Friday, June 26, 2026

Companies Most Likely to Make the Boxing Game Poe-Style Fans Want

 

Companies Most Likely to Make the Boxing Game Poe-Style Fans Want

The game fans like Poe want would need realistic boxing first, but also options, sliders, deep offline career, real boxer identity, creation-suite depth, CPU vs CPU, promoter/manager systems, eras, weight classes, trainers, referees, judges, and presentation. Not just ranked online.

1. 2K / Visual Concepts — Best Overall Fit

Why they fit:
Visual Concepts already has the strongest sports-game infrastructure for what Poe-style fans ask for: deep modes, roster editing, created characters, tendencies, universe systems, franchise logic, presentation, and long-term sports support. Visual Concepts officially lists NBA 2K, WWE 2K, and LEGO 2K Drive as part of its game history, with more than 35 years in the industry.

Strengths:

  • Deep sports simulation experience.
  • NBA 2K-style tendencies, badges, attributes, eras, roster editing, and league control.
  • WWE 2K-style creation suite, community creations, entrances, belts, arenas, universe tools, and custom characters.
  • NBA 2K26’s MyNBA/MyGM mode includes adjustable simulations, smarter front-office logic, online playoffs, storylines, and long-term dynasty systems.
  • WWE 2K26 promotes Universe Mode, Watch Show mode, 200 CAS slots, deeper body/face morphing, expanded image capacity, and more creation tools.

Why Poe fans would like them:
They are probably the best company for a Boxing 2K with deep offline control: create-a-boxer, create-a-trainer, create-a-gym, create-a-belt, create-a-promotion, universe mode, eras, rankings, sliders, and editable rosters.

Big risk:
2K could ruin the vision if they lean too hard into VC, MyTeam-style monetization, online metas, or scripted story modes instead of a true boxing ecosystem.

Best use:
Lead developer/publisher for a full Boxing 2K built around offline, sim, creation, and universe depth.


2. EA Sports / EA Vancouver / EA Canada — Best Combat-Sports Legacy

Why they fit:
EA has the most direct major boxing-game legacy because of Fight Night, and EA Canada developed Fight Night Champion. EA’s own announcement described Fight Night Champion as being developed at EA Canada in Vancouver and aiming to deliver a dynamic simulation fighting experience. EA Vancouver also developed EA Sports UFC 5.

Strengths:

  • Already understands punch impact, damage, combat presentation, licensed athletes, and broadcast-style sports production.
  • Fight Night had strong punch feel, camera work, knockdowns, atmosphere, and a recognizable boxing identity.
  • UFC 5 uses Frostbite and includes detailed damage systems, doctor checks, stoppages, new strikes, and hit reactions.
  • EA has massive licensing, animation, commentary, audio, presentation, and marketing resources.

Why Poe fans would like them:
EA could make the best-feeling boxing gameplay if they rebuilt Fight Night with modern physics, weight transfer, stamina, cuts, swelling, footwork, clinching, inside fighting, referees, and real boxer tendencies.

Big risk:
EA might make it too hybrid, too online-focused, or too streamlined. Poe-style fans would not want a shallow “Fight Night comeback” with pretty graphics but missing clinching, referees, CPU vs CPU, deep career, sliders, and creation depth.

Best use:
Lead developer for in-ring gameplay, damage, punch feel, presentation, and combat animation, but only if paired with a deeper career/universe design team.


3. 2K + Visual Concepts + Boxing Experts — Best Dream Scenario

This is not just one company, but it is probably the strongest realistic blueprint.

Why it fits:
2K/Visual Concepts could handle the sports-game framework, while real boxing consultants, former boxers, judges, referees, trainers, cutmen, and hardcore sim testers shape the actual boxing logic.

Strengths:

  • 2K handles modes, creation, presentation, rosters, online infrastructure, and yearly support.
  • Boxing experts handle footwork, punch arcs, inside fighting, clinching, judging, referee behavior, corner work, styles, eras, and weight-class authenticity.
  • Community testing could separate casual, hybrid, arcade, and simulation lanes properly.

Why Poe fans would like it:
This is the route most likely to produce the game Poe has been describing for years: Boxing 2K with real boxing DNA, not a basketball or wrestling reskin.

Big risk:
If 2K listens mostly to influencers, eSports players, or casual focus groups, the game could become another “authentic” marketing phrase instead of a true boxing sim.


4. PlayStation Studios / San Diego Studio — Best Sports Authenticity Culture

Why they fit:
San Diego Studio is tied to MLB The Show, one of the most respected annual sports-sim franchises. The official MLB The Show site points fans to information “directly from the team at San Diego Studio.” MLB The Show 25 expanded Road to the Show with high school and college baseball, showing they understand career-path immersion.

Strengths:

  • Strong sports authenticity culture.
  • Excellent presentation discipline.
  • Good career-mode foundation.
  • Strong attention to real-world sport details.
  • Good balance between accessibility and simulation.

Why Poe fans would like them:
They could make a boxing career feel like a real athletic journey: amateurs, Golden Gloves, Olympics, regional titles, rankings, contracts, gyms, scouting, training, promotions, and legacy.

Big risk:
They do not have a proven modern boxing-combat engine. They would need combat-sports specialists, boxing consultants, and maybe a co-development partner.

Best use:
Great publisher/studio candidate for a premium offline boxing sim, especially if they approach boxing the way they approach baseball authenticity.


