Innovation Doesn't Only Come From Studios. Some of Gaming's Most Passionate and Knowledgeable Minds Are Still Waiting for a Seat at the Table.
For decades, game companies have talked about innovation, community feedback, and listening to players. Yet many of the most passionate fans continue to be treated as spectators rather than contributors.
I know this feeling personally.
I have ideas for days.
Not because I think I know everything, but because I have spent years studying the games I love, the sports I follow, and the communities that support them. Like many fans, I constantly think about what could make games deeper, more immersive, and more enjoyable.
But when it comes to boxing games, my perspective goes beyond simply being a fan.
I have boxed.
I have worked with people connected to the sport.
I have spent decades studying boxing, its history, culture, business, personalities, styles, and evolution across multiple eras.
That experience has given me a different perspective than someone who only watches a few major fights each year or casually plays a boxing game.
When I look at a boxing game, I am not just evaluating whether the graphics look impressive or whether a punch animation looks good. I am asking whether the game captures what boxing actually is.
I think about trainers and their influence on a boxer. I think about gym culture. I think about the psychological battles that happen before and during a fight. I think about the different styles, the rivalries, the amateur system, the rankings, the politics, and the journey from an unknown prospect to a world champion.
Those are the elements that make boxing unique.
My perspective is also shaped by experiences beyond the ring.
Over the years, I had access to game developers at EA and other companies. I was fortunate enough to see conversations from both sides of the fence: the passionate players asking for better games and the developers trying to build them.
I served as a Senior Moderator and Community Leader within EA's community ecosystem. That role gave me a front-row seat to the relationship between developers and players, and it taught me how valuable community feedback can be when companies are willing to listen.
I was also a Community Manager in training, which helped me better understand how game companies gather feedback, communicate with their audiences, and navigate the difficult balance between creative vision and player expectations.
In addition, I worked with and helped a now-defunct independent studio that was developing a boxing video game called Round4Round. While the project ultimately never reached the market, the experience provided valuable insight into the realities of game development and the challenges that independent teams face when trying to create ambitious sports titles.
Those experiences reinforced something I have believed for years: some of the best ideas in gaming are often found outside the walls of the studio.
I have viewed games from multiple angles: as a gamer, a boxing fan, a former boxer, a writer, an artist, a community leader, and someone who has worked alongside people trying to build a boxing game from the ground up.
That combination of experiences is why I continue to advocate for deeper collaboration between developers and passionate members of their communities.
Fans Live the Subject Matter
One thing the gaming industry often overlooks is that some fans spend more time studying a specific subject than many professionals assigned to build games around it.
That is especially true when it comes to sports games.
A boxing fan who has watched fights across multiple eras, studied trainers, learned styles, followed prospects, understood sanctioning bodies, and perhaps even stepped into the ring themselves brings a unique perspective that cannot be found in market research alone.
The same applies to racing fans, football fans, basketball fans, RPG enthusiasts, and countless other gaming communities.
Many fans are not simply consumers.
They are historians.
They are researchers.
They are writers.
They are artists.
They are creators.
They are walking databases of information that could help make games better.
Yet too often, their ideas never make it past a forum post, social media comment, podcast discussion, YouTube video, or blog article.
The Industry Often Mistakes Ideas for Noise
Every day, developers receive thousands of suggestions.
Some are unrealistic.
Some are impossible.
Some contradict one another.
But hidden among them are ideas that could genuinely improve a game.
The problem is that many companies view fan ideas as random wish lists rather than valuable design discussions.
A good idea should not be dismissed simply because it came from someone outside a studio.
History has repeatedly shown that some of gaming's biggest innovations came from modders, hobbyists, independent creators, and passionate fans who refused to accept limitations.
Many successful mechanics that are now considered standard started as ideas that established companies initially ignored.
Fans Think in Ecosystems
One of the biggest misconceptions is that fans only think about individual features.
Many of us think much bigger than that.
When I think about a boxing game, I am not thinking about a single punch animation or one gameplay mechanic.
I am thinking about the entire boxing ecosystem.
How do amateur boxers enter the sport?
How do trainers influence development?
How do gym relationships evolve over time?
How do sanctioning bodies affect rankings and title opportunities?
How do different boxing eras feel unique?
How does commentary react to a boxer's career history?
How do fans build their own boxing universes through creation tools?
How does a local prospect become a global superstar?
These are not isolated features.
They are interconnected systems.
The more those systems work together, the more authentic and engaging the experience becomes.
This is why I often say that boxing games should not simply be fighting games with boxing gloves.
They should be boxing ecosystems.
Companies Are Leaving Knowledge on the Table
There are former athletes, coaches, artists, writers, historians, statisticians, modders, and lifelong fans who have spent years thinking about how games can improve.
Many of them would gladly contribute ideas if given the opportunity.
Instead, companies often spend enormous amounts of money trying to discover what their communities want while overlooking people who have been explaining it for years.
The knowledge already exists.
The passion already exists.
The creativity already exists.
The question is whether companies are willing to tap into it.
Too often, the industry acts as if innovation can only come from inside a studio.
That simply is not true.
Some of the best ideas are sitting outside the building.
The Future Should Be More Collaborative
I am not suggesting that every fan idea should be implemented.
That would be impossible.
What I am suggesting is that game companies become better at identifying passionate community members who consistently provide thoughtful feedback, innovative concepts, and genuine expertise.
The best games are often built when developers and communities work together.
Developers bring technical expertise.
Fans bring perspective, experience, knowledge, and passion.
Those strengths should complement each other rather than exist in separate worlds.
Imagine what could happen if studios actively sought out former athletes, coaches, historians, content creators, modders, and dedicated fans during the design process instead of waiting until launch day to ask for feedback.
The results would likely be deeper, more authentic, and more connected to the communities they are trying to serve.
Final Thoughts
For me, this conversation has never been about complaining.
It has always been about possibilities.
As a writer, artist, former boxer, former Senior Moderator and Community Leader at EA, Community Manager in training, and someone who worked with an independent boxing game project, I see opportunities everywhere.
I see systems that could be built.
I see stories that could be told.
I see experiences that could bring boxing to a wider audience and create lifelong fans.
That is why I continue to share ideas.
Not because I expect every idea to be used.
Not because I believe I have all the answers.
But because I believe boxing deserves games that fully embrace the depth, complexity, culture, and beauty of the sport.
Game companies are always searching for the next big idea.
Sometimes that idea is not sitting in a boardroom.
Sometimes it is not coming from a consultant.
Sometimes it is not coming from a focus group.
Sometimes it is coming from a fan who has spent years living the subject, studying it, working within gaming communities, and imagining what it could become.
There are countless creative people on the outside looking in.
People with ideas.
People with vision.
People with experience.
People with passion.
The industry would be wise to stop treating those people as background noise and start seeing them as a valuable resource.
Because some of the best ideas for the future of gaming may already exist.
The people who have them are simply waiting to be invited into the conversation.

