Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Too Many Interviewers Do Not Represent the Boxing Videogame Community



Too Many Interviewers Do Not Represent the Boxing Videogame Community

The boxing videogame community has a representation problem.

Too many content creators, influencers, and game industry interviewers are being placed in front of developers as if they speak for the boxing videogame community. The problem is, many of them do not truly represent that community. They may like boxing games. They may enjoy combat sports games. They may even have an audience. But liking a boxing game is not the same as understanding what boxing videogame fans have been fighting for over the last several decades.

There is a difference between casual interest and true representation.

A lot of these interviews are too safe. They are uninspired. They lack passion. They avoid the uncomfortable but necessary questions. Instead of challenging developers on missing features, removed systems, broken promises, or the lack of true boxing simulation, they often settle for surface-level conversations that do very little for the hardcore fanbase.

That is not good enough anymore.

Boxing Is Not Just an Arcade Fighting Game

One of the biggest problems is that too many people still look at boxing videogames through the lens of an arcade fighting game.

Boxing is not just two characters throwing punches until someone falls down.

Boxing is a sport.

It has rhythm. Range. Timing. Foot placement. Ring generalship. Defense. Feints. Traps. Clinching. Inside fighting. Judging. Refereeing. Corner work. Stamina management. Styles. Tendencies. Punch selection. Weight transfer. Mental pressure. Strategy. Discipline.

A true boxing videogame should represent those things.

When interviewers do not understand boxing as a sport, they do not ask the right questions. They ask about graphics, rosters, knockouts, and online modes, but they miss the deeper issues that determine whether a boxing game feels authentic or shallow.

Where are the questions about the in-ring referee?

Where are the questions about clinching?

Where are the questions about inside fighting?

Where are the questions about realistic stamina?

Where are the questions about boxer tendencies, traits, capabilities, and individuality?

Where are the questions about CPU vs CPU, offline career depth, judging logic, corner advice, ring control, and presentation?

Where are the questions about why hardcore fans keep being told to accept less?

These are the questions that matter to people who truly care about boxing videogames as a serious sports simulation.

Safe Interviews Protect Studios, Not the Community

A safe interview may be good for access, relationships, and views, but it is not always good for the community.

When an interviewer refuses to ask hard questions, the developer gets a comfortable promotional platform instead of real accountability. That may benefit the studio. It may benefit the interviewer. But it does not benefit the fans who are still waiting for the boxing videogame they were promised.

Hardcore fans do not need another interview where every question sounds pre-approved.

They do not need another conversation where the interviewer avoids the missing features everyone is talking about.

They do not need another soft discussion that treats legitimate criticism like negativity.

They need someone who understands the history of boxing games, understands what was lost, understands what is missing, and understands why the hardcore community is frustrated.

That type of voice is rare.

Why Someone Like Poe Would Ask Different Questions

Someone like Poe would ask different questions because Poe is not looking at boxing videogames from the outside.

Poe has been gaming for over four decades. He has boxed as a decorated amateur and as a professional. He has helped companies like EA. He has been part of the boxing videogame conversation for years. He talks to developers from different companies behind the scenes constantly, nearly every day if not every day. He also talks to boxers and hardcore fans.

That matters.

That background brings a different level of understanding to the conversation. Poe would not just ask, “How many boxers are in the game?” He would ask whether those boxers actually fight like themselves.

He would not just ask, “Is career mode bigger?” He would ask whether career mode represents the real boxing ecosystem.

He would not just ask, “Will online be improved?” He would ask whether online has authentic boxing contracts, rule sets, judging options, anti-quit systems, and simulation settings.

He would not just ask, “Does the game feel fun?” He would ask, “Who decided what fun means, and were hardcore boxing fans included in that decision?”

That is the difference between asking generic gaming questions and asking real boxing videogame questions.

The Hardcore Community Deserves Better Questions

The hardcore boxing videogame community has been asking for many of the same things for years.

They want authentic boxing.

They want a real in-ring referee.

They want clinching and inside fighting.

They want realistic stamina and damage.

They want boxers to feel different from each other.

They want deep tendencies, traits, ratings, and styles.

They want a serious career mode.

They want CPU vs CPU.

They want deeper offline options.

They want a creation suite that lets them build a real boxing universe.

They want presentation that respects the sport.

They want sliders, settings, and options that allow casual fans, hybrid fans, and simulation fans to play the way they want.

These are not unreasonable requests. These are the foundations of a serious boxing sports game.

So when interviewers get access to developers and fail to bring these topics up, hardcore fans notice. It makes the community feel ignored again. It makes it look like the same safe voices are being used to control the conversation while the most passionate and knowledgeable fans are kept outside the room.

Representation Should Be Earned

Not everyone with a platform represents the boxing videogame community.

Not everyone with access understands the sport.

Not everyone who interviews a developer knows what should be asked.

Representation should be earned through knowledge, passion, history, and a willingness to speak for the people who have been overlooked.

If someone is going to sit across from developers and speak on behalf of boxing videogame fans, they should understand what the fans have been asking for. They should know the history. They should know the difference between arcade combat and boxing simulation. They should understand why features like referees, clinching, tendencies, stamina, AI, career mode, and creation tools matter.

Most importantly, they should not be afraid to ask the real questions.

This Is About Accountability, Not Negativity

Some people will try to label this kind of criticism as hate or negativity.

It is not.

This is about accountability.

This is about wanting boxing to be represented correctly.

This is about making sure hardcore fans are not pushed aside by people who do not understand what they have been fighting for.

This is about making sure a boxing videogame is not treated like a shallow arcade fighter with licensed boxers attached to it.

Boxing deserves better than that.

The community deserves better than that.

The developers should hear from people who understand the sport, understand gaming, understand the history, and understand what has been missing for far too long.

Because at the end of the day, a boxing videogame should not be accepted just because it is boxing.

It should be judged by how well it represents boxing.

And if the people asking the questions do not understand that, then they should not pretend to represent the boxing videogame community.

Game Companies Are Leaving Money on the Table by Ignoring Hardcore Boxing Fans

 

Game Companies Are Leaving Money on the Table by Ignoring Hardcore Boxing Fans

Everybody should not try to be the voice of boxing or the boxing videogame community.

Some people are simply satisfied that a boxing videogame exists. That is fine for them. But hardcore boxing fans are not looking for just any boxing game. They are looking for a game that represents the sport with authenticity, realism, strategy, depth, consequence, and respect.

There is a major difference between wanting a boxing game and wanting a true boxing simulation.

Some people want visibility. Some want access. Some want to be seen as community leaders. Some want to be close to the developers, the studios, or the movement around the game. But wanting attention is not the same as having boxing fans’ best interests at heart.

Being loud does not make someone the voice of the community.

Being close to the developers does not make someone the voice of the community.

Having followers does not make someone the voice of the community.

The real voice of the boxing videogame community should come from the people who actually care about boxing being represented properly.

Because hardcore boxing fans are not asking for perfection. They are asking for a serious effort to represent boxing as boxing.

They notice when the in-ring referee is missing.

They notice when clinching is missing or shallow.

They notice when inside fighting is not properly represented.

They notice when every boxer moves too similarly.

They notice when styles, tendencies, traits, weaknesses, ring IQ, stamina, punch selection, defense, and footwork do not have real depth.

They notice when the game looks like boxing on the surface but does not fully think, breathe, and behave like boxing.

That is where companies like SCI risk making a major mistake.

They cannot keep trying to force hardcore boxing fans to accept a boxing game simply because it has boxing in it. They cannot expect fans to be grateful for a hybrid or arcade-leaning version of boxing just because the genre has been neglected for years.

That is not how hardcore fans think.

Hardcore fans are not starving for anything with gloves, a ring, and licensed boxers. They are starving for a boxing game that respects the sport.

And if a company ignores that, it is not just ignoring criticism.

It is ignoring money.

Hardcore fans are not just regular buyers. They are the foundation. They are the repeat customers. They are the ones who buy DLC, support roster expansions, run leagues, create content, test systems, promote features, build communities, and keep a game alive after launch day.

Casual fans may buy the game because they recognize a few big names.

They may ask:

“Is Mike Tyson in it?”
“Is Muhammad Ali in it?”
“Is Floyd Mayweather in it?”
“Is Canelo in it?”
“Can I play online?”
“Is it fun?”

But hardcore fans ask different questions:

“Where are the flyweights?”
“Where are the old-school champions?”
“Where are the contenders, prospects, gatekeepers, and journeymen?”
“Where are the different versions of boxers?”
“Where are the real styles, tendencies, strengths, weaknesses, and ring IQ differences?”
“Can I recreate boxing history?”
“Can I build my own boxing universe?”
“Can I watch any fight?”
“Can I customize the ecosystem?”
“Can I create boxers, trainers, promoters, referees, judges, belts, arenas, organizations, and full stables?”