5. Sports Interactive / SEGA — Best Career, Promoter, and Universe Brain

Why they fit:
Sports Interactive calls itself the world’s leading developer of sports management simulations and says its games create immersive parallel sports worlds.

Strengths:

  • Elite management-sim logic.
  • Deep databases.
  • Long-term career simulation.
  • Scouting, contracts, reputations, morale, personalities, staff roles, development, and world progression.
  • Perfect for promoters, managers, gyms, trainers, rankings, sanctioning bodies, negotiations, and boxer career arcs.

Why Poe fans would like them:
They could build the boxing world Poe talks about: a living ecosystem where boxers age, prospects rise, champions avoid mandatories, promoters protect records, trainers develop talent, gyms produce styles, and rivalries build naturally.

Big risk:
They should not be the main in-ring gameplay developer. Their strength is the brain of the boxing world, not the real-time punch mechanics.

Best use:
Co-developer for Career Mode, Promoter Mode, Manager Mode, Rankings, Universe Mode, and long-term simulation.


6. Out of the Park Developments — Best Database/Simulation Specialist

Why they fit:
Out of the Park Baseball markets itself around franchise control, management, career play, official rosters, and deep sports simulation.

Strengths:

  • Deep sports database design.
  • Long-term career simulation.
  • Historical and fictional league logic.
  • Management systems.
  • Ratings, scouting, development, aging, and transactions.

Why Poe fans would like them:
They could help build the boxing equivalent of a living database: every boxer with a style, traits, tendencies, career stage, promoter, trainer, gym, ranking, injuries, reputation, and negotiation behavior.

Big risk:
Like Sports Interactive, they are not the studio you would want building the punch mechanics by themselves.

Best use:
Backend simulation partner for boxing universe logic.


7. Bandai Namco / Dimps — Best Fighting-Game Mechanics Candidate

Why they fit:
Dimps is known for work on combat-heavy franchises including Dragon Ball and Street Fighter-related projects. Bandai Namco also has deep fighting-game experience through franchises like Tekken and anime-combat titles.

Strengths:

  • Strong animation timing.
  • Fighting-game responsiveness.
  • Character identity.
  • Signature attacks and style separation.
  • Good feel for impact, distance, and timing.

Why Poe fans might like them:
They could be strong for boxer individuality: different punch arcs, signature punches, stance identity, rhythm, pressure styles, counters, and movement personality.

Big risk:
They might make boxing too much like a fighting game unless heavily guided by real boxing consultants and sim rules.

Best use:
Co-developer for combat responsiveness, animation systems, signature punches, and boxer style separation.


8. Yuke’s — Best Creation/Combat-Sports History, But Not Best Lead Alone

Why they fit:
Yuke’s has long wrestling-game experience, and AEW: Fight Forever was officially described as being developed by Yuke’s.

Strengths:

  • Combat-sports presentation history.
  • Character creation experience.
  • Wrestling-game mode experience.
  • Animation and move-set systems.
  • Understanding of rosters, entrances, arenas, and community customization.

Why Poe fans might like them:
They could help with creation-suite depth: custom boxers, gyms, stables, belts, arenas, entrances, gear, and move sets.

Big risk:
Their recent public wrestling direction leaned arcade, and Poe-style fans want boxing realism, not a nostalgic arcade combat game.

Best use:
Support studio for creation suite, entrances, arenas, presentation, and customization, not the sole lead for a hardcore boxing sim.


9. Steel City Interactive — Only If They Truly Rebuild and Listen

Why they fit on paper:
Steel City Interactive is the studio behind Undisputed, and its own site says the studio was founded to create the first major boxing game in over a decade, with the goal of making an authentic boxing game that does justice to the sport.

Strengths:

  • Already has boxing licenses and boxing-game experience.
  • Already has a foundation: roster, arenas, animations, career shell, online systems, and brand recognition.
  • Could improve if they bring in the right boxing people, AI programmers, gameplay engineers, physics specialists, and independent testers.

Why Poe fans are skeptical:
Poe-style fans want depth, options, realism, CPU vs CPU, clinching, referees, inside fighting, real traits, sliders, trainer/corner systems, and career ecosystem depth. If SCI repeats the same “authentic boxing” language without public data, transparent testing, and major system changes, they likely will not satisfy that group.

Best use:
Possible candidate only if they do a real reboot, run a third-party survey, use boxing consultants seriously, and stop designing around narrow online feedback.


Best Ranking Overall

Best Single Company Choice

1. 2K / Visual Concepts

They have the best combination of sports modes, creation tools, presentation, roster systems, franchise logic, and long-term support potential.

Best Combat Feel Choice

2. EA Sports / EA Vancouver / EA Canada

They have the best major boxing/combat-sports legacy, especially because of Fight Night and UFC.

Best Career/Universe Partner

3. Sports Interactive or Out of the Park Developments

They would be perfect for the living boxing world: promoters, rankings, contracts, managers, gyms, rivalries, careers, aging, and historical eras.

Best Dream Team

2K/Visual Concepts as lead + EA-style combat expertise + Sports Interactive/OOTP-style universe backend + real boxing consultants + public third-party survey feedback.

That is the kind of structure most likely to create the boxing game fans like Poe actually want: not just “authentic” as a slogan, but authentic in systems, options, boxing logic, and long-term replay value.


