MONDAY MEMORIES: It’s In The Game

Punchout!
By Ryan K Boman | March 8, 2025

From stadium to screen, sports games have been a huge part of our lives as fans. Whether it was playing against your friends as a kid or locking horns today with an unseen opponent online, we all play these video games looking for our next victory. It’s become a hobby, an obsession, and (most of all) a huge financial windfall for programmers and developers.

According to the website, Statistica, these athletic animations generate an annual market size of $21.32 billion. That’s likely because they appeal to children of all ages – especially those of us who grew up in an era when gaming was pretty primitive. Any Atari sports cartridge typically featured a ball on the cover, but it looked more like a box during the actual gameplay. But we played it anyway because that was the best we had at the time.

For me? The true story of modern gaming began with the Nintendo revolution of the late 1980s. That original NES was fairly affordable, and it offered sports fans their first real look at more accurate reenactments of sports action. Titles like Double Dribble, Blades of Steel, and RBI Baseball are considered old-school classics today.

Then, of course, there was Tecmo Bowl, the game where Bo Jackson was literally unstoppable. Every gamer from that era would choose the Raiders because, well… they KNEW.

Mike Tyson’s Punchout! was another major title during this same time. I know personally that I must have battled Iron Mike about a hundred times before I finally knocked him out for good. In fact, I punched in the code to skip to the Tyson match so many times that I can remember the numbers better than I can recall my grocery list. (NOTE: The code was: 003-373-5963. And it’s sad that – after 35 years – I don’t even have to look it up. That’s one of the things my brain actually held on to as the years have gone by.)

With the rise of EA Sports in the 90s, along with the emergence of the Sony PlayStation and Microsoft’s X-Box, more and more details were being added to titles from every single sport. Leading the way was the John Madden Football series, which is still a must-have after over 30 years as one of the industry’s top titles. Similarly, the golf games featuring Tiger Woods in his prime were hot sellers in the early 2000s. The emergence of the NBA Live series was also a key contributor in making EA the leader in sports gaming.

Then came internet gaming, which took things to a whole new level. Most Gen-Xers (who were the original gamers) were in their 20s to 30s during this time, and they had a lot more disposable income. Add-ons, extra equipment, and custom editions helped bring more diversity to the onscreen action. The early years of online play were a little awkward, but it soon became a phenomenon among young adults at the time. Now, E-Gaming has become the rage with those same people’s kids (and in some cases, their grandkids).

While it would be easy to name a million titles and brands over the years, I think it’s more interesting to look at the reasons why we like sports video games so much. For most of us, as kids growing up, we often wore our favorite player’s jersey. And, we were always that same athlete, in a game or just playing outside – bouncing a ball off of a wall.

Sports games replaced that, in some ways. Now, you could really play as that star -with all his natural characteristics – against other stars that you had seen on television. Even better? As time went by, you could actually create yourself and put you in the game. So in many ways, sports gaming took fans’ imagination and electrified it.

Whether it’s shooting a round of golf inside the house on a rainy day, or strapping on your chinstrap to start a season of football, those games are an extension of our childhood. The sports stars we dreamed of becoming? We could suddenly do that… for $59.99, of course.

While there have been complaints over the years (especially during the era when there were no college sports games, but that’s a very long story for another day), most sports gamers have stayed loyal to their favorite titles. Most players will buy the new edition of each series for each particular season.

In the Fall, they buy Madden, and in Spring, they buy MLB the Show. The same can be said for FIFA, NBA Live, and WWE 2K. They contain all the updates from the season before. And despite the ever-changing world of real-life sports? The games are patterned after them as much as possible, and they do a pretty accurate job with roster or uniform changes, etc.

The NASCAR game is a nice touch, too. It’s a far cry from the arcade days and Pole Position – where you literally sat in a small storage shed with a steering wheel and pedals. You were never sure if you were getting ready to do some racing or possibly get kidnapped.

On a lighter note – For sports fans, gaming is a way to kick the tires of their physical fires without actually doing much of anything. It’s true. You can live vicariously through those athletic images on the screen, while you pause every few minutes to eat some Doritos.

In that same vein… I have to be honest: I have never played a real round of golf in my life. But I have played thousands of the Hot Shots variety. I made three birdies in a row right before the pizza guy arrived; then I was pretty sluggish on the back nine.

Call it a return to childhood or simply something to do when you’re bored, but sports gaming has become as much a staple in our society as the sports themselves. They have been ingrained in pop culture. So much so, that we all have some connection to them, and that’s why they have remained so prevalent.

Years pass and seasons come and go, but they are preserved in that programming, even as the gain a collection of dust on a shelf. The future will certainly bring more mind-blowing re-creations of our favorite sports, and we will continue to consume them voraciously.

Because as EA Sports famously says, “It’s in the Game”.
And that game is a part of our collective conscience.


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