Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 4 Review

Anyone with even a remote interest in either the genre or the real-life sport should get this game, provided he or she is willing to invest in a quality gamepad.

Though the Tony Hawk series has been appearing on the PC since Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2 was released in 2000, the popular console series hasn't found the PC audience quite as accepting, even after last year's Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 3 was released with additional online multiplayer capabilities that weren't found on the PlayStation 2. Perhaps this lack of acceptance has a lot to do with why Activision isn't handling the publishing duties on Pro Skater 4. Instead, the publishing has been left to Aspyr Media, a company better known for its Mac versions of popular PC games. It appears that the smaller publisher doesn't have quite as wide a distribution chain as Activision does, making this latest installment in the series a little more difficult to find than you'd expect with such a well-known series of games. The PC port may be on par with previous PC installments, adding higher resolution options while maintaining the gameplay that made the series great, but the narrow distribution and somewhat clunky external player-matching program make for a great game that's difficult to play online.

Tony Hawk 4 is another excellent installment in Activision's flagship series.
Tony Hawk 4 is another excellent installment in Activision's flagship series.

Tony Hawk 4 does away with the two-minute time limit so commonly associated with the genre. While this takes away the exciting challenge of trying to accomplish all of a level's objectives in one run, the game's larger levels would make such an effort impossible anyway. Instead, goals in Tony Hawk 4 are spread throughout the level in the form of various bystanders with big arrows floating above their heads. Skating up to them and hitting the grab-trick button will make them talk and will start the goal, which in turn starts a timer. Many of the goals are the same sort that the series has featured all along. You'll still have to reach certain score plateaus by pulling off long strings of tricks, you'll still have to collect or break various goal-specific items, and you'll still collect the letters that spell "skate." New types of objectives include some combo-based goals that ask you to beat a specific score with one combo. You'll also have to collect letters that spell the word "combo"--without landing your combo until the word is complete. The size of each area lets the game pack a lot more goals into each of the game's nine levels, and some goals are only available once other objectives have been competed. Completing a goal also earns you upgrades for your skater, such as cash, new slots for special tricks, or stat points.

All this goal completing leads up to unlocking the pro challenges, which become available when you've completed 90 of the game's 190 total goals. Goals can be completed with any of the game's skaters, so you won't have to play through the game multiple times to see all there is to see. But the pro challenges ensure that you'll still play the game with every skater. These challenges are larger in scope than your average goal, and many of them attempt to tie into a skater's actual career. For example, Tony Hawk's pro challenge has you gapping from one rooftop ramp to another, doing specific tricks as you go. Bam Margera's pro challenge takes after his popular CKY series of videos, putting the Jackass star in a shopping cart and challenging you to race, hurdle, and slalom your way from the top of Alcatraz down to the bottom. Bob Burnquist, who is one of the two Tony Hawk 4 pro skaters not featured in last year's game, has a pro challenge that is styled after his event-winning performance at the Op King of Skate competition, which aired on pay per view last year. In that competition, Bob opened up the top section of a full loop and rode all the way around it. In the game, you'll take this one step further, doing specific tricks while gapping the ever-widening break in the loop. The pro challenges are unique, more difficult than your average goal, and quite a lot of fun. Completing a pro challenge unlocks that skater's ending video and also opens up a new collection of more-difficult goals in every level.

A newly redone career mode and additional online options are some of the highlights.
A newly redone career mode and additional online options are some of the highlights.

Many of the level goals in Tony Hawk 4 will be pretty difficult even for series veterans, so accomplishing them will be really satisfying. The game throws some strict time limits at you in some of the goals, and some of the later combo goals are tough to pull off. In previous games, failing a goal or missing a jump meant that you had to spend time skating around to get back in position. Here, when you fail a goal, you can use the pause menu to jump right back to the start of that goal, instantly. This gives the game a real trial-and-error feel, letting you reattempt the same combo line over and over again until you finally get it, though being able to restart a goal at any point keeps this from getting as frustrating as trial-and-error-style gameplay usually gets. You can also jump to any goal that you previously tried, which is a handy way to skip around from place to place in a level.

Aside from earning cash by completing goals, you can also find it floating around each of the levels, just like in Tony Hawk 2. You'll use cash in the skate shop to unlock decks for your skaters and purchase various items. Cash is also used to purchase new parts for created skaters, a set of presentation-oriented cheat modes (such as bloodier wrecks, fiery grinds, and slow-motion specials), four hidden skaters, and two of the game's levels, one of which is the Chicago level from Activision's latest console-based BMX game, Mat Hoffman's Pro BMX 2. Depending on how into Iron Maiden and Star Wars you are, you may or may not be excited by the game's hidden skaters. One of them, however, is a nice spot of fan service for all the people who have been requesting the addition of some more pro skaters. Three of the four hidden skaters up for sale are available immediately. The fourth, voiced by adult-film star Jenna Jameson, can be purchased only once you've collected at least $100,000 in cash, essentially forcing you to find all the cash and complete every goal, which will take a while.

The game plays even faster than before.
The game plays even faster than before.

Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 4 plays even faster than its predecessors, but the main gameplay change is the addition of spine transfers. This lets you reorient your skater in midair so you can go up one side of a quarter-pipe and down the other. It also works for getting out of pools and half-pipes, getting up onto high ledges, and saving yourself from wrecking when you accidentally fly off the side of a ramp. But the spine transfer isn't the only thing cooking. The concept of double- and triple-kick tricks has been expanded to cover grabs as well, with a second press of the grab button giving you tweaked versions of existing grabs or, in some cases, a completely different move. For example, a double-tapped stalefish becomes a tweaked stalefish. A double-tapped benihana becomes the sacktap. Flatland tricks were introduced as special moves in Tony Hawk 3. Tony 4 still has special manuals, but most of the main tricks--caspers, truckstands, pogos, half cabs, and the like--are available to every skater without even having to fill your special meter.