More Companies That Could Build the Boxing Game Poe-Style Fans Want

The best boxing game probably would not come from one studio doing everything alone. The strongest version would be a lead sports studio backed by boxing consultants, career-sim developers, animation specialists, AI engineers, creation-suite designers, and public community testing.

Below is a deeper list.


A. Best Lead Studio Candidates

1. 2K / Visual Concepts

Best role: Main developer and publisher for a true Boxing 2K.

Visual Concepts is still the strongest fit because it has experience with NBA 2K, WWE 2K, sports presentation, deep rosters, created characters, franchise-style systems, and annual sports-game support. Their own studio history points to NBA 2K, WWE 2K, LEGO 2K Drive, and more than 35 years in game development.

Strengths for a boxing game:

  • Deep attributes and tendencies.
  • Roster editing.
  • Creation suite experience.
  • Presentation and broadcast packages.
  • Eras, legends, current athletes, and created rosters.
  • Universe-style mode potential.
  • MyNBA-style league control translated into boxing.
  • WWE-style community creations translated into boxers, belts, arenas, gyms, trunks, robes, and promoters.

Why Poe-style fans would want them:
They could build the offline ecosystem better than almost anyone: rankings, belts, promotions, trainers, gyms, eras, weight classes, tournament brackets, CPU vs CPU, and editable boxing worlds.

Concern:
They must not turn boxing into a VC grind, MyFaction-style card chase, or online-first meta game.


2. EA Sports / EA Vancouver / EA Canada

Best role: Main gameplay developer for punch feel, damage, movement, and presentation.

EA still has the biggest mainstream boxing legacy because of Fight Night. EA also has recent combat-sports experience with UFC, and EA’s UFC 5 feature page highlights Frostbite, doctor stoppages, damage, swelling, cuts, and injury-based interruptions.

Strengths for a boxing game:

  • Punch impact.
  • Knockdown drama.
  • Damage systems.
  • Broadcast polish.
  • Licensed athlete presentation.
  • Crowd atmosphere.
  • Camera work.
  • Combat-sports animation experience.
  • Strong audio and hit reaction potential.

Why Poe-style fans would want them:
EA could probably make the most immediately satisfying punching, knockdowns, replays, swelling, cuts, and atmosphere.

Concern:
EA would need to go far deeper than Fight Night Champion. Poe-style fans would not be satisfied with just nice punching and graphics. They would need clinching, inside fighting, real referees, judges, trainers, sliders, CPU vs CPU, career depth, and boxer individuality.


3. PlayStation Studios / San Diego Studio

Best role: Premium sports-simulation lead or co-lead.

San Diego Studio is strongly associated with MLB The Show, and reporting on MLB The Show has highlighted how the studio treats authenticity as a key part of sports-game development, including stadium research and career-mode detail.

Strengths for a boxing game:

  • Sports authenticity culture.
  • Clean presentation.
  • Long-term career-mode discipline.
  • Strong animation polish.
  • Good balance between sim and accessibility.
  • Real-world sport respect.

Why Poe-style fans would want them:
They could approach boxing like a real sport, not just a fighting game. A San Diego-style boxing game could focus on amateur career, gyms, regional circuits, scouting, rankings, training, rivalries, and championship legacy.

Concern:
They would need a strong combat-sports team because baseball expertise does not automatically transfer to footwork, clinching, punch physics, stamina, and ring IQ.


4. Big Ant Studios / Nacon

Best role: Mid-budget sports-sim lead or co-developer.

Big Ant presents itself as a sports-game developer, and its public profile includes cricket, rugby league, AFL, tennis, and other sports titles.

Strengths for a boxing game:

  • Sports-game production experience.
  • Roster and league systems.
  • Smaller-sport experience.
  • Career/franchise potential.
  • More likely than giant publishers to serve niche hardcore sports fans.

Why Poe-style fans might like them:
They understand that not every sport is Madden/NBA scale. Boxing needs a developer willing to build for hardcore fans, regional fans, offline players, and creation communities.

Concern:
They would need a serious budget increase and elite combat-sports consultants. Boxing cannot feel stiff, generic, or underfunded.


5. Steel City Interactive

Best role: Only if completely rebuilt with stronger systems, deeper testing, and real public feedback.

Steel City Interactive is already known for Undisputed, so they have boxing-game experience, licensing experience, and a foundation. That matters.

Strengths:

  • Already knows the boxing-game market.
  • Already has boxer relationships and licenses.
  • Already has animation, roster, arena, and online infrastructure.
  • Already has data from what fans praised and criticized.

Why Poe-style fans might accept them:
Only if they treat Undisputed 2 like a true rebuild: new engine logic, real clinching, inside fighting, in-ring referees, CPU vs CPU, deep sliders, real career ecosystem, trainer systems, judging logic, better AI, and a third-party public survey.

Concern:
If they repeat the same “authentic boxing” wording without the systems to back it up, Poe-style fans will not trust it.


B. Best Career, Universe, and Management Partners

6. Sports Interactive / SEGA

Best role: Boxing career, promoter mode, manager mode, and universe simulation.

Sports Interactive calls itself the world’s leading developer of sports management simulations.

Strengths for a boxing game:

  • Deep management logic.
  • Long-term career simulation.
  • Staff roles.
  • Scouting.
  • Morale.
  • Contracts.
  • Development curves.
  • Reputation systems.
  • World simulation.

