management systems improve retention?

  • How can separate gameplay modes serve multiple groups?

A $25 million boxing game does not need the sales of a $200 million open-world blockbuster.

A company must match the scope and budget to the available market.

That is business planning.

Calling the sport niche without presenting a financial model is not analysis.

It is an excuse to avoid the analysis.


Simulation Does Not Mean Making the Game Miserable

The industry often creates a dishonest choice.

Players are told they must choose between a fun game and a realistic game.

Why?

Why is fun automatically assigned to arcade design?

Why is realism described as slow, frustrating or boring?

Why do people assume that accurately representing boxer identity, stamina, damage, movement and strategy would remove entertainment?

The excitement of boxing comes from the sport itself.

It comes from danger.

It comes from uncertainty.

It comes from tactical adjustments.

It comes from seeing one boxer solve another boxer’s style.

It comes from a body punch changing the fight three rounds later.

It comes from a boxer being hurt but hiding it.

It comes from a trainer recognizing a pattern.

It comes from a southpaw creating positional problems.

It comes from a pressure boxer cutting off the ring.

It comes from an exhausted boxer surviving the final minute.

It comes from a powerful puncher remaining dangerous even while losing.

It comes from the possibility that one mistake can end everything.

A realistic/sim game would not remove the drama.

It would allow the actual drama of boxing to exist.

Artificially increasing punch speed, reducing consequences and forcing every matchup to feel competitively equal does not automatically create fun.

Sometimes it removes the very qualities that make boxing compelling.


Accessibility Is Not the Same as Dumbing Down Boxing

A realistic/sim foundation does not require every player to master every system immediately.

The game can teach people.

It can include:

  • Beginner control presets.

  • Optional defensive assistance.

  • Automatic clinch assistance.

  • Foot-position indicators.

  • Tactical tutorials.

  • Interactive boxing lessons.

  • Simplified corner recommendations.

  • Optional stamina warnings.

  • Adjustable damage.

  • Adjustable referee strictness.

  • Adjustable AI complexity.

  • Practice drills for distance and timing.

  • Separate beginner matchmaking.

  • Casual, hybrid and realistic/sim rule contracts.

Accessibility means creating a path into the experience.

Dumbing down means destroying the depth at the destination.

A new player should not have to understand lead-foot dominance during his first fight.

However, the mechanic should still exist for players who learn it.

A beginner may need assistance cutting off the ring.

That does not mean ring cutting should be removed.

A beginner may not understand why clinching is necessary.

That does not mean clinching should become a meaningless animation.

A beginner may initially throw too many punches.

That does not mean stamina consequences should disappear for everybody.

You do not help players learn basketball by removing spacing.

You do not help players learn football by eliminating playbooks.

You do not help players understand racing by making every vehicle handle identically.

You should not introduce players to boxing by removing boxing.


Other Simulation-Oriented Games Destroy the “Realism Does Not Sell” Myth

Boxing does not exist in an isolated commercial universe.

The wider videogame market contains successful simulation-oriented franchises, management games, tactical games and complex role-playing games.

The Gran Turismo series surpassed 100 million units sold worldwide as of June 25, 2025. The franchise built its identity around the concept of being a serious driving simulator while still offering assists, introductory content and different ways to play. (gran-turismo.com)

Gran Turismo did not conclude that realistic vehicle behavior had to be removed because beginners might crash.

It provided assists.

It taught players.

It allowed them to progress.

It made automotive detail part of the product’s appeal.

Realism was not treated as a disease that had to be hidden from the consumer.

It became part of the franchise’s identity.

A boxing game can follow the same principle.

The underlying sport can be deep while the entry point remains welcoming.


What Are Companies Actually Afraid Of?

This is where the investigation must become more direct.

If realistic/sim boxing has not been publicly proven unprofitable, why does the industry remain so resistant to it?

Several possible explanations are more believable than the claim that consumers simply do not want realism.

They May Be Afraid of the Development Cost

Authentic boxing is difficult to build.