That is the difference.

Casuals may buy names.

Hardcore fans buy ecosystems.

So when a company talks about having over 200 boxers, including DLC, who is really going to support that?

The hardcore boxing fans.

Casual players may recognize the biggest stars, but they are not usually the ones demanding 200+ boxers, multiple eras, deep divisions, undercards, regional names, prospects, contenders, former champions, journeymen, alternate versions, historic venues, trainer packs, broadcast packages, and career-mode expansions.

That level of depth is a hardcore boxing fan desire.

A casual fan may not understand why the 87th boxer on the roster matters.

A hardcore fan does.

A hardcore fan understands why a tough gatekeeper matters. They understand why a former champion matters. They understand why a regional contender matters. They understand why a defensive specialist, awkward veteran, southpaw spoiler, pressure fighter, Olympic prospect, or aging comeback fighter matters.

That is what makes a boxing world feel alive.

That is what creates replay value.

That is what sells DLC long-term.

So if SCI or any other company believes it can sell a massive boxing roster while ignoring the hardcore boxing audience, that is backwards. The people most likely to support that roster are the same people asking for the game to be more authentic, more realistic, and more respectful to boxing.

That is why forcing hardcore fans to accept a hybrid or arcadey version of boxing is a business mistake.

A realistic boxing game can still have casual options.

It can still have assists.

It can still have sliders.

It can still have different control settings.

It can still have casual, hybrid, and simulation lanes.

It can still welcome new players without watering down the sport.

But the foundation should respect boxing first.

That is how you grow the audience without betraying the core.

The smartest business move is not to fight hardcore fans. The smartest business move is to build a game deep enough for hardcore fans while giving casual players options to enjoy it at their level.

That is how you sell the base game.

That is how you sell the sequel.

That is how you sell roster packs.

That is how you sell historic fighter packs.

That is how you sell career expansions.

That is how you sell creation-suite upgrades.

That is how you sell arenas, trainers, broadcast packages, and long-term content.

Hardcore fans are not the problem.

Hardcore fans are the market that can make a boxing game last for years.

The boxing videogame community does not need voices who only protect the company, excuse missing features, or tell fans to lower their standards. It needs voices who understand the sport, respect the fans, and are willing to push for a better game.

Because this should not just be about making a boxing videogame.

It should be about making a boxing videogame worthy of the sport.

And if companies like SCI ignore that, they are not just leaving features out of the game.

They are leaving money on the table.

Dragon Age: The Open-World Feel Wasn’t the Problem, The World Needed More Life

 

Dragon Age: The Open-World Feel Wasn’t the Problem, The World Needed More Life

The open-world feel did not tarnish what Dragon Age was. The problem was never simply, “Dragon Age should not be bigger.” A bigger world can work for Dragon Age. A more open structure can work for Dragon Age. Exploration, large regions, hidden ruins, dangerous roads, political territories, old battlefields, mage-touched forests, dwarven ruins, Qunari-occupied zones, and Fade-scarred lands all fit the series.

The real issue is that the world needs more meaningful things happening inside it.

A Dragon Age open world should not feel like a giant checklist. It should feel like a living continent full of danger, politics, religion, magic, war, secrets, and consequences. The player should not just be running across beautiful landscapes, collecting materials or closing repeated rifts. The player should feel like every region has its own crisis, its own culture, its own factions, its own secrets, and its own people reacting to what is happening.

Dragon Age was built on choice, companions, lore, politics, and consequences. So when the world gets bigger, those things need to get bigger too.

An open Dragon Age world should have:

Villages that change over time.
A town should not just sit there waiting for the player. If bandits are threatening it, the threat should escalate. If demons are nearby, people should disappear. If mages are hiding there, templars should show up. If the player helps one faction, another faction should react.

More companion involvement.
Companions should not just comment once and move on. They should have opinions about the region, argue with locals, recognize old enemies, unlock unique solutions, or even refuse certain choices. A Dalish companion should change the way an elven ruin feels. A dwarf should matter in Deep Roads content. A mage should matter when dealing with spirits, demons, and magical disasters.

Faction pressure.
Dragon Age is at its best when groups are not just “good” or “bad.” The Chantry, templars, mages, Qunari, nobles, Carta, Wardens, Dalish, dwarven houses, Antivan Crows, Tevinter powers — these factions should be moving around the map with their own agendas. The player should feel caught in a web of competing powers.

More unique encounters.
Not every fight should feel like random enemies placed in a field. You should stumble onto assassins hunting someone, a mage experiment gone wrong, a cursed caravan, a noble’s secret execution, darkspawn tunneling beneath a village, or a spirit trying to protect a ruined shrine in a disturbing way.

Regions with identity.
Each area should feel like it belongs to Dragon Age. One zone might be political and tense. Another might be horror-focused. Another might be a warzone. Another might be ancient and mysterious. Another might be full of religious conflict. The map should not just be large; it should have personality.

Consequences that stay visible.
If you save a settlement, people should rebuild. If you ignore a threat, bodies should pile up. If you side with one faction, their banners, patrols, and influence should appear. If you make a brutal choice, the land should remember it.

That is where the open-world approach needed to grow.

The issue was not that Dragon Age became too open. The issue was that the open spaces sometimes did not carry enough of the series’s strongest identity. Dragon Age is not just about walking through fantasy landscapes. It is about walking through a world where history, politics, magic, religion, and personal choices collide.

A larger Dragon Age world should feel like the player is stepping into a living Thedas, not just exploring zones, but entering conflicts already in motion.

So no, the open-world feel did not tarnish Dragon Age.

It simply needed more happening.

More consequences.
More companion reactions.
More faction movement.
More unique stories.
More danger.
More mystery.
More Dragon Age inside the open world.

The Open World Should Have Felt Like Thedas Was Moving Without You

A Dragon Age open world should not feel like the player is the only thing causing events to happen. The world should already be in motion before the player arrives.

That is what makes a fantasy world feel alive.

When you enter a region, there should already be tension. People should already be afraid. Factions should already be plotting. Monsters should already be migrating. Nobles should already be betraying each other. Mages should already be experimenting. Templars should already be hunting. Spirits should already be whispering. The Qunari should already be watching. The darkspawn should already be digging.

The player should not be starting every story.

The player should be entering stories that are already unfolding.

That is the difference between an open world that feels empty and an open world that feels alive.

Dragon Age Needs Dynamic Regional Conflict

Every major region should have a conflict system underneath it.

Not just quests.
Not just map markers.
Not just collectibles.

A real conflict.

For example, imagine entering a region where three powers are fighting for control:

A noble house controls the main city.
A rebel faction controls the roads.
A group of apostate mages hides in the forest.
Templars are hunting them.
A demon cult is taking advantage of the chaos.
A dwarven merchant house is secretly funding both sides.
And a companion has history with one of the leaders.

Now the region has layers.

The player can help the nobles restore order, support the rebels, protect the mages, expose the merchants, destroy the cult, negotiate peace, or make everything worse. The choice should not just change one dialogue scene. It should change the map.

Roads become safer or more dangerous.
Merchants return or disappear.
Villages get rebuilt or abandoned.
Enemies change.
Patrols change.
Prices change.
Companions approve, disapprove, or confront you.
New quests open.
Other quests close.
The final battle in that region changes.

That is the kind of open-world design that fits Dragon Age.

Not empty space.
Political space.
Moral space.
Faction space.
Story space.

Exploration Should Reveal Lore, Not Just Loot

Dragon Age has some of the best lore in fantasy gaming, but open-world exploration should do more than scatter codex entries around the map.

The lore should become playable.

You should not just read about an ancient elven ruin. You should discover why it matters. You should find spirits trapped inside it. You should see how Dalish elves interpret it differently from Tevinter scholars. You should watch companions argue over what the ruin means. You should unlock powers, curses, or story consequences depending on what you do there.

A dwarven ruin should not just be a cave with enemies. It should reveal caste history, forgotten thaigs, lost inventions, ancient golems, darkspawn corruption, and political secrets connected to Orzammar or Kal-Sharok.

A haunted battlefield should not just be a place with undead enemies. It should tell the story of who died there, why they died, who betrayed them, and what spirit or demon still feeds on that pain.

That is Dragon Age exploration.

The player should feel like every ruin, cave, tower, swamp, battlefield, and abandoned village has a reason to exist.

The Map Should React to the Player’s Reputation

Dragon Age is a series built around reputation, leadership, and consequence. An open-world Dragon Age should reflect that constantly.