How they could help boxing:
They could build the living boxing world Poe keeps describing:

  • Promoters protecting records.
  • Champions avoiding dangerous mandatories.
  • Prospects being built slowly.
  • Veterans becoming gatekeepers.
  • Trainers developing styles.
  • Gyms producing different boxer identities.
  • Sanctioning bodies making controversial decisions.
  • Fighters aging, declining, moving divisions, or making comebacks.

Concern:
They should not be the in-ring gameplay developer. Their value is the brain of the boxing universe.


7. Out of the Park Developments

Best role: Database, historical mode, career simulation, and world editor.

Out of the Park Baseball markets itself around franchise control, management, season/career play, and deep sports simulation.

Strengths for a boxing game:

  • Huge database logic.
  • Ratings and scouting systems.
  • Historical leagues.
  • Fictional universe generation.
  • Player development and decline.
  • Long-term stat tracking.
  • Management decisions.

How they could help boxing:
They would be perfect for a Boxing Universe Engine:

  • Every boxer has a record, age, style, promoter, trainer, gym, ranking, popularity, risk level, and financial value.
  • CPU boxers fight each other.
  • Titles change hands without the player.
  • Rankings move naturally.
  • Eras can be simulated.
  • Legends and fictional boxers can coexist.

Concern:
They would need to partner with a real-time gameplay studio.


C. Best Combat-System and Animation Partners

8. Bandai Namco / Dimps

Best role: Punch animation, responsiveness, style identity, and boxer individuality.

Bandai Namco and Dimps have deep experience with fighting games and character-based combat. That does not mean they should make boxing arcade, but they understand timing, spacing, responsiveness, and unique character feel.

Strengths for boxing:

  • Signature punches.
  • Style separation.
  • Stance identity.
  • Impact timing.
  • Distance control.
  • Character-specific animation.
  • Hit reactions.

Why Poe-style fans might like them:
They could help make boxers feel different: Foreman should not punch like Ali, Tyson should not move like Fury, Joe Louis should not throw like Roy Jones Jr., and every boxer should not share the same generic animation bank.

Concern:
They would need strict boxing-sim direction so the game does not become Tekken with gloves.


9. Capcom

Best role: Responsiveness, control feel, animation timing, and competitive balance.

Capcom is one of the best companies in the world at making responsive combat systems. For a boxing game, their value would be input feel, timing windows, counter logic, spacing, and animation clarity.

Strengths for boxing:

  • Crisp controls.
  • Footsies and range logic.
  • Counter timing.
  • Visual readability.
  • Competitive balance.
  • Character feel.

Why Poe-style fans might like them:
Capcom could help solve the problem where boxing games feel either too sluggish or too button-mashy. They understand that combat needs rhythm, timing, range, recovery, vulnerability, and punish windows.

Concern:
They are a fighting-game company first. The boxing game would need to stay grounded in real boxing rules, not super meters, fantasy combos, or arcade pressure.


10. Iron Galaxy

Best role: Technical co-development, fighting-game systems, ports, and online support.

Iron Galaxy is known for co-development, technical consulting, ports, and fighting-game-related work, including Killer Instinct support in its public profile.

Strengths for boxing:

  • Combat-game support.
  • Online technical experience.
  • Platform optimization.
  • Co-development.
  • System cleanup.
  • Responsiveness tuning.

Why Poe-style fans might like them:
They could help make online and offline gameplay feel consistent, polished, and stable without forcing the whole game to become an online meta fighter.

Concern:
They are better as a support partner than the main creative lead for a deep boxing sim.


11. NetherRealm Studios

Best role: Presentation, damage visuals, character drama, and impact.

NetherRealm knows how to make combat look dramatic and readable. For boxing, that could help with knockdowns, entrances, rivalries, facial damage, camera cuts, and crowd reaction.

Strengths for boxing:

  • Dramatic presentation.
  • Character personality.
  • Impactful hit reactions.
  • Cinematic moments.
  • Rivalry-style packaging.
  • Visual feedback.

Why Poe-style fans might like them:
They could make knockdowns, staredowns, damage, and tension feel huge.

Concern:
They are risky because their natural lane is stylized fighting-game combat. A boxing game cannot feel like Mortal Kombat in gloves.


D. Best Creation Suite, Customization, and Presentation Partners

12. Yuke’s

Best role: Creation tools, entrances, arenas, belts, robes, gear, and presentation.

Yuke’s has long wrestling-game history and developed AEW: Fight Forever, which is officially associated with Yuke’s development.

Strengths for boxing:

  • Character creation.
  • Move-set style systems.
  • Entrances.
  • Arenas.
  • Gear customization.
  • Presentation packages.
  • Community content potential.

Why Poe-style fans might like them:
They could help build a serious boxing creation suite:

  • Create-a-boxer.
  • Create-a-trainer.
  • Create-a-gym.
  • Create-a-belt.
  • Create-a-promotion.
  • Create-a-referee.
  • Create-a-commentator/announcer voice bank.
  • Create-a-style.
  • Create-a-signature punch.

Concern:
Their involvement would need a simulation director. Boxing should not become wrestling-style arcade chaos.


13. Sumo Digital

Best role: Co-development, live ops, ports, and large production support.

Sumo Digital describes itself as a major UK developer delivering AAA work for publishers and partners, with full development, co-development, and live-ops experience. Their site also points to more than 500 projects across full development, co-development, and live ops.