A realistic/sim mode cannot be created by adjusting three stamina sliders and slowing the punches.

The underlying game would require:

  • Advanced animation coverage.

  • Better motion capture.

  • More sophisticated physics.

  • Detailed boxer research.

  • Style-specific artificial intelligence.

  • Situational clinch logic.

  • Referee AI.

  • Judge AI.

  • Corner AI.

  • More robust career systems.

  • Granular testing across hundreds of boxer combinations.

That takes time, expertise and money.

A shallow game is cheaper to produce.

A universal movement system is easier to maintain.

One basic AI framework is easier to tune.

A small group of shared punch animations is easier to test.

Therefore, the real concern may not be that realism will not sell.

The concern may be that realism is expensive to deliver properly.

Companies should say that honestly.

Do not tell boxing fans that they do not want depth when the actual problem is that the company does not want to pay for depth.

They May Be Afraid of Boxer Individuality

A realistic/sim game would expose whether developers truly understand the boxers on their roster.

It would not be enough to scan the boxer’s face.

It would not be enough to record a ring walk.

It would not be enough to assign ratings for speed, power and stamina.

The game would need to understand:

  • How the boxer establishes range.

  • How he reacts under pressure.

  • Which direction he prefers to circle.

  • How he behaves near the ropes.

  • How he attacks the body.

  • How he sets up his strongest punch.

  • Whether he fights differently while hurt.

  • Whether he takes risks while behind.

  • How he manages fatigue.

  • How he deals with southpaws.

  • How he clinches.

  • How he escapes the corner.

  • How he changes throughout his career.

Realistic boxer identity would expose generic design immediately.

That creates accountability.

It is easier to call every boxer authentic than to build every boxer authentically.

They May Be Afraid of Real Boxing’s Imbalance

Boxing is not fair.

A great boxer can dominate a limited boxer.

A taller boxer may control range.

A powerful boxer may remain dangerous despite losing every round.

One style may create enormous problems for another.

Age, damage, preparation, weight and confidence can change a matchup.

Competitive gaming companies often prefer predictable balance.

They want every character or boxer to have recognizable counters.

They want matchmaking to feel fair.

They want players to believe every loss could have been prevented through the correct button sequence.

Real boxing does not always work that way.

Sometimes the opponent is better.

Sometimes the matchup is terrible.

Sometimes the boxer is too fast.

Sometimes the damage cannot be reversed.

Sometimes the wrong tactical decision in round three becomes fatal in round ten.

A realistic/sim mode would require developers to accept that imbalance can be an authentic feature rather than a design flaw.

That may frighten companies that prioritize competitive symmetry over boxing truth.

They May Be Afraid That Boxing Knowledge Would Matter

A realistic game would reward players for understanding the sport.

Distance would matter.

Angles would matter.

Foot position would matter.

Punch selection would matter.

Ring geography would matter.

Stamina management would matter.

Opponent tendencies would matter.

Some experienced boxing fans and tactical gamers would defeat players who rely only on reflexes, memorized combinations or exploitable mechanics.

That could frustrate people who expect instant competence.

But every deep competitive game has a knowledge ceiling.

The answer is not to flatten the game.

The answer is to teach the player.

A person who refuses to learn boxing should not be given the power to remove boxing from everyone else’s experience.

They May Be Afraid of Supporting Multiple Modes

A proper three-lane system would require clear development discipline.

The game might need:

Accessible Mode

More assistance, forgiving stamina, simplified defense, clearer indicators and reduced punishment.

Hybrid Mode

A mixture of responsive videogame conventions and recognizable boxing principles.

Realistic/Sim Mode

Authentic consequences, boxer individuality, tactical AI, full rules, meaningful clinching, realistic stamina and minimal artificial balancing.

Maintaining these modes would require testing.

Online matchmaking might need separate rankings.

Balance changes could not be applied blindly across every ruleset.

The studio would need to communicate exactly what each mode represents.

That requires more work.

However, “it requires more work” is not the same as “nobody wants it.”

