2011: Wwe Smackdown Vs Raw
And then it broke your heart—and your spine—with a steel chair.
Want to invent a move called "The Spinal Paranoia" that starts as a powerbomb, transitions into a backbreaker, and ends with an armbar? You could do that. You could animate every single frame. The result was often either a masterpiece of sadistic creativity or a broken animation where a wrestler spun 900 degrees before gently falling over. It was brilliant, broken, and beautiful. WWE SmackDown vs. Raw 2011 is not the "best" wrestling game ever made. The online servers were laggy wastelands. The commentary (Michael Cole and Jerry Lawler) was recycled and robotic. And the graphics, with their shiny, plastic skin textures, have aged like milk. WWE SmackDown vs Raw 2011
A glorious, glitchy, storytelling masterpiece that proved failure is the most interesting win condition of all. And then it broke your heart—and your spine—with
For the first time in the series’ history, weapons weren't just static props. You could lean ladders against the ropes. You could stack chairs. You could throw a trash can into your opponent’s face as they were climbing the turnbuckle. Most importantly, the finally worked. The physics engine allowed for actual tosses over the top rope without glitching through the apron. Throwing Kane out of the ring felt weighty, desperate, and real. You could animate every single frame
And not just lose a match—but lose the entire storyline? Before 2011, career modes in wrestling games were linear power fantasies. You started at the bottom, won every match, got the title, and rolled credits. SvR 2011 ’s Road to WrestleMania (RTWM) mode blew that formula up.
Final Score then: 8.5/10 Final Score now: 10/10 for sheer audacity