Strengths for boxing:

  • Large-scale co-development.
  • Platform support.
  • UI systems.
  • Mode support.
  • Live updates.
  • DLC pipelines.
  • Optimization.

Why Poe-style fans might like them:
A boxing game this deep would need constant updates: roster patches, slider updates, boxer tendency patches, bug fixes, new arenas, new gyms, new belts, and new career logic. Sumo could help keep the machine running.

Concern:
They are probably not the right boxing-vision lead. They are a strong support partner.


14. Saber Interactive

Best role: Arcade/hybrid side mode, customization, online team systems, and technical support.

Saber has worked in sports-adjacent areas like Wild Card Football, which was licensed by the NFLPA and featured customization around teams, uniforms, logos, colors, and playbooks.

Strengths for boxing:

  • Customization systems.
  • Arcade/hybrid gameplay support.
  • Online infrastructure.
  • Team/stable concepts.
  • Fast, accessible modes.

Why Poe-style fans might like them:
They could help build optional side modes: gym wars, fantasy tournaments, arcade events, online stables, or casual-friendly modes that do not ruin the sim core.

Concern:
They should not define the main boxing gameplay if the target is realism.


E. Best Physics, Motion, and Technical Tool Partners

15. Epic Games / Unreal Engine

Best role: Engine, MetaHuman-style characters, animation pipeline, creation tools, and visual realism.

Epic’s Unreal Engine ecosystem is important because boxing needs realistic bodies, faces, swelling, lighting, arenas, ropes, cloth, sweat, blood, and camera work. Reporting on MetaHuman has highlighted expanded body creation, real-time animation capability, and broader use across engines and creative tools.

Strengths for boxing:

  • Realistic character rendering.
  • MetaHuman-style face/body tools.
  • Arena lighting.
  • Broadcast presentation.
  • Mocap pipeline.
  • Community creator possibilities.
  • Better creation-suite foundation.

Why Poe-style fans might like it:
A boxing creation suite could become revolutionary if it uses high-end digital-human tools for face scans, body types, aging, scars, swelling, beard styles, hair, posture, and expressions.

Concern:
Unreal Engine is a tool, not a magic wand. Developers still need boxing logic, AI, physics, and mode design.


16. NaturalMotion-Style Technology

Best role: Dynamic hit reactions, knockdowns, balance loss, ropes, and stumble systems.

NaturalMotion’s Euphoria technology is known for dynamic motion synthesis and real-time character reactions rather than only canned animations.

Strengths for boxing:

  • Dynamic knockdowns.
  • Stumbles.
  • Off-balance reactions.
  • Rope interactions.
  • Different reactions to different punch angles.
  • Less repetitive KO animations.
  • Better “hurt but still standing” moments.

Why Poe-style fans would like this:
Boxing knockdowns should not all look the same. A boxer hit by a short left hook, a chopping right hand, a jab while off balance, or a body shot should react differently. Dynamic motion technology could help make that believable.

Concern:
Physics must be controlled. Too much ragdoll makes boxing look silly. The best solution is authored boxing animation blended with dynamic physics.


17. SideFX / Houdini

Best role: Procedural creation tools for arenas, gyms, robes, trunks, belts, crowds, and environments.

Houdini is used for procedural workflows and reusable tools in game development pipelines.

Strengths for boxing:

  • Procedural arenas.
  • Gym generation.
  • Crowd variation.
  • Belt creation.
  • Trunk and robe patterns.
  • Posters and promotional assets.
  • Fight-week visual packages.
  • Era filters and broadcast looks.

Why Poe-style fans might like it:
A boxing game with a true creation suite could use procedural tools so players are not stuck with a tiny number of generic arenas, trunks, logos, and belts.

Concern:
This is pipeline support, not game design. It helps the artists and creation suite, but it does not create boxing realism by itself.


F. Smaller or Specialist Sports Studios Worth Considering

18. Milestone

Best role: Physics discipline, career structure, and sports authenticity support.

Milestone is best known for racing and motorcycle titles, and its own site lists a long history of sports/racing games.

Strengths for boxing:

  • Physics-oriented sports development.
  • Career progression systems.
  • Licensed sport structure.
  • Discipline around timing, weight, balance, and control.

Why Poe-style fans might like them:
Boxing needs weight, balance, momentum, stamina, and body positioning. A studio used to vehicles and physics could help think about weight transfer and movement penalties seriously.

Concern:
They are not combat-sports specialists, so they would need a boxing gameplay partner.


19. Bigben/Nacon Sports Network

Best role: Publisher for a serious mid-budget boxing sim.

Nacon owns or works with multiple sports-related development groups, including Big Ant. A Nacon-backed boxing project could be more niche and more hardcore than an EA or 2K product.

Strengths:

  • More willing to serve smaller sports markets.
  • Could support a dedicated sim audience.
  • Less pressure to make everything appeal to casuals first.
  • Could invest in a long-term boxing platform.

Concern:
The budget must be high enough. A revolutionary boxing game cannot be treated like a small licensed sports title.


20. Microsoft / Xbox Game Studios

Best role: Publisher/platform backer, not necessarily direct developer.

Xbox has studios with strong tech, physics, presentation, and production expertise. The best Xbox route would be to fund a boxing game and assign the right lead/co-dev team instead of forcing one internal studio to do something outside its lane.