If the player becomes known as merciful, people should come asking for protection.
If the player becomes known as ruthless, enemies should surrender faster, but common people may fear them.
If the player favors mages, templar-aligned groups should challenge them.
If the player favors templars, apostates and rebel mages should avoid or ambush them.
If the player angers the Chantry, certain religious towns should refuse support.
If the player helps dwarves, merchants and smiths should offer rare equipment.
If the player betrays a faction, bounty hunters and assassins should appear on the road.

The open world should not treat the player like a tourist.

It should treat the player like a political force.

That is what Dragon Age has always understood at its best. The player is not just a hero with a sword or staff. The player is someone whose decisions affect nations, religions, bloodlines, wars, and the future of Thedas.

More Random Encounters Should Have Story Weight

Dragon Age needs random encounters, but not meaningless ones.

Not just wolves.
Not just bandits.
Not just demons standing in a field.

The encounters should feel authored, dramatic, and strange.

You might find a group of templars surrounding a terrified young mage.
You might find a wounded Qunari who refuses help but carries important intelligence.
You might find a noble family being escorted by mercenaries, only to learn the “bandits” chasing them are actually villagers they exploited.
You might find a spirit pretending to be a lost child.
You might find darkspawn dragging people underground.
You might find a merchant selling relics stolen from a Dalish burial site.
You might find a Grey Warden burning bodies before anyone can ask why.

These moments do not always need to be massive quests. Some can be small. Some can be disturbing. Some can be funny. Some can be tragic.

But they should feel like Dragon Age.

The world should constantly remind the player that Thedas is beautiful, dangerous, political, magical, and morally complicated.

Camps Should Have Been More Important

Camps, bases, strongholds, and safe zones should be more than fast-travel points.

They should become living hubs.

When the player clears a road, refugees should arrive.
When the player defeats a monster threat, hunters should return.
When the player recruits a faction, their soldiers should appear.
When the player makes enemies, spies should infiltrate the camp.
When companions have unresolved issues, they should trigger scenes there.
When the region gets worse, wounded people should fill the area.

A camp should tell the story of the region’s condition.

At first, it might be quiet and desperate. Later, it might become busy and hopeful. Or if the player makes the wrong choices, it might become militarized, fearful, or abandoned.

That gives the player a visual sense of progress without needing a menu to explain everything.

The Open World Needed More Companion-Driven Discovery

Companions should not just be party members following behind the player. In an open-world Dragon Age, companions should help open the world.

A rogue companion might notice hidden tracks, secret doors, smuggling routes, or ambushes.
A mage companion might sense Fade disturbances, cursed objects, illusions, or spirits.
A warrior might identify military formations, old battle tactics, weapon marks, or siege damage.
A dwarf might recognize stonework, lyrium signs, Carta markings, or Deep Roads architecture.
An elf might read old elven symbols, understand Dalish customs, or expose human misunderstandings of elven history.
A Qunari companion might interpret Qunari signals, discipline structures, or coded battlefield behavior.

That would make companion choice matter during exploration.

It would also make replaying the game better because different party combinations would reveal different layers of the same region.

That is exactly the kind of system Dragon Age should have leaned into.

Bigger Worlds Need Bigger Role-Playing

When the world gets bigger, the role-playing has to get deeper.

The player should not just choose dialogue options in main story scenes. They should role-play through travel, discovery, leadership, reputation, and conflict.

Do you enter a hostile town peacefully or with intimidation?
Do you announce your identity or travel quietly?
Do you bring a companion who will escalate the situation or calm it down?
Do you save supplies for your camp or give them to starving villagers?
Do you expose a dangerous truth or bury it to prevent panic?
Do you spare a monster because it was created by abuse?
Do you kill a mage before they become an abomination, or risk saving them?
Do you allow a faction to control a region because they bring order, even if they are cruel?

That is Dragon Age.

The open world should be a role-playing machine, not just a landscape.

The Real Problem Was Density of Meaning

The issue was not size.

It was density.

Not graphical density.
Not collectible density.
Not enemy density.

Meaningful density.

Every area should have story density. Political density. Companion density. Lore density. Consequence density. Encounter density. Moral density.

A Dragon Age open world does not need to be the biggest. It needs to be the most layered.

Thedas should feel like a place where every road has history, every ruin has a secret, every faction has an agenda, and every decision can echo.

That is why the open-world idea should not be blamed by itself. The open-world feel was not the enemy of Dragon Age. The empty parts were.

A bigger Dragon Age world can work.

But it has to be alive.

It has to be reactive.

It has to be dangerous.

It has to be personal.

It has to be full of companions who matter, factions that move, towns that change, enemies that adapt, and choices that stay visible.

That is how Dragon Age can have an open-world feel without losing its soul.

Many Fans Feel Like EA and BioWare Destroyed Dragon Age

 

Many Fans Feel Like EA and BioWare Destroyed Dragon Age

There is a painful conversation happening in the Dragon Age community, and it is not just about one game. It is not just about one bad decision. It is not even only about Dragon Age: The Veilguard.

It is about trust.

Many fans feel like EA and BioWare did not simply mishandle Dragon Age. They feel like the franchise was slowly stripped down, redirected, softened, and pushed away from what made it special in the first place.

Some fans are now asking the harshest question possible:

Did EA and BioWare intentionally destroy the Dragon Age franchise?

That is a serious accusation. No fan can honestly prove that someone inside EA or BioWare sat in a room and said, “Let’s ruin Dragon Age.” Without inside evidence, no one can claim that as fact.

But fans do not need secret documents to recognize a pattern.

They saw the direction change.
They saw the tone change.
They saw the combat change.
They saw the writing style change.
They saw the role-playing depth reduced.
They saw the franchise drift further and further away from the identity that made people fall in love with it.

That is why the anger is so strong.

Fans may not be able to prove intent, but they can absolutely point to the damage.

And to many of them, whether it was intentional or not, the end result feels the same: the Dragon Age they loved was dismantled in front of them.

Dragon Age Used to Feel Dangerous

When Dragon Age: Origins released, it felt like a dark fantasy world with real weight behind it. Thedas was brutal. It was political. It was religious. It was ugly. It was beautiful. It was full of betrayal, racism, class conflict, blood magic, ancient horrors, moral compromise, and impossible decisions.

You were not just playing through a fantasy adventure. You were surviving a world that did not care about your comfort.

That is what made Dragon Age special.

The Grey Wardens were not clean superheroes. They were desperate warriors carrying a terrible burden. Mages were not just flashy spellcasters. They were feared, controlled, exploited, and sometimes corrupted. The Chantry was not just background religion. It shaped laws, nations, oppression, rebellion, and war. The dwarves were not just underground fantasy people. They had caste systems, political rot, lost history, and terrifying mysteries buried beneath the Deep Roads.

Everything had weight.

Everything had history.

Everything had consequences.

That is the Dragon Age many fans still remember.

It felt like Thedas existed before the player arrived, and it would keep bleeding long after the player left.

The Series Started Moving Away From Its Own Strengths

Over time, however, Dragon Age started changing.

Dragon Age II had strong characters and interesting ideas, but it was clearly rushed. The repeated environments, smaller scope, and limited structure made many fans feel like the franchise had already been compromised by production pressure.

Then came Dragon Age: Inquisition. It was successful and won Game of the Year, but even that game divided fans in certain areas. Some loved the scale, the world, and the lore revelations. Others felt the open-world structure padded the experience and pulled attention away from the tighter RPG depth that made the earlier games special.

Still, Inquisition felt like Dragon Age in many important ways. It had political tension, party conflict, lore mystery, ancient elven revelations, religious pressure, and a sense that Thedas was still a complex world.

Then came the long wait.

Years passed. Development reportedly shifted. Direction changed. The franchise went quiet. Fans waited and waited, hoping BioWare would come back with something that respected the roots of the series.

But when The Veilguard finally arrived, many longtime fans felt like they were looking at a franchise that had been heavily reshaped for a different audience.

That is where the wound became deeper.

Fans Feel Like Dragon Age Lost Its Identity

The biggest complaint is not simply that fans disliked a new game.

The bigger complaint is that many fans feel Dragon Age no longer feels like Dragon Age.

They miss the darker tone.
They miss the tactical RPG foundation.
They miss the uncomfortable choices.
They miss the heavier writing.
They miss the danger of magic.
They miss the companion tension.
They miss the feeling that party members could truly challenge the player.
They miss the religious, political, and cultural complexity.
They miss the sense that Thedas was bigger than the protagonist.

Earlier Dragon Age games were not afraid to make players uncomfortable. They were not afraid of ugly truths. They were not afraid of morally messy outcomes. They were not afraid to let companions disagree, leave, betray, or judge you.

That friction mattered.

That darkness mattered.

That role-playing mattered.

So when fans say EA and BioWare destroyed Dragon Age, this is often what they mean:

The name survived, but the soul was weakened.

