Smackdown Vs Raw 2008 Pc [patched]: Wwe
Without fanfare or a massive press release, THQ and Yuke’s Media Creations announced that WWE SmackDown vs. Raw 2008 —already a hit on consoles—would be coming to PC. But this wasn't a simple copy-paste job. It was a fascinating, and somewhat flawed, experiment. The PC version launched with the same core roster as its console cousins, capturing the WWE landscape of late 2007. You could play as John Cena in his "Hustle, Loyalty, Respect" prime, the cerebral legend Triple H, the high-flying Rey Mysterio, or the monstrous Great Khali. The "ECW Extreme Rules" banner was still flying high, adding stars like CM Punk (in his early straight-edge savior days) and the violent Sabu to the mix.
The biggest omission was . While the console versions had a functional (if laggy) online mode, the PC release shipped with no internet play whatsoever. It was a baffling decision, especially given that LAN gaming was a PC staple. The reason? THQ cited "technical challenges and piracy concerns," a statement that frustrated the community. The Story Mode: WWE 24/7 The heart of the game was WWE 24/7 Mode , a career mode that broke new ground. Instead of a linear story, you were a rookie on the ECW brand (then WWE's "extreme" third brand). Your goal was to climb the ranks, switch brands, and chase championships. However, the mode’s hook was interpersonal rivalries . Before each match, you chose a "Rivalry Action"—attack your opponent backstage, taunt them in a promo, or sabotage their match. These actions directly affected match difficulty and unlockable cutscenes. wwe smackdown vs raw 2008 pc
But this power came with peculiarities. The keyboard controls were famously abysmal—a sprawling mess of keys for grapples, strikes, limb targeting, and the new . On consoles, you mashed face buttons to fight out of submissions or pinfalls. On PC, you frantically hammered the 'K' and 'L' keys, a setup that felt more like data entry than a wrestling match. Most serious players immediately plugged in a USB controller. Without fanfare or a massive press release, THQ
WWE SmackDown vs. Raw 2008 for PC wasn't the main event. It was the plucky mid-carder who got a surprise title shot. It didn't win the championship, but it put on a memorable match, and it kept the door open for everyone who came after. It was a fascinating, and somewhat flawed, experiment
Ultimately, SvR 2008 on PC is remembered as the bridge. It was flawed, incomplete, and frustrating in its own unique ways. Yet, it broke the barricade. After this release, THQ would bring WWE SmackDown vs. Raw 2009 to PC, then 2010 , and 2011 . The series would eventually evolve into the WWE 2K franchise, which today enjoys full, simultaneous PC releases.
In the storied history of wrestling video games, 2007 was a year of transition. The acclaimed SmackDown vs. Raw series had become a console powerhouse on the PlayStation 2, PSP, and the emerging Xbox 360. But for the legions of PC gamers who loved sports entertainment, the ring had gone cold. The last WWE game to officially land on a home computer was Raw 2 for Windows in 2003, a port so obscure it had become legend. Then, in the spring of 2008, something unexpected happened.
The PC version ran this mode flawlessly, though it lacked the PS3's "Create-a-Finisher" feature (added later via a patch for consoles). You could still create a wrestler in the robust mode, but you couldn't design your own devastating piledriver or 630° splash. Legacy and Final Bell WWE SmackDown vs. Raw 2008 on PC was a commercial gamble. It sold modestly—a niche product for a niche audience of wrestling PC gamers. Critics gave it mixed reviews. IGN called it "a solid console port stripped of its best online feature," while PC Gamer admired its visuals but panned the "carpal-tunnel inducing struggle system."