Strengths:

  • Funding power.
  • Game Pass reach.
  • Cloud infrastructure.
  • Strong first-party support network.
  • Potential to use multiple studios.

Why Poe-style fans might like it:
Xbox could fund the kind of boxing game that needs years of development and deep offline systems.

Concern:
Xbox would need the right creative leadership. Money alone does not guarantee boxing authenticity.


G. Companies That Could Help, But Should Not Lead Alone

21. Naughty Dog

Best role: Cinematics, emotion, story presentation, facial acting.

They could help with:

  • Rivalry cutscenes.
  • Press conferences.
  • career drama.
  • Post-fight interviews.
  • Trainer/boxer emotional scenes.

Concern:
They are not a sports-sim studio.


22. Rockstar / Rockstar Advanced Game Engine-Style Team

Best role: Physics, crowd behavior, city/world presentation, dynamic reactions.

They could help with:

  • Dynamic body reactions.
  • Crowd behavior.
  • realistic environments.
  • organic animation blending.

Concern:
They are not likely to make a boxing sim, and their scale would probably be unrealistic for this genre.


23. Remedy

Best role: Presentation, atmosphere, narrative systems, camera work.

They could help with:

  • Documentary-style career mode.
  • Broadcast storytelling.
  • Psychological pressure.
  • Cinematic fight-week presentation.

Concern:
Not a sports studio.


24. Kojima Productions

Best role: Presentation, dramatic tension, cinematic identity.

They could help with:

  • Big fight atmosphere.
  • Walkouts.
  • weigh-ins.
  • rivalries.
  • story presentation.

Concern:
The game could become too cinematic and not enough boxing-sim.


Best Company Combinations

Best Big-Budget Boxing Sim

2K / Visual Concepts + real boxing consultants + Sports Interactive/OOTP-style universe systems

This is the best route for the full Poe-style dream: deep career, universe mode, creation suite, rankings, belts, history, CPU vs CPU, sliders, and presentation.


Best Gameplay-First Boxing Game

EA Sports + Iron Galaxy + NaturalMotion-style dynamic animation + real boxing consultants

This could produce the best punch feel, movement, damage, knockdowns, and online stability.


Best Offline Career Boxing Game

Sports Interactive + Out of the Park Developments + Visual Concepts

This would be the strongest route for:

  • Promoter mode.
  • Manager mode.
  • Career mode.
  • Amateur-to-pro journey.
  • Historical eras.
  • CPU boxing universe.
  • Rankings and sanctioning bodies.
  • Long-term boxer development.

Best Creation Suite Boxing Game

Visual Concepts + Yuke’s + Epic/Unreal/MetaHuman tools + Houdini-style procedural tools

This would be best for:

  • Create-a-boxer.
  • Create-a-gym.
  • Create-a-belt.
  • Create-a-promotion.
  • Create-a-trainer.
  • Create-a-referee.
  • Create-a-style.
  • Create-a-signature punch.
  • Custom robes, trunks, boots, logos, arenas, and posters.

Best Hybrid/Casual + Sim Option Game

2K or EA as lead + Saber or Sumo for support

This would allow the game to have:

  • Realistic sim mode.
  • Hybrid mode.
  • Arcade mode.
  • Online gym wars.
  • Tournament mode.
  • Gauntlet mode.
  • Fantasy matchups.
  • Casual-friendly side modes without destroying the sim core.

Most Realistic Top 10 Ranking

1. 2K / Visual Concepts

Best overall choice for the full boxing package.

2. EA Sports / EA Vancouver

Best for gameplay feel, damage, punch impact, and mainstream appeal.

3. PlayStation San Diego Studio

Best sports-authenticity culture.

4. Sports Interactive

Best career/universe/manager-mode brain.

5. Out of the Park Developments

Best database and long-term simulation partner.

6. Big Ant Studios / Nacon

Best smaller-sport sports-game candidate.

7. Sumo Digital

Best co-development and production support.

8. Iron Galaxy

Best fighting-game technical support partner.

9. Bandai Namco / Dimps

Best animation/combat-style partner.

10. Steel City Interactive

Only if they rebuild properly and listen to sim/offline fans.


The Honest Answer

The company most likely to satisfy fans like Poe is not just the company with the biggest name.

The winning formula is:

2K-level sports depth + EA-level punch feel + Sports Interactive-level career simulation + WWE 2K-level creation tools + real boxing consultants + public third-party survey feedback.

That is the blueprint.

A boxing game cannot just say “authentic.” It has to prove it through:

  • Real weight classes.
  • Real catchweight options.
  • Real boxer styles.
  • Real clinching.
  • Real inside fighting.
  • Real judges.
  • Real referees.
  • Real corners.
  • Real trainers.
  • Real rankings.
  • Real promoters.
  • Real career consequences.
  • Real stamina and damage.
  • Real creation tools.
  • Real offline support.
  • Real CPU vs CPU.
  • Real sliders.
  • Real community feedback.

That is what separates a boxing game made for marketing from a boxing game made for boxing fans.

Thursday, June 25, 2026

Career Mode Should Be the Story: A Living Boxing World, Not Disconnected Game Modes

 


A boxing videogame’s modes should be built so well that Career Mode, Story Mode, Gym Mode, Promoter Mode, Training Camp, Universe Mode, and Online Gyms feel seamless. They should not feel like separate islands where one mode has depth and the others feel forgotten.

