Close Menu
Best in TechnologyBest in Technology
  • News
  • Phones
  • Laptops
  • Gadgets
  • Gaming
  • AI
  • Tips
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
The Best Robotic Pool Cleaners of 2026: Beatbot, iGarden, Dreame

The Best Robotic Pool Cleaners of 2026: Beatbot, iGarden, Dreame

12 July 2026
NBA The Run Adds Campaign Mode In 2027

NBA The Run Adds Campaign Mode In 2027

12 July 2026
I bought into a brighter future, but my digital life bills monthly subscriptions

I bought into a brighter future, but my digital life bills monthly subscriptions

12 July 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Just In
  • The Best Robotic Pool Cleaners of 2026: Beatbot, iGarden, Dreame
  • NBA The Run Adds Campaign Mode In 2027
  • I bought into a brighter future, but my digital life bills monthly subscriptions
  • Here’s How Apple Is Updating Its Child Safety Features in iOS 27
  • Xbox Consoles Are Getting Another Price Increase In August
  • I spent a fortune on a Copilot+ PC, and I’ve barely ever touched Microsoft’s AI
  • Everything Announced At The 2026 Capcom Spotlight
  • Lizzy Caplan Joins The Cast Of FX’s Far Cry Anthology Series
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Best in TechnologyBest in Technology
  • News
  • Phones
  • Laptops
  • Gadgets
  • Gaming
  • AI
  • Tips
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Global
    • Press Release
Subscribe
Best in TechnologyBest in Technology
Home » EA Sports UFC 6 Review – Complacency At The Top
Gaming

EA Sports UFC 6 Review – Complacency At The Top

News RoomBy News Room12 July 20266 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
EA Sports UFC 6 Review – Complacency At The Top
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Legendary boxer Marvin Hagler once said, “It’s difficult to get up and do roadwork at five in the morning when you’re sleeping in silk sheets.” While this refers to getting rich through combat sports and therefore losing the work ethic you once had, the notion could also be applied to EA Sports and its lack of competition. The Madden franchise, with its NFL exclusivity, has long drawn the ire of fans for a perceived lack of innovation due to its monopolization of the NFL video game space, and after spending many hours with EA Sports UFC 6, I’m starting to worry the same problem might have transposed to this franchise as well.

To be clear, the gameplay in UFC 6 is the best this franchise has seen. Thanks to new ways of differentiating the fighters, either via animations, movements, tendencies, or signature ways of attacking, EA Vancouver finally cracked the code on making combatants feel distinct. And those fighters largely look incredible; though your mileage will vary based on fighter popularity, the biggest stars’ likenesses are often dead-on in UFC 6. This permeates the experience, whether you’re playing a quick one-off fight in the game’s capable online suite or diving deeper into longer-tail modes.

UFC 6 carries forward the series’ pedigree of action-packed fights inside the cage; though grappling options are always available, in my experience, wrestling-heavy affairs are rare. That’s a good thing, as grappling continues to be a sore spot, straddling the line between being too cryptic and too mindless. Instead, fights often quickly develop into high-speed chess matches and violent car crashes. Thanks to improved blocking and more variance in striking, it pays to be strategic, particularly as you manage your stamina over the course of an extended bout. And thanks to an evident focus on approachability, anyone can ease into the action with optional features like slow-motion in-fight moments, beginner control schemes, and simplified grappling. 

This entry also introduces a Flow State mechanic, which uses a charging meter and aims to emulate the feeling of a fighter being in the zone. Once you enter Flow State, activated with a push of the d-pad, the background noise fades away, and your fighter temporarily gains a performance boost. This addition effectively captures the momentum shift that can occur when everything starts clicking, but it also veers the action heavily to the arcade side of the fence.

 

However, like many UFC stars past and present, the in-Octagon performance isn’t the problem – it’s everything that happens outside of the fights. The M rating affords more blood in the cage, but it’s more often used to listen to (mostly) uncensored rap and nu metal songs on repeat in the poorly optimized menus. You still have access to all the modes of recent games; I enjoyed putting together my dream fight card, setting up a one-night tournament like the early days of the promotion, or pulling off fantasy matchups between two legends in their primes, but I’m always drawn to the longer-form experiences. 

UFC 6 touts two distinct career modes, but unfortunately, both fall flat. The standard career mode features the same loop as past games: You sign to fight a specific opponent, then manage your week-by-week bandwidth by completing a combination of sparring and promotional activities. However, this quickly becomes repetitive, as you complete the same few activities multiple times per fight with a career spread across 30-plus fights. You can simulate some of the activities you’ve already completed, but you get fewer benefits, and with all the promotional activities simply being menu items you select, it doesn’t take long for the tedium to set in. 

Even the new player-agency elements fall woefully short of expectations, giving you occasional binary choices that range from how you trash-talk to whether you want to fall for your coach’s get-rich-quick scheme. These feel inconsequential at best and outright annoying at worst; by the end of the first couple of years, I was hoping to change camps like in past games, but that is one area of player agency that’s missing. Normally, I’m glued to this mode with each new entry, but since I’ve played all previous UFC games, UFC 6’s career mode quickly gave me an unshakeable sensation of “been there, done that.”