This Is Why Fans Feel Betrayed

A franchise is not just a logo. It is not just characters, names, locations, and lore references. A franchise has an identity. It has a feeling. It has expectations built through years of storytelling, gameplay, and emotional investment.

Fans invested in Dragon Age because it offered something specific.

It was not trying to be a light fantasy adventure.
It was not trying to be a generic action game.
It was not trying to please everyone.
It was not afraid to be strange, political, violent, tragic, or complicated.

That is why it stood out.

So when fans feel like the franchise was softened, streamlined, modernized, or sanitized beyond recognition, they do not just see it as a creative choice. They see it as a betrayal.

They feel like the people in charge either forgot what Dragon Age was or no longer respected what it was.

And honestly, that feeling should not be dismissed.

The Pattern Is Why Fans Are Angry

This is why the “intentional destruction” feeling exists.

Again, fans may not be able to prove intent. But they can look at years of choices and say, “This does not look like protection. This does not look like respect. This does not look like a studio and publisher preserving one of their strongest RPG franchises.”

From the outside, the pattern looks painful:

A beloved dark fantasy RPG franchise was changed.
The original audience was told to accept a new direction.
The role-playing systems were reduced or reshaped.
The tone became less brutal.
The party dynamics felt less dangerous.
The tactical identity weakened.
The long-term fanbase became divided.
The franchise returned after years away, but many fans felt disconnected from it.

That is why so many fans feel like Dragon Age was not simply mishandled.

They feel like it was slowly pulled away from them.

Maybe it was corporate pressure.
Maybe it was chasing broader audiences.
Maybe it was fear of risk.
Maybe it was development trouble.
Maybe it was leadership changes.
Maybe it was trend-chasing.
Maybe it was a misunderstanding of what the core audience truly valued.

But the damage is still real.

Intentional or not, fans are looking at the outcome.

And the outcome has left many of them feeling like the franchise was weakened from the inside.

Criticism Is Not Automatically Toxic

One of the biggest mistakes companies make is treating passionate criticism as toxicity.

Yes, some people go too far. Personal attacks on developers are wrong. Harassment is wrong. Celebrating layoffs is wrong. Developers are human beings, and many of them work under difficult conditions, corporate pressure, shifting mandates, and impossible expectations.

But criticism of creative direction is not toxicity.

Fans are allowed to be upset.

Fans are allowed to say the franchise changed too much.

Fans are allowed to question EA’s handling of BioWare.

Fans are allowed to question why Dragon Age was allowed to sit for so long, go through so many changes, and return in a form that left many longtime supporters feeling disconnected.

That is not hate.

That is accountability.

The fans who are angry are often the same fans who kept the series alive through discussion, theory videos, fan art, fan fiction, forums, lore debates, replays, and years of waiting.

They are not angry because they never cared.

They are angry because they cared too much to stay silent.

Fans Want Thedas, Not a Generic Fantasy Brand

This is the heart of the issue.

Fans do not want a generic fantasy action game wearing the skin of Dragon Age. They do not want familiar names without familiar depth. They do not want references without weight. They do not want lore without consequence.

They want Thedas.

They want a world that feels old, dangerous, political, magical, tragic, and alive.

They want companions who feel like real people, not just agreeable teammates. They want choices that make them pause. They want villains with ideology. They want factions with history. They want cultures with flaws. They want magic to feel powerful and terrifying. They want the world to push back.

That is what Dragon Age was built on.

That is what many fans feel has been lost.

Dragon Age Can Still Be Saved

The answer is not to bury Dragon Age. The answer is not to pretend the franchise no longer matters. The answer is not to move on and act like the fans are the problem.

The answer is restoration.

Dragon Age can still matter. The world of Thedas is still one of the strongest fantasy settings in gaming. There are still stories to tell. There are still mysteries to explore. There are still factions, races, conflicts, religions, ancient powers, and forgotten histories that could carry future games.

But BioWare and EA have to stop running from what made the series great.

Bring back the darkness.
Bring back the danger.
Bring back the hard choices.
Bring back deeper role-playing.
Bring back tactical options.
Bring back class identity.
Bring back companion conflict.
Bring back consequences.
Bring back political tension.
Bring back the horror of the Deep Roads.
Bring back the fear of blood magic.
Bring back the weight of the Grey Wardens.
Bring back the mystery of dwarven history.
Bring back the complexity of the Chantry, the Qunari, the elves, the mages, and the templars.

Do not make Dragon Age ashamed of being Dragon Age.

Evolution Is Not the Problem

Fans are not asking for Dragon Age to stay frozen in the past.

That is an easy excuse used to dismiss legitimate criticism.

Most fans understand that games have to evolve. Combat can improve. Graphics can improve. Dialogue systems can change. Accessibility can expand. New protagonists, new regions, new threats, and new themes can be introduced.

The problem is not evolution.

The problem is abandonment.

Evolution builds on identity.

Abandonment replaces it.

A true evolution of Dragon Age would take what made the franchise powerful and expand it. It would deepen the role-playing. It would make choices even more meaningful. It would make companions more reactive. It would make combat more strategic, not less. It would make Thedas feel even more alive, dangerous, and politically unstable.

That is what fans wanted.

Not a museum piece.

Not nostalgia bait.

But a future that respected the foundation.

Whether Intentional or Not, the Damage Is Real

Maybe EA and BioWare did not intentionally destroy Dragon Age.

Maybe it was mismanagement.
Maybe it was corporate interference.
Maybe it was chasing trends.
Maybe it was fear of risk.
Maybe it was trying too hard to reach a broader audience.
Maybe it was years of development problems and leadership changes.
Maybe it was a misunderstanding of what the core audience truly valued.

But from the fan perspective, the result still hurts.

Because whether the damage was intentional or accidental, the damage is still real.

The trust is damaged.
The identity is damaged.
The fanbase is divided.
The future is uncertain.

And that is why so many fans are speaking out.

They are not asking for Dragon Age to die.

They are asking for it to remember what it is.

Final Word

Many fans feel like EA and BioWare destroyed Dragon Age because they watched a dark, complex, tactical, choice-driven RPG franchise slowly become something that felt less dangerous, less layered, and less connected to its roots.

That feeling should not be mocked. It should not be dismissed. It should not be written off as nostalgia.

Fans remember what Dragon Age was.

They remember how Origins made them feel.
They remember the impossible choices.
They remember the companions.
They remember the lore.
They remember the darkness.
They remember Thedas.

So when fans say EA and BioWare destroyed the franchise, what many of them are really saying is:

You had something special. You changed too much. You ignored too much. You lost the people who cared the most. And now you want us to pretend we are the problem for noticing.

That is why the anger is real.

That is why the distrust is real.

And that is why Dragon Age needs more than another sequel.

It needs a restoration.

Because Dragon Age does not need to die.

It needs to come home.

Sunday, June 7, 2026

Why Are Bethesda Hiring Multiplayer Developers When Fallout Fans Want Single-Player?

 

Why Are Bethesda Hiring Multiplayer Developers When Fallout Fans Want Single-Player?

Bethesda hiring multiplayer developers is the kind of thing that makes Fallout fans stop and look twice.

And honestly, fans are not wrong for asking questions.

When people think about Fallout 3, Fallout: New Vegas, and even Fallout 4, they think about wandering a broken world alone. They think about strange towns, dangerous roads, factions with ugly motives, companions with baggage, moral choices, vault experiments, dark humor, and that feeling that anything could be waiting over the next hill.

That is Fallout to a lot of people.

So when fans see Bethesda hiring people with multiplayer experience, networking experience, online systems experience, and live-service-style technical skills, the concern is obvious:

Are they trying to turn Fallout 5 into another online-first game?

That is the fear.

And after Fallout 76, Bethesda should understand exactly why fans are nervous.

Multiplayer Hiring Does Not Automatically Mean Fallout 5 Is Multiplayer

To be fair, a studio hiring multiplayer developers does not automatically mean the next mainline Fallout will be multiplayer.

Bethesda still has Fallout 76, and that game needs ongoing support. It needs server work, online systems, events, updates, stability fixes, and backend maintenance. So some of these hires could easily be connected to Fallout 76.

Also, modern games often use online infrastructure even when the main game is single-player. A single-player Bethesda game can still have mod sharing, Creation Club systems, cloud saves, account services, analytics, patch pipelines, community content, and post-launch updates.

So no, fans should not immediately assume:

“Multiplayer developers = Fallout 5 is doomed.”

That would be too simple.

But the concern still makes sense because Bethesda has already crossed that line once.

Fallout 76 Changed the Trust Level

Fallout 76 is the reason this conversation exists.

Before Fallout 76, if Bethesda hired multiplayer developers, fans might have shrugged it off. But after Fallout 76, fans know Bethesda is willing to take the Fallout brand into online territory.