The best boxing game would not ask players to choose between Career Mode and Story Mode like they are two different experiences.

The real answer should be:

Career Mode is the story.

A boxing career already has drama built into it. You do not need a forced Hollywood script to make boxing interesting. Boxing naturally has rivalries, rematches, bad blood, controversial decisions, hometown pressure, rankings politics, injuries, gym tension, promoter disputes, title shots, short-notice fights, weight problems, undefeated records, comeback stories, aging champions, dangerous prospects, and legacy-defining moments.

The game should use those things naturally.

If you lose, that should become part of the story.
If you get robbed by the judges, that should create controversy.
If you switch trainers, that should affect your boxing identity.
If you leave a promoter, that should change your opportunities.
If your old sparring partner becomes your rival, the game should recognize it.
If you retire as champion, the world should continue without you.

That is how Career Mode becomes personal.

A real boxing career is not just “train, fight, repeat.” It is a world. It is a system. It is a sport full of people, politics, money, loyalty, betrayal, styles, reputations, and consequences.

That is what a boxing videogame should capture.


Game Modes Should Connect to One Living Boxing Ecosystem

A great boxing game should make every mode feed into the same universe.

Training Camp should not just be mini-games. It should affect stamina, timing, injuries, confidence, strategy, trainer chemistry, and fight preparation.

Gym Mode should not just be a background. It should have sparring partners, stablemates, rival gyms, trainers, young prospects, gym rumors, and style development.

Promoter Mode should not just be menus. It should affect matchmaking, exposure, money, rankings, contracts, title politics, and who gets protected or thrown to the wolves.

Universe Mode should keep the world moving with or without the player. Other fighters should win, lose, age, decline, retire, move divisions, switch trainers, sign with promoters, become stars, fall off, or make comebacks.

Online Gyms should not just be random matches. They could become stables, leagues, rival camps, tournaments, rankings, and community-driven boxing worlds.

That is how the game becomes more than “pick a boxer and fight.”

It becomes a boxing ecosystem.


The Creation Queue / World Pool System

A boxing game should allow players to create a queue, world pool, or universe import system where created boxers, trainers, promoters, managers, referees, judges, gyms, organizations, announcers, and other boxing figures can be placed into the career world.

This would give the creation community real power.

Players should not only be able to create one boxer while the rest of the world stays generic. They should be able to build an entire boxing universe and decide who enters it, when they enter it, and how they affect the sport.

You could create:

Boxers: prospects, journeymen, contenders, champions, legends, gatekeepers, rivals, comeback fighters, amateurs, Olympic medalists, international stars, second-generation fighters, and hometown favorites.

Trainers: defensive specialists, pressure-fighting teachers, old-school trainers, motivators, strategists, cutmen, strength coaches, and once-in-a-generation boxing minds.

Promoters and managers: honest promoters, shady promoters, regional promoters, global powerhouses, aggressive matchmakers, loyal managers, and business-first opportunists.

Gyms and stables: local gyms, famous gyms, elite camps, family gyms, underground gyms, rival stables, and gyms known for producing certain styles.

Officials: referees and judges with different personalities, strictness, experience, bias, reputations, and decision-making tendencies.

The key is that the game should not force everything to appear at once. The player should be able to place creations into a queue and let the world introduce them naturally.

A created amateur could enter the world years later as an undefeated prospect.

A created trainer could become available after another trainer retires.

A created promoter could start small, then grow into a major force.

A created international boxer could build a record overseas before becoming a mandatory challenger.

A created rival could enter the rankings after your boxer wins a regional belt.

A created son, brother, cousin, or stablemate could begin his own career after your first fighter becomes champion.

That is how Career Mode becomes a true boxing saga.


More Than One Boxer in the Same Career World

A boxing career mode should not trap the player inside only one boxer forever.

You should be able to have more than one boxer in your career universe.

That does not mean the player has to control everyone at once. It means the game should give players options. You could focus on your main created boxer while also managing or following other fighters connected to the same world.

You could control:

A young prospect from your gym.

A former champion making a comeback.

A rival boxer’s career.

A stablemate trying to step out of your shadow.

A boxer from another country trying to break into the rankings.

A second-generation fighter connected to your first career.

A full stable under one trainer, manager, or promoter.

This would give Career Mode long-term value. Instead of finishing one career and starting over from scratch, the player could remain inside the same universe and continue building the boxing world.

Your first created boxer could retire and become a trainer.
Your old rival could become a promoter.
A former sparring partner could become a champion.
A younger fighter from your gym could become the new face of boxing.
Your retired legend could train the next generation.

That is replay value with meaning.

Boxing is not one person’s journey. Boxing is a world of careers crossing paths.


Ping, Follow, and Track Any Boxer’s Career

The game should also let players ping, follow, track, scout, and monitor any boxer’s career.

In real boxing, fans follow more than one fighter. They follow prospects, champions, rivals, hometown fighters, future opponents, exciting styles, gym members, and fighters from different countries.

A boxing game should let players do the same.

You should be able to click on any boxer and choose:

Follow Career
Track their record, fights, rankings, titles, injuries, weight changes, trainer changes, promoter changes, and upcoming announcements.

Ping Updates
Receive notifications when something important happens.

Watch Their Fights
Watch full fights, CPU vs CPU matches, highlights, or simulated results.

