Wrestlers Without Boundaries
With only 38% positive Steam reviews and a community asking whether grappling even exists, this one is a hard sell for anyone who actually likes wrestling games.
GamerScout Verdict
Skip it - broken progression, absent grapple mechanics, and a 38% Steam rating disqualify this for any wrestling fan.
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About Wrestlers Without Boundaries
I went looking for something to recommend to wrestling game fans on a budget, and Wrestlers Without Boundaries stopped me cold pretty fast. This is a 3D single-player sports brawler released in 2018 by Real Fighting, built around a career mode where you pick a fighter, work through tournaments across multiple arenas, earn coins, and gradually unlock new wrestlers and venues. On paper, that loop is inoffensive. In practice, the game has serious questions hanging over it that no post-launch patch appears to have answered. The most damning signal comes straight from the Steam community, where players were asking within days of launch whether grappling mechanics exist at all. That is not a good sign for a game with wrestling in the title. The combat reportedly leans on kicks, strikes, and basic combos rather than anything resembling the throws, holds, or signature moves that define the genre. If you came expecting even a rough approximation of what WWE 2K or Fire Pro Wrestling do, you will feel the absence immediately. The progression system adds a light coin economy tied to winning matches, but broken rating fights and healing that apparently does nothing suggest the underlying systems were not fully tested before release. The Steam numbers tell the same story. Out of 13 user reviews the game has collected since launch, only 38% are positive. That sits firmly in the Overwhelmingly Negative neighborhood by any reasonable standard, and the title has since been delisted from Steam directly, meaning keys now circulate only through third-party resellers. A delisted single-player sports game with no critic coverage, no community activity, and unresolved core gameplay questions is a very specific kind of risk to take on. To be fair about what the game is trying to do: the structure of pick-a-fighter, enter tournaments, unlock arenas is a completely legitimate arcade sports design. There is a version of this concept that works well for a casual thirty-minute session. The 3D presentation and multi-arena setup suggest some production intention was there. If the combat input actually functioned and grapples existed, this could have been a perfectly serviceable budget distraction. The ambition was not the problem. The execution, though, is the problem, and there is no indication that patches ever addressed it. For wrestling game fans, the genre has genuinely good options at various price points, and this is not one of them. Spending money on a delisted game with broken progression and apparently missing mechanics is a gamble that almost certainly does not pay off.

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System Requirements
Minimum
- Processor
- 2.0 GHz Dual Core
- Memory
- 2 GB RAM
- Graphics
- NVIDIA Geforce GTS 450 or AMD Radeon HD 6750
- DirectX
- Version 9.0
- Storage
- 500 MB available space
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Game Info
- Developer
- Real Fighting
- Publisher
- Unknown
- Release Date
- May 30, 2018