Developer: Neversoft Ent.
Publisher: Activision
Genre: Sports
Sub-Genre: Skateboarding
Release Date: Nov 17th, 2006
Additonal Info:
Developer: EA Canada
Publisher: Electronic Arts
Genre: Sports
Sub-Genre: N/A
Release Date: Sep 24th, 2007
Additonal Info: Also available on Xbox 360.
Developer: Neversoft
Publisher: Activision
Genre: Sports
Sub-Genre: Skateboarding
Release Date: Oct 23rd, 2002
Additonal Info:
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User rating: 3.3
(based on 6 votes)
The earlier titles in the Tony Hawk series were often cited for their innovation. The original Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater brought the sport of skateboarding into the videogame industry. Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 2, often considered the best in the series, revolutionized the gameplay formula by adding manuals into the mix. Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 3 added an online mode, THPS4 modernized the classic career mode found in the earlier titles, and Tony Hawk’s Underground further perfected the formula by again revamping the career mode in addition to another number of solid features.
Suddenly, it seems the ideas dried up. Underground 2 was a bore, American Wasteland was garbage, and Project 8 -- while superior to the previous two -- only offered a single unique gameplay mechanic that set it apart from its predecessors. Now, with a new challenger in the form of EA’s groundbreaking title ‘skate,’ can Tony Hawk’s Proving Ground break the mold and offer an appealing skateboarding experience?
There’s one thing for sure – Proving Ground is a Tony Hawk game, not a skate replica. Neversoft’s Tony Hawk series, including Proving Ground, has always been an arcade-like representation of the sport of skateboarding. You’ll be finding yourself jumping massive gaps with little effort, pulling off long and unrealistic lines, and plainly performing the impossible. If you prefer this to skate’s realistic approach, more power to you, but it must be noted that Proving Ground is noticeably less immersive than skate partially due to this design choice.
If you’ve played a Hawk title in the past, you’ll immediately recognize the tight control scheme, gameplay, and overall flow of the game - with one general exception. This lays in the expanded ‘Nail the Trick’ feature, which was first introduced in Project 8. You’re now able to both ‘Nail the Grab’ and ‘Nail the Manual’ in addition to performing ‘Nail the Trick’ manoeuvres. The essence of these mechanics lies in total control. Activate any of them to flip, grab, and manual your board in any way possible using the natural control scheme of the left and right analog sticks. You’re even able to link them together to create the ultimate line. It really is a blast once you truly get the hang of the system.

Besides nailing our sweet custom tricks, the rest of Proving Ground generally feels outdated and outdone. While we used to ignore the unrealistic physics and animation of the Tony Hawk series, after seeing both superbly represented in rival title skate, it’s hard to cast a blind eye upon such issues. Examples include your skater not crouching before an ollie, or hitting a ledge and grinding from a highly unrealistic angle. These concerns aren’t helped by the fact that everything in the game simply looks drab. The unremarkable environments plus the barely decent character models equal a game not up to today’s standards – it falls well under the visual bar that skate set for the genre.
Oh, we can’t fail to mention that development studio Neversoft seems to think that pedestrians are ghosts -- we’ve often witnessed the local population passing directly through such objects as an arcade machine on a sidewalk without a second thought. It is small details such as this one (also, cars look like boxes) that damages the immersion factor of Proving Ground, taking you off the skateboard and placing you directly in your living room.
There are three cities in Proving Ground: Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington, D.C. Each one is connected by bridges and tunnels to create one open (if uninspired) world. Scattered across the cities are various story paths. The three different categories -- Career, Hardcore, and Rigger -- affect the type of skater you become. Perform career goals to gain and expand Nail the Trick, Grab, and Manual abilities. Rigger challenges will have you modifying the environment, creating completely new areas by adding of changing or adding objects, and climbing to previously inaccessible areas.
Hardcore skaters will be graced with the abilities to aggro kick (push faster), bowl carve, and skate check those who are in your way. It’s no fun that you’ll inevitably be restricted from several of the more entertaining abilities until later in the game. We preferred skate’s 'start with everything and let the user learn ... (continued on next page)

Tony Hawk's Proving Gound Bob Burnquist
Tony Hawk's Proving Gound Bob Burnquist HD
Tony Hawk's Proving Ground Rodney Mullen
Tony Hawk's Proving Ground Rodney Mullen HD
PSU should review skate much more better then Tony Hawk this is coming from a user that has played all the Tony Hawk's games but its just getting boring now its all the time the same want something new try skate :)
i played the demo and i wasnt impressed! i have always been a tony hawk fan but theyve lost it and ive tryed the skate demo i love it gonna get skate game soon
very accurate rating