Overall reception of Bob is mixed. In 2010,
GamesRadar+ writer Michael Grimm discussed a hypothetical matchup between Bob and ''Street Fighter's
Rufus for Street Fighter X Tekken'', commenting, "How two totally different companies [Namco and
Capcom] decided they both needed speedy fat asses in their games at exactly the same time is something of a mystery, though ... we feel there's room for both of them." Jeff Marchiafava of
Game Informer criticized Bob in 2012, describing him as one of the most "ridiculous"
Tekken characters: "Bob is from America. Bob is also morbidly obese. That's pretty much all the thought Namco put into Bob." Gavin Jasper at
Den of Geek listed him as the ninth best
Tekken character, and stated "it's being a big, fat dude that gives him his unending confidence and charm while not acting like a joke." Sung Wook "Beckor" Baek from InvenGlobal was very positive of the character, opining "plump figure and freestyle karate moves strangely complement one another." Beckor further states "He looks and feels perfect, probably because he just doesn't care what other people think of him," while considering it a "mistake" to think of him as a "joke character." Dale North at
Destructoid described him as "[looking] like the cross between an overweight
Ken Masters from
Street Fighter and
Dr. Eggman from
Sonic the Hedgehog," while stating that those who "always picks the cool-looking character" will never use Bob. Oliver James Clark, author of
On the Persuasive Power of Videogame avatars on Health-related behaviours, notes "Bob is an example of how larger bodied individuals can be portrayed positively in the media, but there are also various stigmatising elements about him. For instance, all of his techniques are named after chocolates, or other allusions to digestion and eating." In
Fighting/Fat: Fighting Game Characters and the Emptiness of Video Game Fatness, writer Todd Harper compared him to Rufus from
Street Fighter and Cheng Sinzan from
Fatal Fury, stating that Bob "has a slightly more realistically proportioned version of the top-heavy, spherical torso." In the article
Fat Avatars in Games and Popular Media by Alex Layne of NYM Gamer, she describes Bob as "a nice violation of what the stereotype of the overweight body can do," and questioned if he can truly be "overweight," due to him "genetically [engineering] himself to be this way." In the study
A sort of halfway-house, A hero version of me: Experiences of Playing with an athleticised self-similar avatar, writers by Oliver Clark, Sarah Grogan, and Jenny Cole state "Bob is an example of how larger bodied individuals can be portrayed positively in the media, but there are also various stigmatising elements about him," and mentions how his moveset names reference food. In a
GameSpy hands on article for
Tekken 6, authors Brian Altano and Gerald Villoria were critical of his stereotyped portrayal, questioning "What is it about these Japanese fighting games and how their fat guys are always American?" However, they were more positive towards his moveset. ==References==