One day, Paul came across a newspaper flyer announcing The King of Iron Fist Tournament 4. Friends and admirers slowly disappeared, and his dojo eventually went out of business from the lack of students. Unknown to Paul, Ogre morphed into his second form - True Ogre - and the tournament continued after his departure.Īlthough Paul asserted that he was the true champion of The King of Iron Fist Tournament 3, few believed him, and even those that did eventually grew tired of his attitude. However, Paul's happy ending was short-lived. Paul went undefeated through the entire The King of Iron Fist Tournament 3 and was even victorious against Ogre. With training still a part of his daily regiment, he is still in peak condition and feels he still has what it takes to win the big one. Last spring he received an unexpected invitation to the '3rd King of the Iron Fist Tournament'. After two years of punishing street fighting, throughout the USA, Paul emerged ready for the King of Iron Fist Tournament 2 with overwhelming confidence and entered once again with an extreme desire to be the champion.Ĭoincidentally, Paul eventually found himself up against Heihachi Mishima in the tournament, and lost to him.ĭespite Paul's enviable career, he has yet to win the one tournament that would mark him as being one of the true greats. In New York, he found work in the south Bronx as a bouncer, his ego and arrogance led him into numerous confrontations with unsavoury people. Shaking his head in disbelief, Paul left the Mishima estate and returned to New York. Unfortunately, he was defeated by Kazuya in a furious battle that lasted for hours. Paul entered the King of Iron Fist Tournament and challenged a fully grown bear named Kuma and win. He met a martial artist named Kazuya Mishima and their fight ended in a draw. His jeans are now dark blue instead of grey and hair is still down.įascinated as a child by "Bear Killer Willy Williams", Paul grew up to be one of the world's renowned fighters. His civilian outfit is similiar to the one he wore in Tekken 4, but wears a black leather jacket with a flaming skull design on the back and black fingerless gloves. He would keep the outfit for the next two tournaments, but in Tekken 7, the white wraps are gone. In Tekken 5, Paul regains his red judo uniform, but has white wraps around of his wrists and his red gi is even more tattered and torn than it was before. His new civilian outfit conisited of a black T-shirt with a flaming skull design on the back, handwatch on his left hand, gray jeans, black shoes and his hair is down instead of the flat top style. In Tekken 4, Paul wears a white T-shirt with a long sleeved red gi uniform jacket thrown off and tied around his waist, red gi uniform pants with logos on them and navy blue boots with orange flame designs on them, as well as a black belt and black hand guards. He has the sleeves rolled up and a white t-shirt underneath in Tekken 3. During the first three installments, his civilian clothes conisisted of a black leather jumpsuit with a flaming skull design on the back, black fingerless gloves and boots with a flame designs on both sides of his pants.
He regains the judo uniform in Tekken 2 and Tekken 3. Since his first appearance, Paul always wears a red judo uniform with the sleeves ripped off and a yellow judo sign, black belt and black hand and foot guards. For the most part, Paul's outfit's pretty much remains the same in all the Tekken games (except Tekken 4) but with minor modifications.