Native boxing content. Hype edits, walkouts, knockouts and fighter storylines, placed across the pages real fight fans already follow. Built for fight-week reach a promoter cannot manufacture in-house.
We sit between your event and the creator network that actually moves boxing culture. From selection to rollout, every campaign is built to feel native, not promotional.
We match the moment to the right boxing creators and content lanes. A curated subset of the network per campaign, based on fighter, storyline and audience fit.
Hype edits, walkout energy, fighter storylines, KO highlights, press-conference moments and recaps. Each lane mapped to where the card lands strongest.
We manage creator briefing, timing, posting windows, performance tracking and recap. One point of contact across the network, one view across every placement.
Boxing content already runs on high-energy edits. We place your fighters and moments where the audience is already watching.
When a card lands inside a boxing creator's edit, it does not get scrolled past. It gets associated with a fighter's aura, a walkout, a knockout, a press-conference moment. That association is what drives ticket and PPV intent back to the event, through the fans you have not converted yet, inside content they actually watch.
28 manually vetted creators across the most engaged corners of combat-sports content, with a dedicated boxing tier leading the rollout.
The boxing tier is anchored by the founder page boxing.arc (140K, 19M+ likes, multiple edits past 9M views) and supported by 100K-300K fight-edit pages. The wider network also spans MMA and UFC. Full creator manifest shared at contract stage to protect roster integrity.
A focused snapshot of what the network has delivered inside boxing content. Real posts, real algorithmic reach, no paid amplification on top.
Anthony Joshua vs Jake Paul edits across @boxing.arc, @fightmaniatv and @boxingdynamic, network boxing pages.
Canelo Alvarez vs Edgar Berlanga across the network's flagship boxing pages (@viralboxingg, @linton.fx). Edits that became some of the biggest boxing content on the platform.
Jake Paul vs Gervonta "Tank" Davis edits across @viralboxingg and @boxing.arc, network boxing pages.
Naoya Inoue vs Junto Nakatani edits on the founder page boxing.arc, placed inside the biggest fight in the pound-for-pound conversation. Live edits below.
More edits from this campaign being added.
Ryan vs Barrios edit on @linton.fx, one of the network's boxing pages.
Aggregate reach profile across recent network posts, delivered through algorithmic discovery rather than an existing fanbase.
Young, male, combat-coded, and found through the For You algorithm, not an existing following. That is ticket and PPV discovery, not preaching to converts.
The event is the spark. The viral window is the 10 days around it. Three phases, different content in each.
Hype and walkout edits, fighter storylines, undercard narrative for the names being built. The card starts moving inside fight culture before the first bell.
Real-time moments, walkouts and in-ring tension across the network while the audience is most engaged.
Highest leverage. Knockout and winner edits, coldest-moment clips and recaps in the first 48 hours, then mid and smaller pages extend the wave across the week.