Scout Fighter
Study their tendencies, strengths, weaknesses, style, stamina issues, chin history, punch stats, defensive flaws, and recent form.

Mark as Rival or Future Opponent
Let the game build storylines around fighters you are watching closely.

Add to Shortlist
Useful for promoters, managers, trainers, or players building future matchups.

This would make the entire boxing world matter.

Imagine getting alerts like:

“Javier Morales moved to #3 in the WBC rankings.”

“Malik Stone suffered his first loss by controversial decision.”

“Your former sparring partner signed with a rival promoter.”

“Darnell Price called you out after his knockout win.”

“Your old trainer is now working with your next opponent.”

“Former champion Isaac Bell is returning after two years away.”

That is the kind of system that makes players care about the universe, not just their next fight.


The World Should Not Revolve Only Around the Player

One of the biggest problems with many sports career modes is that the world feels dead unless the player is involved.

A real boxing game should not be like that.

The boxing world should move with or without you.

Other fighters should fight each other. Champions should defend belts. Prospects should rise. Veterans should decline. Promoters should sign talent. Trainers should move gyms. Judges should gain reputations. Referees should become known for how they handle fights. Upsets should happen. Fighters should duck dangerous opponents. Fighters should demand more money. Fighters should switch weight classes. Fighters should retire, return, and chase legacy.

The player should be able to follow all of it.

That is why the creation queue and world pool system matters. It lets the player create the ingredients, but the game’s universe system should make those ingredients live.

The player should be able to say:

“I want these 50 created boxers in my universe.”

“I want these 10 trainers available.”

“I want these 5 promoters active.”

“I want this gym to produce prospects.”

“I want this created rival to enter the rankings later.”

“I want this boxer to start as an amateur.”

“I want this retired fighter to become a trainer.”

“I want this boxer to debut in year three.”

That is not just creation.

That is world-building.


Why This Would Change Boxing Games Forever

This type of design would give Career Mode serious longevity.

Offline players would have endless replay value.
Creation communities would have real purpose.
Content creators could build full boxing worlds.
Hardcore fans could recreate eras.
Casual fans could download ready-made universes.
Sim players could watch CPU careers unfold.
Promoter-style players could run stables and build events.
Online communities could create gyms, leagues, rankings, and rivalries.

This is how a boxing game becomes more than a game mode.

It becomes a boxing platform.

Career Mode should have the freedom of a sports sim, the drama of a story mode, the depth of a management game, and the replay value of a living universe.

A boxing game should let players create the world, follow the world, fight inside the world, and watch the world evolve.

Because in boxing, one career is never just one career.

It is connected to trainers, promoters, managers, gyms, rivals, rankings, belts, politics, history, and the next generation coming behind you.

That is what a real boxing videogame should capture.

Boxing Promoters Don’t Promote Like They Used To

 

Boxing Promoters Don’t Promote Like They Used To

Boxing promotion does not feel the same anymore.

In the 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, and early 2000s, promoters had to promote. They had to sell the fight. They had to sell the story. They had to make the public care. They used posters, commercials, newspapers, magazines, radio, television interviews, press conferences, city tours, gym footage, and word of mouth. A major fight felt like an event before the bell ever rang.

Today, promoters have more technology than ever, but many of them seem less effective than ever.

We live in an era with social media, YouTube, podcasts, live streams, short-form video, documentaries, behind-the-scenes content, digital ads, online communities, fighter channels, and global platforms that can reach fans instantly. There is no excuse for a fighter or a fight to feel invisible.

But somehow, a lot of boxing promotion feels lazy.

Now the boxer is expected to promote themselves. The fighter has to build the hype, make the viral clips, talk on social media, do interviews, create drama, carry the storyline, engage fans, sell tickets, and still train for the fight. Meanwhile, managers and promoters still get paid like they are doing the heavy lifting.

That is backwards.

A promoter’s job is not just to sign contracts and appear at the final press conference. A promoter should be building the fighter’s brand, explaining why the matchup matters, creating emotional investment, introducing casual fans to the boxer’s personality, and making the fight feel important.

Back in the day, even posters had energy. Commercials had drama. The build-up made fans feel like they had to watch. You knew who was fighting, why they were fighting, what was at stake, and why it mattered to boxing history.

Now, too many fights are announced, barely marketed, and then everyone acts shocked when the public does not care.

That is not the fans’ fault.

That is a failure of promotion.

Technology should have made boxing promotion better, not lazier. A promoter today has more tools than Don King, Bob Arum, Butch Lewis, Main Events, HBO, Showtime, and old-school fight marketers had decades ago. With today’s platforms, a promoter can create mini-documentaries, fighter profiles, training camp series, animated fight posters, rivalry breakdowns, interactive fan polls, press conference clips, ticket campaigns, and global digital rollouts.

Instead, a lot of modern promotion feels like:
“Here is the fight. Buy it.”

That is not enough.

Boxing needs real promoters again. Not just dealmakers. Not just people collecting percentages. Not just people standing next to the fighter after the fighter already did the work.

A real promoter should make the public feel like a fight matters.

The boxer should not have to do everything alone while the promoter gets paid for doing almost nothing. Fighters risk their health, reputation, and future every time they step into the ring. The least a promoter can do is actually promote them.

Boxing has the technology. Boxing has the media platforms. Boxing has the history. Boxing has the fighters.

What boxing needs now is promoters who remember what the word promoter actually means.

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