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Mayweather v. Pacquiao battle it out on NES classic videogame 'Punch Out'

Video shows no love for "Money" Mayweather in his victory over "Pac-Man"

By Scott Smith
Referee Kenny Bayless separates Floyd Mayweather Jr., right, and Manny Paciquiao during their welterweight unification bout at MGM Grand Garden Arena Saturday, May 2, 2015, in Las Vegas, Nevada. Mayweather won with an unanimous decision after the 12 round fight. Photo by David Becker/UPI
1 of 4 | Referee Kenny Bayless separates Floyd Mayweather Jr., right, and Manny Paciquiao during their welterweight unification bout at MGM Grand Garden Arena Saturday, May 2, 2015, in Las Vegas, Nevada. Mayweather won with an unanimous decision after the 12 round fight. Photo by David Becker/UPI | License Photo

LAS VEGAS, May 4 (UPI) -- A viral video re-envisions Saturday's lackluster "fight of the century" boxing match between Floyd "Money" Mayweather and Manny "Pac-Man" Pacquiao in the classic NES videogame "Mike Tyson Punch Out."

The parody by Noober Goobers Gaming starts with a dig at Mayweather's refusal to fight Pacquiao for years.

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"Maybe next year you will agree to my terms," Mayweather's 8-bit videogame character says initially, before his terms are accepted and the fight begins.

The parody shows every punch from fighter "Little Pac" being blocked, interrupted by frequent "hugs" from Mayweather, with just one punch of Mayweather's landing at the end of Round 12. Mayweather won the fight in a judges' decision.

"There's no blueprint on how to beat my hugs!" Mayweather's character says between rounds, in response to Little Pac complaining "He keeps hugging me!"

Boxing fans have criticized delays in making the matchup happen, coming after both boxers' prime years; Mayweather is 38, Pacquiao is 36. They've also criticized a distinctly unlovable Mayweather, who was booed before and after Saturday's event even though he was fighting a foreigner in his own hometown.

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A video posted by Floyd Mayweather (@floydmayweather) on

The fight's purse -- most of it from home pay-per-view at $90 per -- was valued at at least $300 million. Mayweather showed off a $100 million check to the press on Sunday. Pacquiao's take was smaller, but he still walked away with a lot of money.

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