That does not mean Fallout 76 has no audience. It clearly does. Some players enjoy it. Some like the co-op survival format, the events, the camps, and the shared wasteland idea.

But Fallout 76 is not what many longtime Fallout fans wanted from the next major Fallout experience.

They wanted a world that reacted to them.

They wanted meaningful choices.

They wanted towns, factions, consequences, companions, and storytelling.

They wanted the loneliness of the wasteland.

They wanted the feeling that the game was built around their character’s journey, not around public events, daily loops, servers, or shared-world systems.

That is the difference.

Fallout 76 may be a Fallout product, but for many fans, it did not scratch the same itch as a true single-player Fallout RPG.

Fans Are Not Anti-Technology

This is where some people misunderstand the criticism.

Fans are not saying Bethesda should never hire multiplayer developers. They are not saying online technology is evil. They are not saying every developer with multiplayer experience should be kept away from Fallout.

The real issue is design priority.

Fans are saying:

“Do not build Fallout 5 around multiplayer systems.”

That is a reasonable demand.

Use multiplayer developers for Fallout 76.

Use online engineers for mod support.

Use backend systems for updates, cloud saves, and community tools.

But do not let live-service thinking invade the heart of Fallout 5.

The mainline Fallout experience should not be built around player retention charts, daily challenges, online economies, cosmetic shops, co-op balancing, seasonal loops, or public event grinding.

Fallout 5 should be built around role-playing.

Fallout 5 Needs to Be Single-Player First

If Fallout 5 happens, it needs to be a true single-player RPG first.

Not “single-player friendly.”

Not “playable solo.”

Not “online but you can ignore people.”

Not “shared world with private instances.”

Single-player first means the entire game is designed around one player creating one character and shaping one wasteland.

That means:

The world should react to the player’s choices.

Factions should rise, fall, betray, merge, collapse, or remember what the player did.

Companions should have depth, loyalty, conflict, and consequences.

Settlements should matter beyond just building structures.

Dialogue should have real role-playing options.

Skills, perks, reputation, karma, faction alignment, and character background should affect the world.

Exploration should feel dangerous, strange, and rewarding.

The wasteland should feel authored, not just generated or stretched.

That is what fans are asking for.

Bethesda Has to Rebuild Confidence

Bethesda cannot just assume fans will trust the process.

The studio is in a different position now.

Fallout 76 damaged trust with a large part of the Fallout audience. Starfield also left many players questioning Bethesda’s design direction. Some fans felt it was too empty, too safe, too spread out, or too dependent on systems that did not create enough emotional attachment.

That matters because Fallout 5 is not just another sequel.

Fallout 5 would be the first new mainline Fallout after years of debate about Bethesda’s identity as an RPG studio.

So if fans see multiplayer hiring, vague language, online systems, monetization talk, or “social features,” they are going to question it.

And they should.

Fans are not being negative just to be negative. They are protecting the identity of a series they care about.

The Long Wait Makes Everything More Uncertain

Another reason fans should be cautious is the timeline.

Fallout 5 is not around the corner. Bethesda still has The Elder Scrolls VI ahead of it, and even that game has no clear release date.

So when people talk about Fallout 5, they are talking about a game that could be more than five years away.

A lot can happen in five years.

Leadership can change.

Microsoft’s priorities can change.

Game Pass strategy can change.

The live-service market can change.

The modding economy can change.

Bethesda’s engine strategy can change.

The entire industry can shift again.

That is why fans should not act like Fallout 5 is guaranteed to be exactly what they want. It may be planned, but plans can evolve. Projects can be delayed. Directions can change. Studios can be reorganized. Franchises can sit longer than expected.

So the question is not just:

“Are we getting Fallout 5?”

The bigger question is:

“What kind of Fallout 5 would we be getting?”

That is what fans need to pay attention to.

Multiplayer Should Never Control the Mainline Fallout Formula

There is a way for Bethesda to include online features without damaging Fallout 5.

They could have creation sharing.

They could have optional community mods.

They could have cloud-based settlement sharing.

They could have an optional separate co-op mode.

They could even have a separate survival mode for people who want that.

But the main game should not be compromised.

Do not balance the entire combat system around co-op.

Do not weaken V.A.T.S. because of online play.

Do not simplify dialogue because multiplayer players might skip it.

Do not make settlements feel like social hubs instead of player-built communities.

Do not turn quests into repeatable event content.

Do not make the economy feel like an online marketplace.

Do not make the player feel like one participant in a server instead of the central force in the story.

That is the line.

Optional online features are one thing.

Turning Fallout 5 into a multiplayer-shaped RPG is another.

Fallout Works Because of Isolation

One of the most powerful parts of Fallout is isolation.

You leave the vault. You step into the wasteland. You do not fully know who to trust. You find broken homes, dead towns, strange survivors, old government lies, mutant horrors, and factions trying to rebuild the world in their own image.

That feeling gets weaker when the world is filled with other players jumping around in costumes, farming events, trading loot, or sprinting through the same spaces.

That may work for Fallout 76.

It should not define Fallout 5.

A mainline Fallout game needs atmosphere. It needs silence. It needs consequence. It needs the player to feel small at first, then powerful through choices, survival, alliances, and reputation.

That feeling is hard to preserve when the design priority becomes multiplayer engagement.

Fans Should Demand Clear Answers

Bethesda does not need to reveal everything about Fallout 5 right now, but when the time comes, fans should ask direct questions.

Will Fallout 5 be single-player first?

Will it be playable offline?

Will it have real factions and consequences?

Will it have deeper dialogue and role-playing than Fallout 4?

Will companions matter?

Will settlements be more connected to the world?

Will player choices reshape regions?

Will the game avoid live-service progression?

Will there be no forced online requirement?

Will multiplayer, if included at all, be completely optional and separate?

These are fair questions.

Bethesda should expect them.

Should Fans Be Nervous?

Fans should be cautious, not hysterical.

Multiplayer hiring alone does not prove Fallout 5 is in trouble. Bethesda has Fallout 76. Bethesda has online systems. Bethesda has multiple studios. There are practical reasons to hire developers with networking and multiplayer experience.

But fans should not ignore the pattern either.

Bethesda already made an online Fallout. The industry loves recurring engagement. Microsoft owns Bethesda now. Game Pass changes how companies think about long-term player activity. And Fallout 5 is far enough away that anything can happen.

So yes, fans should keep their eyes open.

Not because every multiplayer developer is a threat.

But because Fallout’s identity needs to be defended early.

Final Thought

The message to Bethesda should be simple:

You can support Fallout 76.

You can hire multiplayer developers.

You can modernize your online systems.

You can build better tools, better mod sharing, better backend support, and better post-launch infrastructure.

But Fallout 5 must be a real single-player Fallout RPG first.

Do not make the mainline series pay for the live-service experiment.

Do not confuse online activity with role-playing depth.

Do not mistake multiplayer features for a living world.

Fallout fans are not asking for the past to be copied exactly. They are asking for the soul of Fallout to be respected.

Because if Fallout 5 ever comes, it should not feel like a server with quests.

It should feel like a wasteland with history, danger, consequence, choice, and a world that remembers what the player did.

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Debunking and Debating EA’s Answers in the EA UFC 6 MMA Junkie Interview



Debunking and Debating EA’s Answers in the EA UFC 6 MMA Junkie Interview

EA’s UFC 6 developers gave a long Q&A to MMA Junkie’s Mike Bohn, and the answers reveal a lot. They repeatedly use words like authenticity, fighter personality, real MMA, mind game, narrative, and choice, but when you break the answers down, there is a clear pattern:

EA wants the game to feel more personal and exciting, but many of the design decisions still appear built around online balance, broad accessibility, live-service content, and casual player behavior.

That does not automatically make the game bad. But it does make the “authenticity” claims worth challenging.


1. “Authenticity and Fun” Is Already a Compromise Statement

The developers said the striking philosophy was built around both authenticity and fun. That answer sounds harmless, but it is actually the core tension in almost every EA combat-sports game.

They said:

“We have to, at the end of the day, make it fun, but also make it authentic.”

That is the line sim fans should focus on.

Because whenever a developer says “fun” and “authentic” together, the question becomes: who gets to define fun?

For casual players, “fun” may mean faster exchanges, immediate button response, quick combinations, less penalty, and fewer frustrating realism checks.

For hardcore combat-sports fans, “fun” may mean danger, consequence, timing, fatigue, defensive responsibility, ugly rounds, clinch battles, cage work, bad style matchups, and the feeling that a fight can become uncomfortable.

EA says close range is more dangerous and powerful in UFC 6. That can be good. But if close range simply becomes a faster combination zone, that is not necessarily realism. Real close range is messy. It involves frames, elbows, dirty boxing, underhooks, collar ties, head position, smothering, balance, clinch threats, and defensive panic.

