![]() While the tutorial was very long- and covered so much material my head was spinning trying to remember what they taught me at the beginning- it was also very helpful and allowed me to become familiar with the game before having to start doing tricks and stunts, making it very user friendly. The controls are pretty basic and an in-depth tutorial at the beginning of the game covers just about everything you need to know. Instead of having to remember a button combination if you wanted to do an ollie you would flick the front of the remote up, sparing you from tons of memorization. The controls are probably the most interesting part of the game since the use of the Wii Remote removed the need for complicated button combos. At times the objectives could be very unclear, but usually you are shown what is expected of you first so that you just have to follow the first skater’s lead to complete the objective, balancing it out. The game offered plenty of objectives and playtime to keep one satisfied for many hours. Typically not every objective in a level needs to be completed to progress, which lowered frustrations on objectives that were rather tricky since you could just move on and come back later. Luckily, each objective has two difficulties- the basic ‘owned it’ difficulty which is needed to complete the objective and the ‘killed it’ difficulty, which takes the objective to another level, providing a bit of a challenge to those who master the basic objectives. Each area holds a list of objectives, and after completing a certain amount of those objectives you can move onto a new area. Your skateboarding does not go unnoticed- a guy looking for something newsworthy among the destruction recruits you, giving you stunts to perform as he films so that you can earn invites and get picked up by a sponsor as you become a professional skateboarder. It gets very involving once you get it down.The plot begins with your arrival in a town that has been destroyed by some unknown force, your objective being to skate this now abandoned and somewhat broken town. Worth a play but PLEASE, play more than an hour. Overall, The game is fun and my Wii will be seeing alot of it but the learning curve + the two horrible introlevels can be frustrating. The Replay feature (slow-motion, rewind etc.) and the ability to save replays adds alot to this game. Even though this games multi-player modes are not incredible, I have had many great hours playing this game with a friend in career mode. Once you have gotten past the controls, which work well once learned, the game is Good. I would suggest playing this game in freeskate for awhile to get past that. (It's just not a perfect 8) This game is great. Even though this games multi-player modes are not incredible, If I could give this a 7.9 I would. ![]() With a selection of over 2000 tricks you can't get this wrong. Thankfully, the margin of error is wide and the recognition is usually good. You have dozens of tricks to experiment with, and most of them are easy to pull **** Drawing out your tricks is intuitive, but it does take a bit of getting used to before you can successfully pull off a long line of combos. An upward slash will give you an ollie, while a diagonal slash will produce a kickflip, and so on. ![]() Using the bottom screen, you quickly draw your tricks on a picture of a skateboard. The stylus controls are remarkably precise. You have dozens of tricks to experiment with, and most of them are easy to pull **** Drawing out your tricks is Good game, a contender for best game of 2018. Good game, a contender for best game of 2018. ![]()
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