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Fight Night Champion PlayStation 3

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  • Age Rating: P 16
  • OfflineMultiplayers: 1-2 1-2
  • OnlineMultiplayers: 2 2

Product summary

More than just a change to the franchise name, Fight Night Champion takes the boxing experience one giant step forward by delivering an experience never before seen in an EA SPORTS… See more

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Av. User Rating

  • Age Rating: P 16
  • OfflineMultiplayers: 1-2 1-2
  • OnlineMultiplayers: 2 2
Fight Night Champion Product Details

Released on 02/03/2011

Fight Night Champion for PS3

More than just a change to the franchise name, Fight Night Champion takes the boxing experience one giant step forward by delivering an experience never before seen in an EA SPORTS video game. History will be made with this revolutionary iteration that builds upon the best-in-class gameplay and physics engine of Fight Night Round 4, while immersing you in a world of brutality, uncertainty, betrayal, and redemption. Survive the brutal road to redemption with Fight Night Champion.

Fight Night Champion for PS3

  • Full Spectrum Punch Control—Control your boxer’s punches with precision and accuracy like never before with a new synergy of gameplay controls. From overhand punches to strategic counter jabs and one-punch knockouts, overwhelm your opponents with your refined skill set.
  • Physics-Based Gameplay—Move around the ring and time your attacks with precision. Building off the best-in-class gameplay engine featured in Fight Night Round 4, you now have an even wider range of abilities when it comes to counterattacks, setting up combos, and attacking your opponent.
  • Legacy Mode—Create your alter ego and put him in the ring against past champions. Work your way up the ranks through training and scheduled bouts, and establish your name as the fighter to beat. Take your boxer online and see how you size up against the best in the world competing for local or worldwide belts in the all-new Fight Night Nation.
  • Online Gyms—Create an online gym with your friends and battle it out to see who’s the ultimate champion, or turn boxing into a team sport and challenge other gyms in Rival Matches to unlock items, win trophies, and more.
  • Authentic Content—Fight Night Champion showcases the truest graphical representation of the sport, lifestyle, and culture of boxing with authentic and dynamic blood, realistic body damage and deformation, and mature content throughout. Experience the violence and brutality that is true to the trade.
  • With Fight Night: Champion headed to HD consoles in March, EA Sports is already hard at work prototyping a possible Kinect version of the celebrated boxing franchise.

    Champion will not support any motion controllers, but the game's producer Mike Mahar confirmed to Eurogamer that the company was attempting to see how a Fight Night Kinect game might work.

    "Right now the best simulation experience we can give users is through a conventional controller," explained Mahar. "I also think that most of our users don't want to - and can't - punch for 10 rounds!"

    However, he did concede that "it's an interesting proposition. Undeniably at some point we're going to want to integrate motion controls into our game somehow, whether that's in a mini-game or separate game I don't know."

    Mahar went on to suggest that a mini-game within a conventional Fight Night would be "a disservice" to the current motion-control devices, adding "I think we'd best serve the community... with a totally different game."

    In the meantime, fans of virtual pugilism won't have long to wait to get their latest fix of their favourite franchise, as Fight Night Champion hits Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 on March 4th. The game features a brand new story mode and more realistic injury detail, for those who like to see exactly what damage those haymakers really can do.

  • Eye of the tiger

    The noble art of boxing has been a part of gaming ever since Nintendo released Punch-Out!! in the mid-nineties, and although this classic is basic by today's loftier standards, its tagline of "as close to the ring as you can get without going through the ropes" is an accolade it once wore with pride. But today, the mantle of Heavyweight Champion has been passed on to the Fight Night series.

    Fight Night Champion is the latest evolution in boxing simulations. But rather than enter the ring with a cocky look of self-assurance, it defends its title with the tenacity of a seasoned veteran. The punching animations look slicker, the ebb and flow of combat is more convincing and the principles of the sport it represents are more naturally realised with a focus on believable stamina and full-body movement.

    In Fight Night Round 4 we were introduced to Total Punch Control, a system that used circular motions of the right analogue stick to convey the bread and butter of boxing ballistics. But in Fight Night Champion, the new Full Spectrum Punch Control replaces the old semicircles with directional inputs. You tilt upwards for a straight punch, sideways for a hook and downwards for an uppercut.

