In 1999, Tony Hawkâs Pro Skater showed millions of people the world over that their fingers could talk.
Thereâs a language that comes built into certain video games. Buttons become verbs, launching virtual figures into new landscapes. Combinations of inputs string together whole sentences that make you fluent in physics, aesthetics and sometimes even ideas. And the whole while, youâre learning how the subjects and the objects of gameplay grammar inter-relate, what they do to each other and what you can do to them.
All of this happens because youâre having fun. And Tony Hawk HD is an ungodly amount of fun. Itâs also a lumbering Frankenstein of a game, sewn together from old parts and forced to shamble out into the light.
WHY: Rough edges abound in this remaster, but itâs still incredibly fun to play.
Tony Hawk Pro Skater HD
Developer: Robomodo
Platforms: Xbox 360 (version played)
Released: July 18th
Type of game: Third-person extreme sports skatebording.
What I played: Unlocked five of the seven levels in about eight hours. Sampled various modes for about two hours and tried multiplayer (mostly unsuccessfully) for about an hour.
Two Things I Loved
The sense of discovery that comes with finding new trick lines and opportunities kept me playing levels over and over.
The levels you played a decade ago feel more like they have their own identities now.
Two Things I Hated
The jitteriness of the experience will make you wish that THPS HD was a full remodeling of the source games.
Trying to play an online match that went smoothly felt like an exercise in futility.
Made-to-Order Back-of-Box Quotes
âTony Hawk Pro Skater HD makes me feel better about getting rid of my original PS1.â -Evan Narcisse, Kotaku.com
âI can too get a Sick score on the Hangar level. Itâll just take hours and hours.â -Evan Narcisse, Kotaku.com
Tony Hawkâs Pro Skater HD reminds you that the legendary skateboarderâs first video game efforts were the kind of experiences that ate up whole chunks of your time. Hours will go by as you grind the rails in the Mall level or collect the S-K-A-T-E letters on Venice Beach.
The appeal here is that the gameplay consists almost entirely of reflex responses that, when knitted together correctly, reveal the expanse of the experience to you. Get enough speed to power a mighty leap and suddenly youâre on top of a ledge you barely could see before. Tie a flip trick, rail grind and lip trick together with manuals and suddenly your score balloons. Modes that werenât in the original releases, like Big Head Survivalâwhere you need to keep pulling off tricks to prevent your head from explodingâadd some replayability but feel gimmicky compared to the purity of the core game.
Yet, when you compare whatâs on offer in HD with the original versions of THPS 1 & 2, this weekâs release feels slight. Pulling only seven levels from the first two THPS games comes across stingy and swapping out tunes from those titlesâ beloved soundtracks for a bunch of new songs adds insult to injury. Part of whatâs being offered up with this remaster is access to your nostalgia, so it stings when fondly remembered elements or levels donât show up.
The online multiplayer experience so far with Tony Hawk HD hasnât been a smooth ride, either. Matches have been hard to find and, even when I hosted sessions, glitches hobbled their stability. Other players would spawn in mid-air and drop onto my head, making me bail and ruining combos. And then when some matches ended, I was stuck for nearly a full minute before I could click into a menu.
THPS HD still succeeds in delivering a sensation that games specialize in: letting you feel creative in a hyper-fast, amazingly intricate way. Putting together an incredible thread of tricks and nailing the landing that will make them count continues to be a emotional high like little else. Tony Hawk Pro Skater HD isnât a best-in-class remaster like Halo: Combat Evolved Anniversary. The areas where the game couldâve used more polish practically scream out at you. Nevertheless, thereâs no denying how much fun there is to be had in playing THPS HD. Iâve stayed up very late for the last few nights with it, denying myself precious sleep not because I had to but because I wanted to. None of the flaws can stop me from recommending it. Tony Hawk Pro Skater HD may be a Frankenstein but itâs one with a very good skeleton.
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