Here Comes the Pain is pure, uncut fun . You can pick it up in five minutes, suplex your friend through a table from the top of a Hell in a Cell, and laugh until your sides hurt. It is fast, loose, and gloriously glitchy. It’s a game where Rey Mysterio could body-slam The Big Show without irony, and nobody complained because it was awesome .
The cutscenes are the stuff of legend: Bikini contests that turn into brawls, backstage attacks in the parking lot (where you could throw people off a ), and storyline twists that made absolutely no logical sense but were incredibly fun. It also featured branching paths for Championship matches, Royal Rumble drama, and even the ability to challenge for a title on a random episode of Velocity . Smackdown - Here Comes The Pain-
You have icons like You have the golden age of the SmackDown Six: Eddie Guerrero, Chris Benoit, Kurt Angle, Edge, Rey Mysterio, and Chavo Guerrero. And you have the monstrous new guard: Brock Lesnar (the cover star), John Cena (in his "Doctor of Thuganomics" rookie year), Batista, and Randy Orton. Here Comes the Pain is pure, uncut fun
Still the G.O.A.T. If Yuke’s ever remastered it with online play, the world would stop turning. It’s a game where Rey Mysterio could body-slam
The commentary is a train wreck. Tazz and Michael Cole (for SmackDown) and Jerry Lawler (for Raw) repeat the same 15 phrases ad nauseam. ("He’s putting those educated feet to good use!"). It’s objectively bad, but like a cult movie, it’s beloved for its absurd repetition. Modern WWE 2K games are technical marvels with photorealistic graphics and complex simulation mechanics. Yet, they often feel sterile. Matches are slow, reversals are scripted, and the fun often gets lost in the menu clutter.