![]() Playing as a variety of skaters with their own skill sets seemed like quite the adventure to me. I primarily enjoyed the idea of a skateboarding simulator in which you could actually do tricks, considering my own real-world experience with that sort of stuff had been beyond woeful. With the likes of Anthrax, Sublime, Rage Against The Machine and Goldfinger already on my playlist - which for me, at the time, existed on audio cassette - the soundtrack didn’t really blow me away the way it did so many others. It was back in 2000 when I was just coming to terms with the original PlayStation’s DualShock controller that I first ran into THPS and its follow-up THPS 2. Before we break this possibly backhanded ( you’ll have to stick around to find out for sure) compliment down, it behoves me to elaborate on my opening line. ![]() And the most succinct way to sum up this package would be that for better or worse, it remains a solid, no-frills, arcadey skateboarding game. ![]() Now that we’ve got that out of the way, we’re almost ready to acid drop right into the half-pipe of my thoughts on Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 1 + 2 on the PlayStation 5. ![]() I didn’t care very much for Tony Hawk's Pro Skater ( THPS) or its follow-up Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2 back when I first played them around two decades ago. ![]()
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