Ring King

Ring King
North American Ring King arcade flyer
Developer(s) Woodplace, Inc.
Namco
Publisher(s) Woodplace, Inc.
Data East
Namco
Platform(s) Arcade
Nintendo Entertainment System
MSX2
Mobile phone
Release date(s)

1985 (Arcade release)

  • JP June 19, 1987
Genre(s) Sports
Mode(s) Single-player
Two players

Ring King, known in the PAL regions as King of Boxer, and known in Japan as Family Boxing (ファミリーボクシング Famirī Bokushingu), is an arcade boxing game originally developed and published by Woodplace, Inc. in the PAL regions in 1985, and later published by Data East in North America the same year.

Gameplay

The game continues the series' theme of comical sports as the player takes the role of a boxer who makes his way from his debut to become a world champion. Ring King, though perhaps unintentionally, is standard of the boxing creations of its era, via providing quirky monikers for opponents the player encounters; in its arcade release, these number eight (8): Violence Jo (ironically, this entry level fighter is the champion, in the NES version), Brown Pants, White Wolf, Bomba Vern, Beat Brown, Blue Warker (reigning champion, in the arcade version), Green Hante and Onetta Yank. Assuming the player wins the championship, arcade play continues cycling through only the last of the afore-listed three (Blue Warker, Green Hante, Onetta Yank).

The player can choose from several different types of punches and defensive maneuvers, along with unique special attacks. The player revives their stamina during the round interval by pressing the button rapidly. The boxer's abilities are determined by three different stats; punch, stamina, and speed. The player can improve these stats using the power points gained after each match. Performing well in matches allows the player to create more powerful boxers. The player can save their game progress by recording a password, and two players can face off against each other in the two-player mode. Though the game is rudimentary, it is possible to counter-punch, and missing with too many punches causes the boxer's stamina to decrease.

Special attacks

The biggest characteristic of the game is the comical set of special attacks. These moves are activated when the player presses the attack button at the right timing and at the right distance. The attacks have the capability to instantly knock out the opponent, but being countered before a special attack causes an extraordinary amount of damage as well. The first special attack is a powerful hook which the boxer throws by spinning around like a top. The second is a straight punch that propels the opponent into the ropes when it connects. The third type is an uppercut that launches the opponent straight into the air. If thrown at the right timing, the uppercut can blast the opponent straight out of the ring, resulting in a technical knockout.

Ports

The game was later ported to the Nintendo Entertainment System (Famicom in Japan) in 1987 by Data East's arcade-to-NES converter, Sakata SAS, which was published by Data East in North America, and by Namco in Japan. This version was also released on the VS. UniSystem as Vs. TKO Boxing. Sony later ported it to the MSX2 exclusively in Japan in 1988. The Famicom and MSX2 versions were released as the third game of the Family sports game series, after Family Stadium and Family Jocky for the Famicom in Japan by Namco as Family Boxing (ファミリーボクシング famirī bokushingu). The game was later converted into an i-mode mobile phone application and released exclusively in January 2004 by Namco.

Controversy

Ring King caused controversy because, when animated, this particular scene shows the cornerman appearing to fellate the boxer.

The NES/Famicom version of Ring King/Family Boxing created some controversy because the boxers' cornermen appear to be performing fellatio on them between rounds. Though the scene was only intended to show the cornermen placing the Foul Cup into the boxer's trunks, the graphical limitations of the NES made the scene appear questionable. The boxers may also appear to be hugging as they grapple because of the NES's limitations.

See also

External links

Arcade versions
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