    It's a setup that's responsive and allows for less punishing execution, and with the face buttons now working in tandem, even Tekken purists can string together combos with ease. Further revisions include a modifier that lets you power-up every type of strike, reflex-based blocking that works with your fighter's attributes, progressive stamina deterioration that rewards forward thinking and a counterpunch system that demands stricter timing on your leans and weaves.

    Thrill of the fight

    Fighting simulations are best enjoyed when trading leather with a friend, but to give its prize fighter a bit of extra pep, EA Canada has included a new Champion Mode. This tells the story of Andre Bishop, a boxing prodigy who is trying to fulfil his late father's dreams by becoming the Middleweight Champion of the World. What follows is a six hour journey of shattered dreams, bitter betrayals and euphoric redemption as Bishop battles his way from the very bottom - one knockout at a time.

    It's a ballad that's surprisingly gripping and sees Bishop bare-knuckle fighting in prison and competing in amateur boxing matches where each round is scored on the number of punches landed. Later bouts see you tackling scenarios like fighting with a broken hand and dealing with a corrupt referee who classes your body strikes as illegal fouls. It's 22 fights from start to finish and every exchange teaches you an important lesson about the art of pugilism. Rule one is keep your hands up.

    Once you've learned the boxing basics its then time to play through the returning Legacy Mode. This lets you craft a boxer in your own image (but likely with a more muscular physique) before embarking on a boxing career filled with knockouts, unanimous decisions and TKOs. The improvements over Fight Night Round 4 are many and include a more comprehensive levelling-up system and improved training games. You can even win fight money to attend better training camps.

    Got the glory

    Then once you've exhausted the single player modes, it's time to craft your own legacy in the online ring. This works similarly to the previous game and includes both a new Lobby system for trash talking about how you once went 10 rounds with Lennox Lewis, as well as improved matchmaking. But the most intriguing addition is the online Gym system. This lets you and your friends team up for some heated sparring before testing your collective skills against another Gym in a Rival Challenge - and to the victor go the all important bragging rights

    As a package, Fight Night Champion is everything a fighting sequel should be. It builds upon its predecessor's foundations with better combat, enhanced features and more intuitive controls. But at the same time, it offers something completely different in the new Championship Mode. So while it's not a boxing revolution and has little in the way of rivals, it has still risen to the challenge of our expectations. And that's no small feat.

     

    Our Rating: 8.0

    KO

    + Fluid boxing animations.


    + Intuitive controls.


    + A compelling story mode.

    BO

    - Hard going at first.


    - A bit familiar in places.


    - Helps if you "like" boxing.

  • When EA bought the rights to the Ultimate Fighting Championship from previous license holder THQ earlier this year, it was unclear what the publisher planned to do with the series. Now we know. It's handed it over to the development team that built the award-winning boxing simulation Fight Night Round 4 and Fight Night Champion.

    The news came as a surprise to creative director Brian Hayes, however. "When we found out that EA and the UFC would be working together, the team was excited," he said. "Most of the team didn't even know about it until the announcement at E3. We were all watching it together and when Andrew Wilson and Dana White took the stage, everybody starting cheering. It was great."

    And despite having made their name in boxing games, the team had been hoping to get their hands on an MMA title. "For me personally, the UFC is something that I grew up with. I remember watching the first UFC events when I was a teenager and it's amazing to see how they have evolved and flourished. Ultimately, we're huge fans, we think we have a great team and we are really excited to be taking on this new challenge. We look forward to bringing the UFC video game experience to new heights."

    EA's official UFC game has yet to be given a title, or target platforms, but will be out sometime in 2013.


  • Fight Night Champion on PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 at GAME

    Eye of the Tiger

    The noble art of boxing has been a part of gaming ever since Nintendo released Punch-Out!! in the mid-nineties, and although this classic is basic by today's loftier standards, its tagline of "as close to the ring as you can get without going through the ropes" is an accolade it once wore with pride. But today, the mantle of Heavyweight Champion has been passed on to the Fight Night series.