They May Be Afraid of Direct Comparison

This may be the greatest fear of all.

Suppose a boxing game included a hybrid mode and a realistic/sim mode.

Players could compare them immediately.

They could see how stamina changed.

They could see whether punch output became realistic.

They could see whether boxer identity became more distinct.

They could see whether the AI behaved tactically.

They could see whether referees, clinching, injuries and judging genuinely affected the fight.

That comparison would force developers to define authenticity.

Marketing departments could no longer use the word as a flexible slogan.

Players would have a measurable standard.

A dedicated realistic/sim mode would create accountability that vague branding does not.


Private Research Is Not a Public Trump Card

A company may claim that it possesses internal telemetry, confidential surveys or focus-group data.

That is possible.

But hidden information cannot be used to silence public criticism while remaining immune from examination.

At minimum, the company should explain:

  • How many people were studied?

  • How were participants selected?

  • How many were boxing fans?

  • How many were sports gamers?

  • How many primarily played arcade fighting games?

  • How was realistic/sim boxing defined?

  • Were participants shown actual gameplay?

  • Was the realistic/sim experience optional?

  • Were assists available?

  • Were people asked about difficulty or authenticity?

  • Were the questions written neutrally?

  • Was long-term engagement measured?

  • Were active and former boxers included?

  • Were experienced boxing-game players included?

Survey language matters.

Consider the difference between these two questions:

“Would you prefer a fun boxing game that anyone can enjoy or an overly complicated simulation?”

“Would you use an optional realistic/sim mode featuring authentic stamina, boxer-specific AI, complete clinching, deeper damage, tactical footwork and adjustable assists?”

The first question is propaganda.

The second question describes an actual product choice.

Companies should not design biased studies, receive the answer they encouraged and then claim that the market rejected realism.


Give the Market a Real Test

A publisher does not need to gamble an unlimited budget to determine whether realistic/sim boxing has an audience.

Build a vertical slice.

Use two highly distinct boxers.

Create the same matchup under three gameplay contracts.

Let thousands of players test each one.

Measure:

  • Initial mode selection.

  • Repeat mode selection.

  • Average session length.

  • Rematch frequency.

  • Tutorial completion.

  • Assist usage.

  • Player migration between modes.

  • Career interest.

  • Satisfaction.

  • Purchase intent.

  • Long-term retention.

Then release the aggregated results.

Let independent researchers review the methodology.

Let the boxing community inspect the questions.

Let active and former boxers participate.

Let sports gamers participate.

Let casual players participate.

Let arcade fighting-game fans participate.

Then companies could make an evidence-based decision.

But until that test occurs, stop pretending the conclusion has already been proven.


The Burden of Proof Belongs to the People Making the Claim

Realistic/sim boxing fans are constantly asked to prove that their preferred game would sell.

That is backward.

The people declaring that it would fail are making the claim.

Therefore, they carry the burden of proof.

Show us:

  • The failed realistic/sim boxing game.

  • The production budget.

  • The marketing budget.

  • The development timeline.

  • The complete feature list.

  • The launch condition.

  • The sales figures.

  • The retention figures.

  • The consumer research.

  • The mode-selection data.

  • The evidence showing realism caused the failure.

Do not show us a broken game and blame realism.

Do not show us an incomplete game and blame realism.

Do not show us a poorly marketed game and blame realism.

Do not show us a hybrid game that never delivered complete boxing systems and pretend it represented the maximum commercial potential of simulation.

Isolate the variable.

Prove that realism was the problem.

Until then, “a realistic/sim boxing game would not sell” remains an unsupported prediction dressed in corporate clothing.


They May Be Afraid That Realism Would Raise the Standard Forever

A truly realistic/sim boxing game would permanently change expectations.

Once players experience legitimate inside fighting, they will question games that omit it.

Once players experience boxer-specific tactical intelligence, generic AI will become unacceptable.

Once clinching becomes interactive and strategic, automatic tie-up animations will feel shallow.

