![]() ![]() ![]() If you haven't played the Legacy mode before you will soon find yourself once you have created your character in a world of juggling training, resting and adhering to your sponsors' wishes in-between fights. If you really don't want to play with digital photos there is enough sliders and creation areas which will allow you to customise the look of your character. Within this mode you can use photos which you have taken on your system or even digital photos uploaded to EA website. With this you will be able to take your character from the beginning and do what it takes to reach the top. Championship mode plays out exactly like any boxing movie you have seen with cut-scenes being used between fights to break up the game play.Īs well as this new Championship mode you also have the Legacy mode back to allow you to create your own character or use one of the several existing characters from the roster. Another situation sees Andre with a cut over his eye and you must protect it from getting hit 15 times in addition to winning the fight. In some fights you will have to fight in a certain way for example you may be told to fight with a fractured hand and to make sure that certain punches aren't used otherwise your hand will be permanently damaged. ![]() Even though this mode really isn't much of a change to the standard game play you get from this title, there is a few variations that keep you guessing. This story line is very graphic to say the least, taking you on a journey of highs and lows which I don't think you would see in most sporting titles. The main plot then makes the obligatory flashback journey to allow you to see Andre's back story and how he ended up in jail before continuing to see his rise from leaving prison to becoming heavyweight champion again. When one of the inmates wants a rematch after he was beaten in front of his peers, he also decides that his friends should join in too. The story starts off in jail as you get involved in fighting other inmates. The game mode allows you to take control of Andre Bishop, a troubled boxer and allows you to see his rise, fall and then rise again. I also want to add about how EA, for once, have taken a risk with one of these games and actually included a story mode within one of its own sport titles. With cuts and bruises getting more swollen and deeper as the fight wears, on through to the tiniest details of the sweat flying off the face of your opponent as you hit them with a massive uppercut - this all adds to the realism and shear graphical stature of this game. If you have played any of the previous Fight Night titles then you will know what I mean about the level of detail that goes into these game, but it feels like that they have just gone above and beyond on this game. Everything looks perfect the way in which the characters move, to the lighting of the stadiums. The first thing I want to address is the physics engine and how stunning the graphics look within this game. So with Fight Night Champion working off the success of the previous titles will this be a round five knock out? Let's touch gloves and find out. Reviews // 30th Mar 2011 - 13 years ago // By Simon James Bonds Fight Night Champion Reviewīoxing games have changed a lot in the gaming industry there has been a lot of fantastic games don't get me wrong, but some never seem to hit the gritty realism of the sport. ![]()
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