Why Boyka Didn’t Become The “Most Complete Fighter” Until Undisputed 3

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Why Boyka Didn't Become The "Most Complete Fighter" Until Undisputed 3
Yuri Boyka is the self- declared “Most Complete Fighter in the World” in the MMA-packed Undisputed series, but he didn’t truly earn the title until his tournament victory in  Undisputed III: Redemption. Boyka was first seen in  Undisputed II Last Man Standing, and after the minimal impact made by the first Undisputed, the series was off to the races in a whole new way, while establishing Scott Adkins as a rising action star. Boyka would return as the protagonist of Undisputed 3 and Boyka: Undisputed, and while he was a changed man, his defeat in Undisputed 2 was essential to his character arc. When viewers are introduced to Boyka in Undisputed 2, the Russian prison MMA fighter is a seemingly unstoppable force in the ring. This feeds into Boyka’s pride, convincing him that he’s already the undefeatable fighting machine that he believes God himself put him on Earth to become.
Unfortunately, his experience with Undisputed 2’s protagonist George “Iceman” Chambers (Michael Jai White) showed that Boyka still had more to learn. While Boyka was undeniably a highly formidable fighter from his introduction in Undisputed 2, there might be an uncomfortable secret to his undefeated streak to that point. In his first match with Chambers, with betting running high, a couple of other prisoners place a sedative in Chambers’ water, weakening him and leading to his defeat. This was also done without Boyka’s knowledge, and he was furious upon learning the truth, killing both inmates who effectively rigged the fight in his favor and setting up a rematch with Chambers. Boyka’s pride still gets the best of him, with Chambers familiarizing himself with MMA just enough to edge out a victory in their rematch, and leaving Adkins’ most well-known character with a shattered knee.
Undisputed III
This could also show that Boyka’s overconfidence might have been fed by betting crime bosses and his fellow prisoners. If a sedative was slipped to Chambers in their first fight without Boyka’s knowledge, one has to wonder how many times that’s happened before, with Boyka winning every fight and walking out of the ring simply thinking he won by his own skill. For Undisputed 3, Boyka has to build himself back up for a new MMA tournament, and the bad knee Chambers left him with doesn’t make it easy. Boyka’s also battling greater obstacles than ever, facing the sinister Dolor (Marko Zaror), who is gladly accepting every unfair advantage handed to him by the prison officials to win the tournament, keeping him from being redeemed in Boyka: Undisputed. For Boyka, entering and winning the tournament is about far more than the possibility of winning his freedom, but about

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validating his belief that he’s been chosen to become the world’s best fighter. As Boyka puts it, “God has given me a gift, only one. I am the Most Complete Fighter in the World. My whole life I’ve trained, for what? I must prove I am worthy of something.” For Boyka, his loss to Chambers in their rematch painfully highlights the false pretenses under which he was handed a victory in their first fight. He cannot lay a true claim to being The Most Complete Fighter in the World without a pure and honest victory in the tournament after recovering from his damaged knee. Fortunately, through his victory over Dolor in Scott Adkins’ best Undisputed showdown — and his defeat of the corrupt wardens and gamblers who stacked the decks against him — Boyka fulfills his self-imposed mission to, once and for all, earn the title of The Most Complete Fighter in the World in Undisputed 3.

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