Once referees actively position themselves, warn boxers, break clinches and react to fouls, invisible officials will feel incomplete.

Once trainers analyze patterns and provide useful advice, cosmetic corner scenes will no longer be enough.

Once career mode includes promoters, managers, matchmaking, negotiations, sanctioning organizations, rankings, rivalries, injuries, weight management and evolving gyms, a basic sequence of fights will no longer qualify as depth.

Once players receive accessible, hybrid and realistic/sim options, companies will no longer be able to claim that arcade-oriented players must determine the experience for everyone.

That may be what the industry fears most.

Not that realism would fail.

That it would succeed.

That it would expose how little previous games attempted.

That it would create a knowledgeable, demanding audience.

That it would make the word “authentic” mean something measurable.

That it would force every future boxing developer to do better.


Final Challenge to the Industry

Stop telling boxing fans that they are too small to matter while using boxing legends to sell the game.

Stop placing Muhammad Ali, Mike Tyson, Sugar Ray Leonard and other icons on the cover while claiming the sport they mastered must be simplified beyond recognition.

Stop using realistic graphics to market arcade-level systems.

Stop calling a game authentic because the boxers were scanned.

Stop telling knowledgeable boxing fans that realism would not be fun.

Stop allowing people who primarily want an arcade fighting game to decide how much boxing belongs in a boxing game.

Give players options.

Create an accessible mode.

Create a hybrid mode.

Create a realistic/sim mode.

Include tutorials.

Include assists.

Include sliders.

Include separate online divisions.

Allow beginners to learn.

Allow casual players to enjoy themselves.

Allow hardcore players to experience the sport with depth.

Nobody has to lose.

The only people threatened by options are those who do not want players to see what is possible.

The gaming industry has spent years making claims about a product it has never fully built.

That is not proof.

That is avoidance.

So here is the challenge:

Show us the failed realistic/sim boxing game.

Show us the evidence that consumers rejected it.

Show us the transparent survey.

Show us the player data.

Show us the financial analysis.

Show us that realism, rather than poor execution, caused the failure.

Until then, stop speaking for the market.

Stop using casual players as a human shield.

Stop treating corporate assumptions as consumer facts.

Stop declaring realistic/sim boxing commercially dead when nobody has had the courage to let it live.

Build the game.

Give players the choice.

Then let the market answer.


Why Does “Fun” Always Mean What Casual and Arcade Fighting-Game Fans Want?

 

Why Does “Fun” Always Mean What Casual and Arcade Fighting-Game Fans Want?

Whenever hardcore boxing fans ask for more realism, strategy, depth, or authenticity in a boxing videogame, the same response appears almost immediately:

“The game still has to be fun.”

On the surface, that sounds reasonable. Of course a videogame should be fun. Nobody is asking developers to create something intentionally boring, frustrating, or inaccessible.

The real problem is not the word “fun.” The problem is how the word is being used.

In boxing-game discussions, “fun” often becomes a shield used to protect arcade mechanics, simplified systems, universal boxer behavior, shallow game modes, and design decisions that appeal primarily to casual players or traditional fighting-game fans.

It is treated as though casual fans have exclusive ownership over fun.

Meanwhile, hardcore boxing fans, experienced sports gamers, former boxers, trainers, historians, simulation players, career-mode players, and strategy-focused fans are told that the things they enjoy would somehow ruin the game.

Why do casual and arcade fighting-game fans get to choose what is fun for everybody else?

Fun Is Not One Universal Experience

Different players enjoy different things.

One player may enjoy throwing thirty punches in a few seconds without worrying about positioning, balance, fatigue, or defensive consequences.

Another player may enjoy carefully breaking down an opponent over ten or twelve rounds.

One player may want quick online matches with simplified controls.

Another player may want a realistic career mode with training camps, injuries, promoters, managers, rankings, contracts, rivalries, weight management, and strategic corner advice.

One player may want every boxer to feel responsive and easy to control.

Another player may want each boxer to have individual limitations, tendencies, movement patterns, strengths, weaknesses, punch mechanics, defensive habits, and stamina characteristics.

