I was extremely late to the party with Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater, never having played any of them until 2016 or so. Having long missed the zeitgeist, I figured it would be one of those instances where the games were massive in their time but are simplistic or clunky to play now. But man, was I wrong.

These are mechanically deep games with a crazy high skill ceiling, rewarding skillful execution and mastery of the controls. They have much more in common with combo-oriented action games like Bayonetta or Devil May Cry than anything in the “Sports” category they’re often lumped into (and as a fan of those action games, I felt right at home). THPS 3 and 4 are just sublime to control.

Admittedly, the first two entries show their age a bit due to lacking the mechanics that flesh out the gameplay in 3/4, but they’re still solid. The 1+2 remaster is outstanding by the way, bringing in all those later mechanics for the full THPS experience. It’s a near-perfect example of a remaster done right.

  • AtomicPurple@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Symphony of the Night. I played it for the first time a few years ago, and it holds up really well next to modern metroidvanias, better than Super Metroid IMO.

  • Elkenders
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    1 year ago

    Chrono Trigger still feels fresh. Agreed on THPS, I’m playing the Dreamcast version of 2 currently. FF9 still holds up for me. Lots of puzzle games. Metal Gear Solid 1 (well, the PS1 game) is still a worthy game. I’m mid play through on Super Mario World and it’s really imaginative, even today. I bet games like Bishi Bashi Special hold up but I haven’t tried it for a long time.