Debate point:
EA keeps saying “authenticity,” but the first filter still seems to be immediate player satisfaction. True simulation is not always instantly satisfying. Sometimes realism is frustrating because fighting is frustrating.


2. Fighter-Specific Blocking Is Good, But It May Be Mostly Visual

The developers explained that fighters no longer have one universal block idle. Instead, blocking reflects the fighter’s personality. They said fighters brace for strikes differently and hold their guard in ways that look more personal.

That is a positive step. Combat-sports games need more fighter individuality.

But here is the question:

Does that blocking style change how defense actually works, or does it mainly change the animation?

A fighter-specific block should affect:

Defensive ElementWhat It Should Change
Guard shapeWhat punches sneak through
Reaction speedHow quickly the fighter covers up
Counter windowsHow well they punch off the guard
VulnerabilityWhat openings their style creates
Stamina drainHow tiring that defensive posture is
Damage absorptionHow clean or partial blocks are calculated
AI behaviorWhether CPU fighters defend like themselves

If Alex Pereira, Sean Strickland, Islam Makhachev, Max Holloway, and Israel Adesanya all have different block looks but the same underlying protection logic, then it is not full authenticity. It is visual personality.

Debate point:
Different blocking animations are welcome, but sim fans need to know whether the system changes outcomes, vulnerabilities, counters, stamina, and AI decision-making. Looking like the fighter is not the same as defending like the fighter.


3. “When You Press a Button, the Strike Comes Out” Is Not Always Realism

One developer said:

“When you’re pressing a button on the controller, your strike comes out. The one you expect comes out.”

That is important because it tells us EA is prioritizing responsiveness.

Responsiveness matters. Nobody wants input delay or broken controls. But combat sports are not just about pressing and receiving instant output. They are about commitment.

A realistic striking system needs to ask:

  • Was the fighter balanced?

  • Were their feet set?

  • Were they mid-recovery from another strike?

  • Were they tired?

  • Were they hurt?

  • Were they moving backward?

  • Were they crowded?

  • Were they off-angle?

  • Was the opponent smothering the shot?

  • Was the punch technically available from that position?

If every expected strike simply comes out because the button was pressed, the danger is that the game becomes too clean. Real fighting is not clean. Fighters throw awkwardly. They get jammed. They lose balance. They punch from bad positions. They miss by inches. They get countered because the punch was forced.

Debate point:
Button responsiveness is not the same as combat realism. A sim combat game should respect body position, timing, stamina, range, and recovery — even when that means the player does not get the perfect strike they wanted.


4. The Beta Was Treated Mostly as a Technical Stability Test

When asked about beta feedback, EA said the beta was mainly for technical stability, online connection, latency, balance, tuning, strike range, and contact.

That is reasonable from a launch-readiness perspective. But it also tells you something: the beta was not necessarily a deep design referendum.

If long-term players were concerned about Flow State, grappling, balance, or direction, those concerns may not have had room to truly reshape the game. The developers were mainly checking whether the game functioned properly online.

Debate point:
A beta that is mostly a stability test should not be treated like a full community validation process. It can tell EA whether the servers and tuning are working. It cannot prove the core design is what serious players wanted.


5. Flow State Is the Most Debatable Feature

Flow State is the biggest issue in the interview.

EA says each fighter has five Flow States or perks. These perks build a Flow Meter when the player performs actions that match the real fighter. For Alex Pereira, landing his left hook or striking after a certain lean can build the meter. Once full, the fighter enters a Flow State for around ten seconds.

EA insists:

“It’s not a power up.”

But then they also say it gives the player and opponent an “Oh my God” moment, creates fear, changes behavior, and makes the player feel powerful.

That sounds like a power-up by another name.

Even if it does not make the fighter invincible, it is still a temporary state triggered by style-specific actions. In a serious combat-sports simulation, momentum should emerge from the fight itself, not from a meter.

Real momentum comes from:

  • timing reads

  • damage accumulation

  • fatigue

  • opponent hesitation

  • failed takedowns

  • fear of counters

  • pressure

  • cage position

  • rhythm disruption

  • confidence

  • visible body language

  • tactical control

EA says Flow State adds a mind-game layer. That may be true for online play. But for sim players, the concern is that it gamifies fighter identity.

A player should already fear Alex Pereira’s hook because it is dangerous, not because a meter is glowing.

Debate point:
If Flow State rewards real fighter behavior, the idea has potential. But if the system turns authenticity into timed momentum windows, then EA has converted fight IQ into a game mechanic that may feel more arcade than simulation.


6. “False Sense of Security” Is a Strange Defense

EA says Flow State is supposed to give a false sense of security. You can still get knocked out, taken down, or countered.

That answer sounds clever, but it does not fully answer the concern.

If the feature gives no meaningful advantage, then why should players care?
If it gives a meaningful advantage, then it is functionally a power-up.
If it mainly creates visual pressure, then it may be psychological gimmickry.
If it changes player behavior online, then it may become a meta mechanic.

The problem is not whether Flow State makes someone invincible. The problem is whether it artificially changes the fight around a timed boost window.

Debate point:
Calling Flow State a “mind game” does not automatically make it authentic MMA. Real mind games come from habits, reads, feints, traps, threat recognition, and consequences. They do not need a temporary meter to announce them.


7. Follow-Up Shots After KOs: EA’s Answer Was Vague

The question about follow-up shots after knockouts was a good one because not every MMA finish is a clean walk-off. Many fights end with a hurt fighter falling and the attacker following up until the referee stops it.

EA answered by talking about:

  • new hit reactions

  • directional falls

  • more authentic knockdowns

  • faster transitions to finish-the-fight positions

  • side-control-like positions

  • hammer fists and hooks

  • referee stoppages

But the answer on actual follow-up shots was uncertain:

“I’m not sure if that is the case this year.”

That is a weak answer.

If UFC 6 is claiming more authentic finishes, follow-up shots are a major part of MMA realism. So is the referee’s decision to step in. So are premature stoppages, late stoppages, flash knockouts, TKO sequences, and ground-and-pound urgency.

Debate point:
Directional knockdowns are good, but authentic MMA finishes require the full sequence: hurt reaction, pursuit, defensive survival, referee positioning, stoppage timing, and post-knockdown danger.


8. The Grappling Answer Exposes EA’s Real Priority

This may be the most revealing answer in the whole interview.

EA was asked why the grappling system was not overhauled. The answer was basically:

  • ground game is complicated

  • online balance is difficult

  • adding positions can take months or years

  • some specialists would become too dominant

  • most players play striking

  • 91–92 percent of fights finish on the feet

  • every fight starts standing

  • striking was the focus

This answer is practical, but it is also a major admission.

EA is saying the ground game is too difficult and risky to expand deeply because it may hurt balance and because most players focus on striking.

But MMA is not kickboxing. MMA without deep grappling is incomplete. If Demian Maia on top of you should be terrifying, then let him be terrifying. That is authenticity. The answer should not be to flatten grappling because some fighters would be too good.

That is the entire point of styles.

Some fighters should be nightmare matchups on the ground. Some should be lost there. Some should survive but not threaten. Some should stall. Some should scramble. Some should panic. Some should submit people quickly.

Debate point:
EA claims authenticity, but when authenticity threatens online balance, balance wins.

That is the key criticism.


9. “We Can’t Let One Player Get a Major Advantage” Conflicts With Real MMA

The developers said:

“We can’t let one player get a major advantage over another player.”

But in MMA, that is exactly what happens.

A wrestler taking down a striker is a major advantage.
A jiu-jitsu specialist getting mount is a major advantage.
A power puncher landing clean is a major advantage.
A tall fighter controlling range is a major advantage.
A pressure fighter trapping someone on the fence is a major advantage.

The job of a sim game is not to prevent advantages. The job is to make advantages earned, believable, counterable, and style-dependent.

A Demian Maia-type fighter should be dangerous on top. The counterbalance should be that he has to get there. He should have striking vulnerabilities, stamina questions, entry risks, and positional battles. But once he earns the correct position, he should feel dominant.

Debate point:
Balance should not mean sameness. A serious MMA game should allow extreme strengths and extreme weaknesses, because that is what creates real style clashes.


10. The “91–92 Percent Finish on the Feet” Argument Is Misleading

EA said roughly 91 or 92 percent of their fights finish on the feet, and most fans play striking.

That may be true inside EA’s own game data, but it does not necessarily justify leaving grappling mostly untouched.

Why do so many fights finish on the feet in the game?

Possible reasons:

  • players prefer striking because grappling is less fun

  • grappling controls are not intuitive

  • ground systems are not satisfying

  • online players avoid grappling because of complaints

  • the game rewards striking more

  • ground-and-pound lacks depth

  • submissions are too gamey

  • transitions feel restrictive

  • casual players do not understand grappling

So the data may reflect the game’s own design limitations, not the sport itself.