None of those players own the definition of fun.

The problem begins when only one group’s preferences are treated as reasonable.

When casual players ask for faster action, easier controls, shorter learning curves, more knockdowns, or simplified mechanics, their requests are described as necessary for the game’s survival.

When hardcore fans ask for realistic footwork, inside fighting, clinching, referee interaction, strategic stamina management, boxer individuality, deeper AI, or authentic career systems, they are often told:

  • “It is just a game.”

  • “That would not be fun.”

  • “Nobody wants all that.”

  • “You are asking for too much.”

  • “Casual players keep the game alive.”

  • “The developers have to appeal to everybody.”

  • “Realism would make the game boring.”

That is not a fair discussion.

It is a design philosophy where one audience is allowed to ask for what it wants, while another audience is expected to lower its expectations.

Casual Fans Are Allowed to Speak for Everyone

There is a strange assumption in sports gaming that casual players represent the entire potential audience.

A casual fan can say:

“The game needs to be easier.”

That statement is accepted as a legitimate market concern.

A hardcore fan can say:

“The game needs more depth.”

That statement is often dismissed as unrealistic, niche, or financially irresponsible.

Why?

Why is accessibility considered essential, but depth considered optional?

Why is arcade action treated as universal entertainment, while realistic strategy is treated as a burden?

Why is a casual fan allowed to reject simulation systems, but a simulation fan is expected to tolerate arcade mechanics?

The phrase “appeal to everyone” often does not actually mean appealing to everyone.

It usually means building the game around casual and competitive arcade preferences while giving hardcore fans a few presentation elements, licensed boxers, realistic graphics, or marketing words such as “authentic.”

That is not equal representation.

That is one audience receiving the core gameplay experience it wants while another audience is expected to be satisfied with appearances.

“Casual Fans Keep the Game Alive”

One of the most common arguments is that casual fans keep sports games alive.

There is some truth behind the idea that a large audience helps a game sell. No serious person should deny that broader accessibility can improve commercial performance.

However, that argument is frequently used in a dishonest or inconsistent way.

When discussing a boxing videogame, people say casual fans are necessary because hardcore boxing fans are supposedly too small of an audience.

Then those same people may discuss UFC and claim hardcore MMA fans keep the sport, community, and videogame alive.

Suddenly, hardcore fans matter.

Suddenly, dedicated fans are the foundation.

Suddenly, long-term supporters, knowledgeable players, and committed communities are important.

Why is hardcore dedication valuable when discussing UFC, but treated as irrelevant when discussing boxing?

Why are MMA enthusiasts recognized as a meaningful audience, while boxing enthusiasts are told that their knowledge and expectations do not matter?

Boxing is not a meaningless sport with no passionate audience.

It has generations of history, legendary personalities, global fan bases, regional cultures, major events, amateur systems, trainers, promoters, journalists, collectors, historians, former boxers, active boxers, and lifelong supporters.

The boxing audience should not be reduced to people who recognize only a few modern names.

Hardcore boxing fans may not always be the loudest commercial demographic, but they provide something casual consumers often cannot provide: long-term engagement.

They discuss the sport year-round. They debate styles, eras, strategies, matchups, trainers, judges, rankings, weight divisions, prospects, and history. They notice when a boxer’s stance is wrong. They recognize when movement does not match the athlete. They understand why southpaw and orthodox matchups matter. They know the difference between realistic pressure fighting and simply walking forward while throwing combinations.

These are the people capable of identifying whether a boxing game truly represents boxing.

That knowledge should be treated as an asset, not an inconvenience.

Hardcore Fans Help Preserve the Identity of the Sport

Casual fans are important for growth. Hardcore fans are important for identity.

A casual audience may purchase a game because of a famous cover boxer, a viral knockout clip, a popular content creator, or a major boxing event.

A hardcore audience is more likely to study the mechanics, play multiple modes, create historical matchups, build custom rosters, test AI behavior, analyze boxer ratings, discuss updates, provide detailed feedback, and remain engaged between major releases.