It’s perhaps why I was so hopeful for The Legacy, a narrative-driven twist on career, where you take control of a fictional UFC prospect. This mode, with its M-rated story and promise of fights that spill outside of the Octagon, has a ton of potential, but once you get past the short, forgettable story, it’s just the standard career mode without your custom fighter. After seeing the story through to the end, you can continue playing career mode as the narrative’s protagonist, but I left The Legacy shortly after its narrative conclusion, likely never to return.

The one UFC 6 mode that impressed me is the Hall of Legends, a new interactive museum that highlights three current UFC fighters. Walking around a lovingly crafted museum themed after Max Holloway’s home of Hawaii or one that pays homage to Zhang Weili’s Chinese origin in third person delivers a cool immersive experience, giving you bite-sized documentaries of each fighter and tasking you with re-creating iconic moments from their careers in-game. It’s here that the dev team’s love of the sport really shines, but when there are only three fights to relive per fighter, and the documentary footage seems to be all repurposed from past UFC content, I was left wanting more.

 

Instead, the one area that feels completely excessive and largely unnecessary is perhaps the most baffling: The Gym. This area serves as a menu-based training system, where you navigate some of the laggiest and most unwieldy screens to assign trainers to fighters to arbitrarily unlock cosmetic items. It almost serves as a chart-your-own-path daily login bonus, with each new level for every fighter unlocking new items to equip, but it all feels so tiresome and unnecessary. In fact, the menus throughout the entire UFC 6 package are so laggy that they bring the menu-heavy experiences of The Gym and both career modes down in noticeable ways. In some cases, they’re so poorly optimized that the music even skips as the next screen loads.

UFC 6’s incremental gameplay improvements and bewildering stagnation fly in the face of the fact that it’s been three years since the last entry in the series. With annualized sports franchises, you almost expect iterative innovations year after year, but after such a long wait, I expected a bigger bump with UFC 6. The improved character models, graphics, and fighter distinctions are welcome improvements, but when almost everything else feels so familiar or inessential, I can’t help but wonder if EA Sports’ UFC franchise has experienced too much time uncontested at the top.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleThe Video Games You Should Play This Weekend – June 26, 2026
Next Article Ranking The Star Fox Series

Related Articles

NBA The Run Adds Campaign Mode In 2027
Gaming

NBA The Run Adds Campaign Mode In 2027

12 July 2026
Xbox Consoles Are Getting Another Price Increase In August
Gaming

Xbox Consoles Are Getting Another Price Increase In August

12 July 2026
Everything Announced At The 2026 Capcom Spotlight
Gaming

Everything Announced At The 2026 Capcom Spotlight

12 July 2026
Lizzy Caplan Joins The Cast Of FX’s Far Cry Anthology Series
Gaming

Lizzy Caplan Joins The Cast Of FX’s Far Cry Anthology Series

12 July 2026
ConcernedApe Explains Why He’s Shown So Little Of Haunted Chocolatier: ‘I Would Rather Serve A Fully Baked Bread’
Gaming

ConcernedApe Explains Why He’s Shown So Little Of Haunted Chocolatier: ‘I Would Rather Serve A Fully Baked Bread’

12 July 2026
Star Fox Remake, Steam Next Fest, And The Adventures Of Elliot | The Game Informer Show
Gaming

Star Fox Remake, Steam Next Fest, And The Adventures Of Elliot | The Game Informer Show

12 July 2026
Demo
Top Articles
5 laptops to buy instead of the M4 MacBook Pro

5 laptops to buy instead of the M4 MacBook Pro

17 November 2024133 Views
ChatGPT o1 vs. o1-mini vs. 4o: Which should you use?

ChatGPT o1 vs. o1-mini vs. 4o: Which should you use?

15 December 2024111 Views
Costco partners with Electric Era to bring back EV charging in the U.S.

Costco partners with Electric Era to bring back EV charging in the U.S.

28 October 2024100 Views

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
I spent a fortune on a Copilot+ PC, and I’ve barely ever touched Microsoft’s AI News

I spent a fortune on a Copilot+ PC, and I’ve barely ever touched Microsoft’s AI

News Room12 July 2026
Everything Announced At The 2026 Capcom Spotlight Gaming

Everything Announced At The 2026 Capcom Spotlight

News Room12 July 2026
Lizzy Caplan Joins The Cast Of FX’s Far Cry Anthology Series Gaming

Lizzy Caplan Joins The Cast Of FX’s Far Cry Anthology Series

News Room12 July 2026
Most Popular
The Spectacular Burnout of a Solar Panel Salesman

The Spectacular Burnout of a Solar Panel Salesman

13 January 2025137 Views
5 laptops to buy instead of the M4 MacBook Pro

5 laptops to buy instead of the M4 MacBook Pro

17 November 2024133 Views
ChatGPT o1 vs. o1-mini vs. 4o: Which should you use?

ChatGPT o1 vs. o1-mini vs. 4o: Which should you use?

15 December 2024111 Views
Our Picks
Here’s How Apple Is Updating Its Child Safety Features in iOS 27

Here’s How Apple Is Updating Its Child Safety Features in iOS 27

12 July 2026
Xbox Consoles Are Getting Another Price Increase In August

Xbox Consoles Are Getting Another Price Increase In August

12 July 2026
I spent a fortune on a Copilot+ PC, and I’ve barely ever touched Microsoft’s AI

I spent a fortune on a Copilot+ PC, and I’ve barely ever touched Microsoft’s AI

12 July 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news and updates directly to your inbox.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
© 2026 Best in Technology. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.