Because then we'd also have to squeeze in that you can throw board-smashing tantrums to boost your score multiplier, add homemade goals and challenges to existing game levels, and even rewire the game's animations to build your own tricks.Īs we said, Tony Hawk's Underground 2 Remix is massive PSP owners are getting a near spot-on PSP-translation of a brilliant console series that lifts everything good about those TV-based outings. Did we mention the 'special' mode that enables you to access new tricks as you focus your concentration? Or that you can design your own graffiti tags? Or how you can import your own face into THUG2's create-a-skater mode? Hardly. One disappointment: there's no online multiplayer mode.Īnd that's only half the story. Up to four PSP owners can compete using the handheld's wireless functionality, at everything from straightforward score and trick competitions, to Slap! (a sort of combat mode), Graffiti (where performing a trick on an object marks it with your colours), King of the Hill (essentially a game of 'It') and Capture the Flag. The game's 10-odd multiplayer modes do offer alternatives, however. In practice, Classic mode isn't wildly different in gameplay terms from the Story one. The alternative Classic mode (which harkens back to the original Tony Hawk console games) is a simpler affair: you've two minutes to skate about collecting letters to complete key words, pull off tricks in particular locations, or perform other area-specific goals (some without your skateboard).
You begin as a young no-one, unlocking pro skater characters and earning renown and better stats as you progress. The Story mode boasts the ludicrous plotline and outrageous cut-scenes you'd expect from a skating title, but it romps along successfully enough. (You'll never again walk to the Post Office without seeing a dozen potential tricks). Each city stage comes with goals you need to complete you're then pretty much left to explore the rich THUG2 world, complete with cars, pedestrians, and street furniture, which transform into ramps, rails, and other props for your skate-based antics. At the centre is the Story-based mode, where Tony Hawk and his pro skater mate Bam Margera (of MTV's Jackass fame) call on you to tour the world, upsetting polite society with noisy wheel-based civil disobedience. THUG2 develops this basic gameplay into a huge game. But happily, you feel almost immediately like you're making progress, just as in real-life your first ollie (a little jump achieved by bouncing the board's tail off the floor) makes up for those endless, ahem, arse-plants. Few PSP games make such demands on a player's thumb dexterity you're endlessly jumping from ramps, grinding your board along rails, benches and walls, and performing aerial tricks on the half-pipe, tweaking to achieve variations with myriad combinations of D-pad and symbol button presses. THUG2 has a poised and forgiving control system, perfected over years on the home consoles and it's been well translated here, but that doesn't mean it's easy. Whether you've only ever skirted past the local (rather sweet) skateboard gang or you're its founding member, you start in the same place - falling off. Happily, you don't need to be a skater for life to begin your THUG2 career. And getting from A to B in THUG2 is among the best uses we've found yet for Sony's machine. Only that I'm often doing it right, and flowing from trick to trick where I used to trundle from crash to bang to wallop.
After playing all the THUG2 a grown man can squeeze into a working day (hurrah for portable gaming), I'm still not always sure what specifically it is that I'm doing. Feeble nosegrind, anyone?īefore any skater comments that a 'feeble nosegrind' is nonsense, like saying a 'goldfish fish' perhaps - you might be right.
Steering your board recklessly about Barcelona or through a Las Vegas casino demands skill, but describing what you just did even more. Boneless stalefish faceplant tailslide: the lingo takes some getting used to in Tony Hawk's Underground 2 Remix ( THUG2).