Debate point:
If players avoid grappling because the ground game is not enjoyable, then using that avoidance as justification to avoid a ground overhaul becomes circular logic.

EA can say, “Most players strike.”
But sim fans can answer, “Maybe because your grappling system has not been made compelling enough.”


11. PC Answer: Reasonable, But Still Disappointing

EA said there is nothing to announce for PC and that a PC version would require dedicated focus, not just a straight port.

That is a reasonable answer technically. PC requires optimization, settings, anti-cheat, hardware testing, input flexibility, and support.

But from a community standpoint, the lack of PC still limits the game’s reach, especially for:

  • modding communities

  • competitive communities

  • content creators

  • accessibility options

  • long-term preservation

  • custom rosters

  • offline editing

  • simulation communities

Debate point:
EA’s “we want to do it right” answer is fair, but after this many UFC games, PC players are justified in asking why “doing it right” has still not happened.


12. Crossplay Is a Clear Positive

Crossplay between PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S is one of the cleaner wins in the interview.

That is something the community has wanted. It helps matchmaking, longevity, online events, and competitive population.

The only debate is whether crossplay should have arrived earlier, but for UFC 6 specifically, this is a positive feature.

Fair credit:
Crossplay is a legitimate improvement and should not be dismissed.


13. Star Ratings: EA’s Explanation Makes Sense for Online, But Not for Sim Accuracy

EA defended the star rating system by saying numbers cause players to choose the highest overall fighter. If one fighter is 96 and another is 95, users may automatically pick the 96. Stars group fighters together and encourage style choice.

This is one of EA’s better explanations from an online-behavior perspective.

But from a simulation perspective, it still raises issues.

A serious sports game should not hide or blur information just because players might make simplistic choices. If the full numbers are available one button away, then the star system is mostly a presentation decision. But the deeper issue is the overall rating itself.

Combat-sports athletes should not be reduced to one broad score.

A fighter’s value depends on:

  • matchup

  • range

  • cardio

  • chin

  • recovery

  • grappling

  • takedown defense

  • cage control

  • kicking

  • boxing

  • submissions

  • scrambling

  • IQ

  • durability

  • discipline

  • pressure handling

A 95 vs 96 overall does not tell you who wins. Style does.

Debate point:
EA is correct that numbers can mislead players. But stars can also blur meaningful differences. The real solution is not hiding numbers or using stars. The real solution is a deeper identity system where matchup style matters more than overall.


14. “No Fighter Has Over a 58 Percent Win Rate” Reveals Balance-First Design

EA said they can see backend win rates and that no fighter has over a 58 percent win percentage.

That sounds good for competitive balance, but it raises a major realism question.

Should every fighter be that balanced in every player population?

In a ranked online fighting game, maybe yes.
In a simulation sports game, not necessarily.

Prime Jon Jones, Khabib Nurmagomedov, Anderson Silva, Georges St-Pierre, Demetrious Johnson, Alex Pereira, Islam Makhachev, and other elite fighters should feel frightening in their areas. Lower-tier fighters should not be artificially smoothed upward just so every matchup stays near 50/50.

The more EA chases even win rates, the more the game risks becoming an esport fighter wearing a UFC skin.

Debate point:
Backend balance does not equal sports authenticity. Real combat sports are unfair by nature. Styles, skill gaps, physical gifts, and bad matchups create imbalance. That imbalance is part of the sport.


15. Roster Answer: Live Service Is Good, But Launch Additions Sound Thin

EA said UFC 6 launches with 270-plus fighters and will grow to 300-plus through live service. That sounds strong numerically.

But when asked about new fighters from UFC 5, they listed only 11 new fighters at launch.

That is where fans may push back.

If a new full-price sequel launches with only 11 new fighters from the previous game, players are going to ask:

  • How much is truly new?

  • How many fighters are carried over?

  • How many missing ranked fighters remain absent?

  • How many legends are locked behind passes?

  • How much content is live-service drip feed?

  • Are expansion passes replacing what should be base content?

The roster being updated monthly is good. But a sequel needs to justify itself at launch, not just promise future support.

Debate point:
A live-service roster is useful, but it can also become a way to make the game feel unfinished at launch and sell excitement later.


16. Fighter Pass and Expansion Passes Raise Monetization Questions

EA said there will be a Fighter Pass, legends every month, and expansion passes later.

That may excite some fans, but it should also trigger questions.

Are legends free?
Are they paid?
Are key modes locked behind expansions?
Are iconic fighters being withheld for monetization?
Will the base game feel complete?
Will offline players have to keep paying for authenticity?

In sports games, roster authenticity is not cosmetic. The roster is the sport. Fighters are not just skins. They are the core content.

Debate point:
If roster updates are live-service support, that is good. If major legends and features are carved into passes, fans should question whether the base game is being held back.


17. PRIDE Answer: Non-Answer

When asked about PRIDE mode, EA basically said:

  • fans are interested

  • they discuss it internally

  • nothing to announce

That is a standard corporate non-answer.

PRIDE mode would not just be a cosmetic feature. It would require:

  • ring rules

  • soccer kicks

  • stomps

  • knees to grounded opponents

  • yellow cards

  • different judging philosophy

  • different presentation

  • different gloves/shorts

  • different referee behavior

  • different pacing

  • different arena atmosphere

So if EA ever does PRIDE, fans should demand that it be mechanically meaningful, not just a visual arena or nostalgia pack.

Debate point:
PRIDE cannot just be branding. If it does not change rules, tactics, danger, and presentation, it is not really PRIDE.


18. Voice Chat Answer: Understandable, But Also Tied to Control

EA said voice chat is not currently supported. They mentioned moderation concerns and the possibility of toxicity.

That is understandable. Voice chat in combat games can become abusive fast.

But players asking for voice chat are also asking for social energy: rivalries, gyms, online events, callouts, community identity, and organic competition.

EA is clearly cautious because moderation creates risk. But there could be solutions:

  • opt-in voice chat

  • friends-only voice

  • gym-only voice

  • post-fight commendations

  • moderated lobbies

  • quick-chat systems

  • streamer/event modes

Debate point:
The concern about toxicity is valid, but the absence of voice chat also makes the online community feel more sterile. EA needs better social tools if it wants UFC 6 to feel alive.


19. Career Mode: Starting Directly in UFC Is Convenient, But Less Authentic

This is another huge debate point.

EA said many players got stuck in Amateur and WFA and never reached the UFC in time to enjoy the biggest fights. So now the main Career Mode starts directly in the UFC, while The Legacy handles the prologue.

That may make the game faster and more accessible, but it weakens the career fantasy.

A real combat-sports career is not just about arriving in the UFC. It is about the climb.

The climb includes:

  • small gyms

  • poor matchmaking

  • regional opponents

  • unknown fighters

  • amateur mistakes

  • early losses

  • bad pay

  • short-notice fights

  • local hype

  • building a record

  • finding a team

  • changing camps

  • earning recognition

If players got stuck in Amateur and WFA, maybe the answer was not to remove or shrink that path. Maybe the answer was to make it better.

Debate point:
EA treated the climb like an obstacle. Hardcore career fans see the climb as the whole point.


20. “Players Got Stuck” May Mean the Mode Was Poorly Designed

EA’s explanation assumes players got stuck because they wanted to reach the UFC faster. But that may not be the whole story.

Players may have disengaged because the lower-level career path was repetitive, shallow, or unrewarding.

Maybe Amateur and WFA needed:

  • better opponent variety

  • better rankings

  • better gyms

  • better scouting

  • better commentary

  • better progression

  • regional belts

  • rivalries

  • amateur tournaments

  • coach relationships

  • injury consequences

  • money pressure

  • promotional offers

If a mode is boring, people skip it. That does not mean the concept is bad. It means the execution needs work.

Debate point:
Do not remove the journey because the old journey was shallow. Build a better journey.


21. Career Mode Buffs and Debuffs Sound Gamey

EA said the new Career Mode social media system includes choices, meaningful outcomes, hype, fitness, buffs, debuffs, and commentary references.

That can add variety. But it also risks making career feel like a board game of temporary modifiers.

If a fighter skips fitness to build hype, then maybe stamina, sharpness, or camp quality should suffer. That is fair. But if choices become simple buff/debuff management, the realism may feel artificial.

A deeper career system would include:

  • trainer trust

  • camp discipline

  • weight-cut quality

  • media pressure

  • sponsor tension

  • injury secrecy

  • opponent scouting

  • personal life distractions

  • gym loyalty

  • corner advice

  • tactical preparation

  • fight-week mistakes

Debate point:
Career choices should create believable consequences, not just buffs and debuffs. A sim career should feel like managing a fighter’s life, camp, business, and risk — not just selecting modifiers.


