
If you’re an SSX veteran who has been champing at the bit to get another dose of Run DMC infused snowboarding or a hardcore gamer who is up for a challenge, you’ll find a lot to love in SSX. The gameplay is fun, fresh, exciting and bloody tough. Newcomers, however, will find the switches in difficulty brutal and unforgiving. It doesn’t cater all that well to the casual enthusiast and will surely alienate those without fond franchise memories to sustain them.

The SSX series is one of the most iconic sports franchises in gaming history, but which one of the games is the best?
All of them are great put ssx 3 was my favorite. We definitely need another ssx asap

Chris writes:
"Arcade sports games are among the most compelling you can play, but many of the best have fallen by the wayside. Here's a bunch that should make a comeback."
Dear nintendo,
Please give me mario strikers again. I will do anything for it.
Love,
Me

Cultured Vultures: This list of what we'd love to see from EA at E3 2018 is a bit more "hopeful" than most, but stick with it.
Dead slace please.. Then again no i don't want a GAAS deadspace... Please sell thsi ip to sonyand we'll see wonders!!!
" It doesn’t cater all that well to the casual enthusiast "
They say that like it's a bad thing. God I hate this generation.
This is a GREAT game. I was loving it already, going through the World Tour all day, which is what the devs refer to as an extended tutorial. I got gold medals on most of that, then decided to check out Explore mode. I noticed there were more runs and more locations than in World Tour, and the medal times were much harder to attain even with all my unlocked characters and gear. I had fun placing Geo Tags in weird places in between attempts at those tougher medal times. Then I got into a Global Event, a long nighttime run featuring sections of the Great Wall of China. Holy crap was that awesome. You can see players all around you doing their own thing as you try to concentrate on your own business. I'm hooked. I know this isn't a bad score but I say it's too low.
It's not a bad thing at all, but not everyone on the planet likes games with an expectation that you've played the entire franchise. The same could be said about the new Twisted Metal, which I'd never played in any incarnation and wasn't the easiest to pick up and play.
I didn't take points off it, but it does need to be mentioned.
Also, "this generation"? I've been gaming since the 1980s when I popped my cherry on an Atari-2600...