Hardcore fans often serve as unpaid quality-control analysts.

They notice when:

  • Every boxer moves too similarly.

  • Punches lack individual mechanics.

  • Inside fighting is missing.

  • Clinching is underdeveloped.

  • Defensive styles are cosmetic.

  • Judges lack distinct personalities.

  • Career mode does not reflect boxing politics.

  • Weight classes have no strategic meaning.

  • Trainers do not influence boxer development.

  • The referee is missing from the ring.

  • Stamina systems encourage unrealistic behavior.

  • Historical boxers fight like modern videogame templates.

  • AI opponents rely on generic patterns.

  • Knockdowns are based on repetitive animations instead of punch context.

These observations do not come from hatred of videogames.

They come from understanding boxing.

When developers ignore that knowledge, the game may still look like boxing, but it gradually loses the sport’s identity.

Realism Can Be Fun

The idea that realism and fun are natural enemies is one of the weakest arguments in sports gaming.

Realism can create fun through consequences, decision-making, individuality, unpredictability, and mastery.

It can be fun to understand why your jab is failing.

It can be fun to adjust your foot position against a southpaw.

It can be fun to recognize that your boxer does not have the stamina to fight at a high pace.

It can be fun to use the clinch to survive after being hurt.

It can be fun to invest in body punching and watch the opponent slow down in the later rounds.

It can be fun to build a boxer through an amateur career.

It can be fun to manage injuries, weight cuts, training camps, promotional relationships, and opponent selection.

It can be fun to discover that a boxer’s style is wrong for a particular matchup.

It can be fun to win a tactical decision instead of chasing a knockout in every fight.

It can be fun to watch CPU-controlled boxers recreate realistic stylistic battles.

It can be fun to build an entire boxing universe where rankings, champions, prospects, promoters, gyms, and rivalries evolve without the player controlling everything.

That is still fun.

It is simply a different type of fun than constant action and instant gratification.

A game does not become boring because it requires thought.

For many players, the thinking is the fun.

Arcade Fighting-Game Fans Should Not Control Boxing Design

Arcade fighting-game fans are allowed to enjoy boxing games. They are allowed to request faster modes, forgiving controls, exaggerated action, simplified systems, and competitive balance.

However, they should not automatically control the design philosophy of a sport they may not deeply follow.

A boxing videogame should not be required to behave like a traditional fighting game merely because both genres involve two people exchanging punches.

Boxing has its own logic.

It has distance management, rhythm, feints, balance, positioning, ring geography, pacing, scoring, clinching, defensive layers, fatigue, injuries, styles, physical disparities, tactical adjustments, and psychological pressure.

Traditional arcade fighting games are often built around symmetrical competitive systems. Boxing is not symmetrical.

Boxers are not supposed to be equally effective in every situation.

Some boxers are faster. Some are stronger. Some are better inside. Some require distance. Some have poor stamina. Some cannot fight moving backward. Some struggle against southpaws. Some have elite chins. Some are dangerous early but vulnerable late. Some win with volume. Some rely on timing. Some can completely neutralize certain opponents while struggling badly against others.

That imbalance is not necessarily bad game design.

It is boxing.

When every boxer is forced into a standardized competitive structure, the game may become easier to balance, but it also becomes less representative of the sport.

Accessibility Does Not Require Removing Depth

A boxing videogame does not have to choose between casual accessibility and hardcore depth.

The solution is not to force every player into one compromised hybrid experience.

The solution is options.

A well-designed boxing game could include:

  • Casual, hybrid, and realistic/sim gameplay presets.

  • Adjustable damage, stamina, movement, defense, judging, clinching, and injury systems.

  • Optional assists for footwork, defense, combinations, and ring positioning.

  • Simplified control schemes for newcomers.

  • Advanced control schemes for experienced players.

  • Separate online rulesets.

  • Custom match contracts.

  • Adjustable AI intelligence and tactical depth.

