Title Bout Championship Boxing
Boxing, the visceral and primal sport, a battle of endurance, stamina and strength between two finely-tuned fighting machines, a clash of veritable titans. Every jawshattering punch, every deft duck and weave and every bloodied and shattered face echoes traditions of an ancient sport.
Cubedrum's Title Bout Championship Boxing Page. EBC Featherweight boss Young Griffo (Chmp) defends his crown yet again against Dal Hawkins (#3) in a.
Whereas Excel spreadsheets, boring grids teeming with pointless numbers, statistics and variables, along with confusing arrays of digits and long words, bafflingly intricate options and almost non-existent graphics echo traditions of.. Well, being bored out of your tree.
Delivering a visceral WWII gaming experience, Company of Heroes redefines RTS by bringing the sacrifice of heroic soldiers, war-ravaged environments, and dynamic battlefields to life. Please visit the 'Company of Heroes. This website would like to store cookies in your browser, one of which is used by this age verification gate in order to ensure that we communicate our products and services responsibly. Company of Heroes 3 Official Trailer New It will coming soon in 2018 For PC / Release Trailer EU Like & subscribe. Company of Heroes 2. Hint #3: The campaign story / game setting is completely fictional. Hint #4: The micro-transactions are completely optional / cosmetics only. Hint #5: There will be 4 major updates every year, and an annual season pass, kind of like R6S. Company of heroes 3.
Combine the two and you get TitleBout Championship Boxing, a piece of software (it definitely doesn't fall under the definition of 'game') which allows you to take two of over 4,000 fighters and make them fight one another. What you get is a screen full of numbers and meters, and a little 2D image of your sluggers in a ring, occasionally moving, or if you're lucky, knocking one another to the mat in a single frame of animation. There's not even a semblance of gameplay here: there are no management options, you can't start training a young fighter from bar fights to international tournaments, you can't do anything remotely fun. This is literally a glorified spreadsheet, and not in that joking way that people call Football Manager a glorified spreadsheet: this is actually Excel with a boxing-themed interface. It's a simulation in the dullest sense of the word.
When boxing games aren’t Punch-Out!!, in my experience, they’re glistening, photorealistish things that you watch while sweatily stirring a thumbstick around a plastic white cauldron. Bit rubbish.

I’d say biffing simulator Title Bout Championship Boxing was about changing that, but it turns out the series has been around for absolutely yonks. Based on the boardgame of the same name, the game’s latest iteration comes from tiny Sussex outfit PISD.
TBCB is half game, half bookie’s tool – about pairing up two of the thousands of real-world boxers available for re-staged classic bouts or “What if?” scenarios.
“I am thrilled to see the release of Title Bout Championship Boxing 2013,” said PISD co-founder Paul Norman in a statement. “The game has been a labour of love for me, and I know boxing fans everywhere are excited about it. Whether players want to recreate the early days of boxing or see how modern day matches might end differently, TBCB 2013 offers something for everyone.”
I’m not sure about everyone – those “pseudo-animated” fighters and big-boned UI probably aren’t the stuff of living room gatherings. But the new TBCB certainly sounds all sorts of comprehensive. Stats, commentary, rankings and famous venues abound.
It runs on Windows, OS X and Linux. What’s more, PISD are operating under the sort of generous payment model you only see in the niche PC market: Title Bout Championship Boxing 2013 costs $19.99 for two licenses, or $9.99 if you own any previous version of the game.
Do you have previous with the TBCB series? Or are you a boxing enthusiast intrigued by the potential match-ups of a hardcore match-upperer?