22. Commentary Remembering Choices Is Good, But It Is Presentation, Not Depth

EA said Jon Anik and Daniel Cormier may remember choices you made and mention them in commentary.

That is a nice feature. It helps immersion.

But it should not be oversold as deep career mode. Commentary memory is presentation. The real question is whether the world remembers your choices mechanically.

Do rivals remember?
Do fans react?
Do rankings shift?
Do promoters treat you differently?
Do gyms reject or pursue you?
Do opponents call you out?
Do judges, media, and matchmaking reflect your path?
Do your bad choices affect your long-term career arc?

Debate point:
Commentary references are welcome, but a real career world needs systemic memory, not just broadcast memory.


23. The Interview Reveals EA’s Hierarchy of Priorities

When you put all the answers together, the hierarchy seems clear:

  1. Striking and moment-to-moment fun

  2. Fighter visual/personality authenticity

  3. Online balance

  4. Crossplay and live-service support

  5. Narrative and social media layers

  6. Roster drip feed

  7. Grappling overhaul later, maybe

  8. PC later, maybe

  9. PRIDE later, maybe

  10. Voice chat later, maybe

That does not mean UFC 6 will be bad. It means the game is being built around EA’s preferred sports-game model: broad access, polish, online balance, live-service roster, and controlled authenticity.

The concern is that deeper simulation always gets pushed behind “scope,” “capacity,” “balance,” and “what most players do.”


Strong Closing Argument

The UFC 6 interview proves EA understands the language of authenticity. They know fans want fighter personality, unique movement, realistic striking, meaningful career choices, better knockdowns, and deeper identity.

But the answers also prove that EA is still filtering authenticity through the same design priorities:

  • keep it fun

  • keep it balanced

  • keep it online-friendly

  • keep it accessible

  • keep it live-service ready

  • avoid systems that create too much imbalance

  • focus where most players already spend time

That is why sim fans should not be silenced when they ask tougher questions.

Because the real issue is not whether UFC 6 has improvements. It clearly does.

The real issue is whether those improvements create a deeper MMA simulation, or whether they make the same EA UFC foundation look and feel more authentic while leaving major systems untouched.

A fair final line would be:

EA UFC 6 may be more polished, more personal, and more responsive, but the interview shows that when true combat-sports authenticity conflicts with online balance, scope, or casual accessibility, authenticity still seems to lose.


To the Players Defending EA and Want to Attack Me Personally

Some of you are reading my breakdown of the EA UFC 6 interview and treating it like I’m attacking the developers, attacking the game, or attacking people who are excited for it.

That is not what I’m doing.

I am debating the answers given in the interview. There is a difference between criticism and hate. There is a difference between asking harder questions and “being negative.” There is a difference between wanting a game to improve and wanting a game to fail.

If you like what EA is doing with UFC 6, that is your right. Buy it. Play it. Enjoy it. Nobody is stopping you.

But you do not get to tell serious combat-sports fans that they cannot question the direction of the game.


Defending EA Does Not Make the Questions Go Away

You can defend EA all you want, but the developers still said what they said.

They said the striking was the focus.
They said the beta was mainly a technical stability test.
They said Flow State lasts around 10 seconds.
They said the ground game was not overhauled.
They said grappling is difficult to balance.
They said most players play striking.
They said 91 or 92 percent of fights finish on the feet in their game.
They said Career Mode now starts directly in the UFC.
They said PRIDE has nothing to announce.
They said PC has nothing to announce.
They said voice chat is not currently supported.
They said only 11 new fighters from UFC 5 are being added at launch.

Those are not rumors I invented. Those are answers from the interview.

So if I respond to those answers, I am not “hating.” I am analyzing.


Stop Acting Like Criticism Means Someone Wants the Game to Fail

This is one of the weakest arguments gaming communities use.

The moment someone asks for deeper gameplay, better career mode, better grappling, better AI, better offline options, better authenticity, or better simulation, somebody jumps out and says:

“You just want the game to fail.”

No.

I want the game to be better.

A person who does not care would not write anything. A person who does not care would move on. The people asking hard questions are usually the ones who care the most because they know what the sport deserves.

Blind praise does not improve games. Pressure improves games. Feedback improves games. Debate improves games.


You Can Be Excited Without Being a Shield for EA

There is nothing wrong with being excited for UFC 6.

If you like Flow State, say that.
If you like the striking changes, say that.
If you like crossplay, say that.
If you like the roster, say that.
If you like Career Mode starting in the UFC, say that.

That is fair.

But do not act like your excitement cancels out every legitimate concern.

A person can say UFC 6 has good improvements and still question why grappling was not overhauled.
A person can praise crossplay and still question why PC is missing.
A person can like fighter-specific movement and still question Flow State.
A person can respect the developers and still challenge the design direction.

That is called being honest.


“Most Players Want Striking” Is Not a Complete Defense

Some players are saying, “Well, most people play striking, so EA made the right choice.”

That argument is too simple.

Maybe most players play striking because the ground game has not been made deep, fun, intuitive, or rewarding enough.

If the grappling system is hard to balance, hard to expand, and not as popular, that does not automatically mean it should be left alone. It may mean it needed more work.

MMA is not just stand-up fighting. If a UFC game keeps prioritizing striking because most people strike, then the game risks becoming a kickboxing game with takedowns attached.

That is a fair concern.


Balance Should Not Erase Real Style Differences

The developers talked about balance. They said certain ground positions could give some fighters a major advantage.

But that is MMA.

Demian Maia on top of you should be a major problem.
Khabib on top of you should be a major problem.
Pereira landing clean should be a major problem.
Jon Jones at range should be a major problem.
A great wrestler against a poor grappler should be a major problem.

That does not mean the game should be broken. It means the game should allow real strengths and weaknesses to matter.

Some of you want every fighter smoothed out for online fairness. That may work for ranked play, but it does not represent the sport fully.

A simulation fan is allowed to ask for more than 50/50 balance.


Flow State Is Fair to Question

Some people are already defending Flow State by repeating EA’s line that it is “not a power-up.”

But let’s be honest.

If a system builds a meter, activates for around 10 seconds, changes how the opponent reacts, creates an “Oh my God” moment, and makes the player feel powerful, fans are allowed to question whether that is too gamey.

Maybe it works. Maybe it is fun. Maybe some players will love it.

But do not act like people are crazy for questioning it.

Combat-sports momentum should come from timing, pressure, damage, fatigue, reads, fear, and mistakes. If EA creates a meter to represent that, it is perfectly fair for sim fans to debate whether that helps or hurts authenticity.


Career Mode Starting in the UFC Is Also Fair to Question

Some players may love starting directly in the UFC. That is fine.

But serious career-mode fans are allowed to say the climb matters.

The amateur path matters.
The regional scene matters.
The early struggle matters.
The bad opponents matter.
The unknown gyms matter.
The low-level fights matter.
The rise matters.

If players were getting stuck in Amateur or WFA, maybe EA should have made those stages deeper instead of moving the main Career Mode directly into the UFC.

That is not hate. That is a career-mode philosophy debate.


Stop Turning Every Critic Into a Villain

This is the problem with many gaming communities now.

If someone questions a feature, they are called negative.
If someone asks for realism, they are called impossible to please.
If someone wants more offline depth, they are told nobody cares.
If someone questions EA, they are told to shut up and be grateful.
If someone does not blindly hype the game, people act like they are attacking the whole community.

That is childish.

A community should be able to handle disagreement.

If your argument is strong, debate the points. Do not attack the person.


My Position Is Simple

I am not telling anyone not to buy UFC 6.

I am not saying every feature is bad.

I am not saying the developers did no work.

I am not saying people cannot enjoy the game.

I am saying the interview deserves scrutiny because the answers show EA’s priorities.

They are prioritizing striking, accessibility, balance, live service, and controlled authenticity. Some fans will like that. Others will want deeper simulation, deeper grappling, deeper career mode, deeper offline systems, and more authentic consequences.

Both groups are allowed to speak.


Final Response

So before you attack me, answer the actual points.

Is grappling deep enough?
Is Flow State truly authentic or just a meter-based mind game?
Is starting directly in the UFC better for Career Mode or just more convenient?
Is 11 new fighters at launch enough for a sequel?
Is online balance being prioritized over real style differences?
Is “most players strike” a good reason not to overhaul grappling?
Is live-service roster support good, or is it becoming a way to drip-feed content?
Is EA building a deeper MMA simulation, or a more polished and accessible version of the same foundation?

Those are fair questions.

If you disagree, debate the questions.

But attacking the person asking them only proves you do not have a real answer. 

 

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