  • Career-mode complexity settings.

  • Optional management systems.

  • Presentation and gameplay sliders.

  • Boxer tendency and attribute editors.

  • Clearly labeled competitive and simulation modes.

Casual players would not lose anything.

Arcade players would not lose anything.

Hardcore players would finally gain something.

The resistance to deeper options often reveals that the real issue is not accessibility. The real issue is that some fans do not merely want an arcade-friendly option for themselves. They want the entire game designed around their preferences.

That is the difference.

Hardcore Fans Are Expected to Compromise Forever

Hardcore boxing fans have been compromising for decades.

They have accepted missing referees.

They have accepted shallow career modes.

They have accepted limited clinching.

They have accepted weak inside fighting.

They have accepted generic boxer behavior.

They have accepted simplified judging.

They have accepted limited creation systems.

They have accepted arcade stamina.

They have accepted repetitive knockdowns.

They have accepted historical inaccuracies.

They have accepted boxing politics being almost completely absent.

They have accepted games where famous boxers feel more like licensed character models than unique athletes.

After all of those compromises, hardcore fans are still told they are asking for too much.

At what point are casual fans expected to compromise?

Why can a casual player not use assists?

Why can an arcade fan not select an arcade ruleset?

Why must the realistic/sim audience always sacrifice the depth it wants in order to protect players who may not even remain with the game long-term?

A player who purchases a boxing game for a few weeks should not automatically have greater influence than someone who has supported boxing and boxing games for decades.

Sales matter, but commitment also matters.

Who Gets to Decide What Is Fun?

Developers, publishers, content creators, casual fans, competitive players, boxers, trainers, and hardcore fans may all define fun differently.

No single group should be allowed to define it for everyone.

“Fun” should not be used as a conversation-ending word.

Whenever someone says a realistic feature would not be fun, the next question should be:

Not fun for whom?

Would realistic footwork be unfun for boxing students who enjoy positioning?

Would a deeper career mode be unfun for management fans?

Would CPU-versus-CPU be unfun for universe builders and content creators?

Would authentic judging be unfun for players who enjoy close decisions and strategic uncertainty?

Would boxer individuality be unfun for fans who want Sugar Ray Leonard, George Foreman, Muhammad Ali, Pernell Whitaker, Marvin Hagler, Roberto Durán, and Floyd Mayweather Jr. to feel fundamentally different?

The word “fun” is meaningless without identifying the audience.

What one player sees as complexity, another sees as depth.

What one player sees as slow pacing, another sees as tactical tension.

What one player sees as imbalance, another sees as boxer authenticity.

What one player sees as frustrating, another sees as a challenge worth mastering.

Boxing Fans Should Matter in a Boxing Game

A boxing videogame should welcome casual players. It should introduce new audiences to the sport. It should provide accessibility options and multiple ways to play.

However, it should never treat boxing knowledge as a problem that needs to be designed around.

Hardcore boxing fans should not be mocked, ignored, or dismissed for wanting the sport represented with greater detail.

They are not asking developers to remove fun.

They are asking developers to recognize that their version of fun also matters.

The casual audience can help a game launch.

The hardcore audience can help a game develop an identity, build credibility, improve through informed feedback, and remain relevant for years.

A successful boxing game should respect both.

It should not force boxing fans to accept an arcade fighting game wearing boxing gloves.

It should build a genuine boxing foundation, then use settings, assists, sliders, modes, and customization to welcome everyone else.

That is what real accessibility looks like.

Not choosing casual fans over hardcore fans.

Not allowing arcade fighting-game fans to speak for the entire community.

Not using “fun” as an excuse to remove strategy, realism, and depth.

The real goal should be a boxing game where different audiences can find their own version of fun without taking it away from somebody else.

Because casual fans do not own fun.

Arcade fans do not own fun.

Competitive players do not own fun.

Hardcore fans do not own fun either.

But every one of those audiences deserves a meaningful seat at the table.

And in a boxing videogame, actual boxing fans should never be treated like the least important people in the room.


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