An Open Letter to Game and Boxing Media
Boxing Is Not “Just a Game”, And Realism Is Not the Enemy of Fun
To the journalists, editors, hosts, creators, and commentators who cover video games and the sport of boxing,
There is a phrase that often appears when boxing video games are discussed:
“It’s just a game.”
And closely behind it comes another claim:
“A fully realistic boxing game wouldn’t be fun.”
Both ideas miss what boxing means to its fans — and what interactive sports experiences actually accomplish.
Boxing is not just content.
And a boxing game is not just software.
At their best, boxing games are educational tools, cultural gateways, and ecosystem builders for the sport.
Boxing Is Fun, Especially to Boxing Fans
Boxing does not need exaggeration to be exciting.
Fans of the sport don’t love it because it looks like a button-mashing spectacle.
They love it because they understand it.
They see:
• Footwork battles for ring position
• The chess match of jabs and feints
• Distance control and timing traps
• Energy management across rounds
• Tactical adjustments under pressure
• The tension of one mistake changing everything
That is excitement.
That is engagement.
That is the sport.
Fun is not limited to flashy chaos.
Fun can be technical.
Fun can be tactical.
Fun can be strategic.
Fun can be authentic.
For boxing fans, realism enhances enjoyment because it reflects what makes the sport compelling in the first place.
So when realism is framed as “boring,” the perspective of the sport’s core audience is being overlooked.
A Boxing Game Teaches Through Play
For many players, a game is their first introduction to boxing.
Interactive learning makes complex ideas intuitive:
• How scoring works
• Why stamina changes late rounds
• What makes a jab elite
• How styles clash
• Why defense wins fights
• How ring control shapes outcomes
Concepts that feel abstract in commentary become clear through interaction.
Games teach by doing.
Education and entertainment are not opposites.
They reinforce each other.
Games Turn Players Into Fans, And Viewers
A great boxing game does more than sell copies.
It grows the audience for the entire sport.
Players who invest time in authentic systems begin to:
• Learn the athletes
• Follow divisions
• Understand tactics
• Watch highlights
• Seek interviews and analysis
• Tune into live events
Curiosity becomes viewership.
Viewership becomes long-term fandom.
Interactive engagement builds stronger attachment than passive watching. When someone spends dozens of hours mastering mechanics and strategy, their connection to the sport deepens.
That connection directly benefits media outlets.
A Boxing Game Builds the Media Ecosystem
An authentic boxing game expands the audience funnel:
Players
become curious fans
become consistent viewers
become long-term followers
This growth supports:
• Higher readership
• Increased video views
• Stronger subscriber bases
• Greater event coverage demand
• Broader demographic reach
Especially for younger audiences, games are the entry point into sports culture. If interactive gateways are dismissed, one of the most effective modern growth channels is ignored.
A boxing game does not compete with media.
It feeds it.
Media Should Advocate for Fan Voice, Not Speak Over It
If media truly represents audiences, it should help ensure those audiences are heard directly.
That means encouraging publishers and studios to run transparent, third-party, and publicly reported surveys about what fans want in boxing games.
Surveys:
• Capture real player priorities
• Prevent assumption-driven design
• Build trust between studios and communities
• Provide data for better coverage and analysis
• Give media concrete insights instead of speculation
When media pushes for independent surveys, it strengthens accountability across the industry. It also gives journalists credible information to report on player expectations, feature demand, and satisfaction trends.
Let fans speak for themselves.
Help measure what they actually want.
Report the results honestly.
That is how coverage becomes advocacy for the audience.
Why Framing Matters
When boxing games are treated as arcade fighting experiences instead of sports simulations, the conversation shifts away from authenticity.
That framing signals to studios that spectacle matters more than sporting integrity.
It tells publishers that exaggeration is safer than accuracy.
It shapes investment and design priorities.
But authenticity is not a limitation. It creates:
• Deeper gameplay systems
• Longer engagement
• Meaningful style diversity
• Stronger competitive foundations
• Respect from real boxing communities
These are advantages.
Ask Better Questions
Coverage influences development. The questions asked in interviews matter.
Instead of focusing only on spectacle, ask:
• How accurately is footwork represented?
• Do stamina systems reflect real fatigue?
• Does defense require responsibility and timing?
• How important is ring control?
• Are different boxer styles mechanically distinct?
These are not niche details. They are the foundation of boxing.
Include Real Boxing Voices
Broaden perspectives beyond general gaming commentary.
Bring in:
• Trainers
• Amateur competitors
• Film-study analysts
• Longtime boxing journalists
They recognize the nuance behind the sport’s mechanics and bring credibility to the discussion.
This Is Bigger Than a Product
Boxing carries history, culture, identity, and generational meaning. Treating it as an arcade spectacle strips away that weight.
Media is not just covering games.
It is shaping how a sport is represented in interactive form, and how new generations discover it.
The Reality
A realistic boxing video game can be:
• Fun
• Competitive
• Commercially successful
• Educational
• Culturally respectful
• A powerful fan-generation tool
And it can grow the audience for everyone who covers the sport.
Boxing is fun to boxing fans.
Realism does not reduce that fun.
It honors it.
Please treat boxing like the sport it is.
Respectfully,
Boxing fans