    Fight Night Champion is the latest evolution in boxing simulations. But rather than enter the ring with a cocky look of self-assurance, it defends its title with the tenacity of a seasoned veteran. The punching animations look slicker, the ebb and flow of combat is more convincing and the principles of the sport it represents are more naturally realised with a focus on believable stamina and full-body movement.

    In Fight Night Round 4 we were introduced to Total Punch Control, a system that used circular motions of the right analogue stick to convey the bread and butter of boxing ballistics. But in Fight Night Champion, the new Full Spectrum Punch Control replaces the old semicircles with directional inputs. You tilt upwards for a straight punch, sideways for a hook and downwards for an uppercut.

    It's a setup that's responsive and allows for less punishing execution, and with the face buttons now working in tandem, even Tekken purists can string together combos with ease. Further revisions include a modifier that lets you power-up every type of strike, reflex-based blocking that works with your fighter's attributes, progressive stamina deterioration that rewards forward thinking and a counterpunch system that demands stricter timing on your leans and weaves.

    Fight Night Champion on PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 at GAME

    Thrill of the Fight

    Fighting simulations are best enjoyed when trading leather with a friend, but to give its prize fighter a bit of extra pep, EA Canada has included a new Champion Mode. This tells the story of Andre Bishop, a boxing prodigy who is trying to fulfil his late father's dreams by becoming the Middleweight Champion of the World. What follows is a six hour journey of shattered dreams, bitter betrayals and euphoric redemption as Bishop battles his way from the very bottom - one knockout at a time.

    It's a ballad that's surprisingly gripping and sees Bishop bare-knuckle fighting in prison and competing in amateur boxing matches where each round is scored on the number of punches landed. Later bouts see you tackling scenarios like fighting with a broken hand and dealing with a corrupt referee who classes your body strikes as illegal fouls. It's 22 fights from start to finish and every exchange teaches you an important lesson about the art of pugilism. Rule one is keep your hands up.

    Once you've learned the boxing basics its then time to play through the returning Legacy Mode. This lets you craft a boxer in your own image (but likely with a more muscular physique) before embarking on a boxing career filled with knockouts, unanimous decisions and TKOs. The improvements over Fight Night Round 4 are many and include a more comprehensive levelling-up system and improved training games. You can even win fight money to attend better training camps.

    Fight Night Champion on PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 at GAME

    Got the Glory

    Then once you've exhausted the single player modes, it's time to craft your own legacy in the online ring. This works similarly to the previous game and includes both a new Lobby system for trash talking about how you once went 10 rounds with Lennox Lewis, as well as improved matchmaking. But the most intriguing addition is the online Gym system. This lets you and your friends team up for some heated sparring before testing your collective skills against another Gym in a Rival Challenge - and to the victor go the all important bragging rights

    As a package, Fight Night Champion is everything a fighting sequel should be. It builds upon its predecessor's foundations with better combat, enhanced features and more intuitive controls. But at the same time, it offers something completely different in the new Championship Mode. So while it's not a boxing revolution and has little in the way of rivals, it has still risen to the challenge of our expectations. And that's no small feat.

    GAME's Verdict

    The Good:

    • Fluid boxing animations.
    • Intuitive controls.
    • A compelling story mode.

    The Bad:

    • Hard going at first.
    • A bit familiar in places.
    • Helps if you "like" boxing.

    Published: 04/03/2011

Fight Night Champion User Reviews
Top review
losa91
5 days ago
Fight Night Champion
Muy buen juego, su nivel de historia y gráficos, Además muy barato. Muchas gracias Game.co !
machadom
1 year ago
Fight Night Champion
It's a game that if you love box, you should have.
Glenn
1 year ago
Fight Night Champion
Brilliant! A MUST buy game!
Mark
1 year ago
Much better then last years outing
The whole feel of the game is really good especially the main story mode it has you gripped though out and the sheer amount of boxing icons you have should keep you going for ages.
Jack
1 year ago
real fight
great graphics on the fighters,ring,arena etc etc. masive improvement over fnr4. the story mode is a good tuch, bare knuckle fighting is a good bit in there, however the story is a lil short imo. fighting wise is better controlled than the other fns. this is deffo the best ring fighting game out there must buy
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