Flatland tricks, grind transitions, and lip-trick transitions are all done differently. They're now done by tapping out moves with the grind, flip, and grab buttons. Flatland tricks were easily abused in multiplayer contests in Tony Hawk 3 because you could do casper flips almost as quickly as you could hit the button, driving your score up quickly and easily. Casper flips and other similar flatland tricks are still scored the same way, but you now have to wait for the trick animation to completely finish before executing another flip, meaning that it's slightly more difficult to toss in a ton of cheap flatland flips at the end of every combo. This balances the game a bit better, though it's still possible to abuse the system to some extent, once you get good at maintaining your balance. Furthermore, you can execute a quick 180-degree turn, which comes in handy if you accidentally miss an item and need to go back for it. Finally, you can grab onto the backs of vehicles and skitch around the roads.

New moves like the spine transfer become more meaningful as you play.
New moves like the spine transfer become more meaningful as you play.

All this double- and triple-tapping in the redesigned trick system means that Tony Hawk 4 requires a good gamepad even more than Tony Hawk 3 did. You can attempt to play the game on your keyboard, but a console-style gamepad with some shoulder triggers--GameSpot recommends just cutting out the middleman and getting a USB adapter that allows you to plug a PlayStation controller into your PC--is really the only viable way to play the game.

Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 4 contains just about every real skating trick you'd want to see in a game, and it contains a huge array of insanely exaggerated tricks as well. Most of Tony Hawk 4's new specials take after Chad Muska's ghetto-blaster grind or Bam Margera's jackass move in that they try to convey a little personality. Now there are special grinds like ferret fight, where a small rodent crawls around your body as you grind. Another has your skater dribbling a basketball. Others include a manual that involves fireworks and grinds with guitars, samplers, an American flag, and even a laser blaster. These new grinds are in direct opposition to the game's level design, which strives for more realism than the series has ever featured in its levels. The design succeeds nicely, and the levels look really great. The Kona skate park, based on a real park in Florida, looks almost identical to the pictures of the park shown on Kona's Web site. Other areas, such as some of San Francisco's classic skate spots, are also rendered with a nice amount of realism. The game still does have a few more fantastical levels, such as Alcatraz and a carnival level, which comes complete with a good number of intoxicated hicks.

Graphically, Tony Hawk 4 is an improvement on Tony Hawk 3, which was the first version designed with the current generation of consoles in mind. The texture quality really drives the realistic look of the level design home, and the animation--most of it reused from Tony Hawk 3--still looks fantastic. The game's performance can vary pretty wildly depending on your machine and the settings you choose. The game has the ability to toggle distance fog on and off, which will keep frame rates up, but at the expense of not being able to see as far as you'd like. Even our 3GHz Pentium 4 test system, armed with an ATI Radeon 9800 Pro, couldn't maintain a smooth frame rate with the detail turned all the way up. The game is still plenty playable, though, and if you meet or exceed the game's system requirements, you should be just fine. There are a few ugly bits to the graphics--the pedestrian models that are shown up close whenever you finish a goal look really, really bad, and most of them share the same looping congratulatory animation. Also, the animation used in the minigames is incredibly poor. Thankfully, these moments are very few and far between, and most of the time, the game looks great.

The game sports nine big, realistic-looking levels.
The game sports nine big, realistic-looking levels.

Many of the game's sound effects are identical to the ones used in Tony Hawk 3. A few have been added here and there, and the sounds of skating are still really solid. With the expanded career mode, a whole lot of voice work has been recorded to go with every goal. Since you'll get a lot of your goals from the skaters themselves, each pro skater has been recorded for the game. Skaters also have skater-specific screams when you wreck. Most of the voice work is pretty solid, though there are a few bits in there that probably could have been done a little better if some more time had been taken in the vocal booth.

The soundtracks of the Tony Hawk series have always been an eclectic mix that is as varied as skateboarding style itself. Tony Hawk 4 is no exception, from the AC/DC title track to the inclusion of NWA's classic radio hit "Express Yourself." Most of the soundtrack is pretty good, and there are more than 30 tracks featured, but there are a few songs that could probably have been left out. Specifically, four tracks came from two of the game's skaters. They aren't awful, but they come across as perhaps a bit self-indulgent. Still, the playlist can be edited on a track-by-track basis, so you can turn off, say, System of a Down or Delinquent Habits if they don't fit your idea of skate-friendly music.

It's not a dramatic departure from the series, but why mess with success?
It's not a dramatic departure from the series, but why mess with success?

Like Tony Hawk 3, Tony Hawk 4 also contains online support for multiplayer matches. The player limit has been raised from four to eight, which is handy, considering that it would be easy to lose three other players in such large levels. All the modes from Tony Hawk 3 return, including capture the flag. There are some new modes, such as score attack, which ends when a player reaches a certain score; combo mambo, which keeps track of which player has performed the largest combo within a certain time limit; and goal attack, which lets you enable any of the career mode goals, with victory going to the player who can complete all the goals first. The game is also set up for team play. You can set up multiple teams in all the game's online modes, which lets you create some pretty cool variations. Sure, you can win a combo mambo game by yourself, but what if you're playing against the best combos of three other players? The options are a nice touch. Unfortunately, the game relies on a third-party player-matching system that forces you to find matches outside of the game. We tried the game out on a couple of different network configurations and found that sometimes servers simply wouldn't connect. This leads to extra hassle, since you have to go all the way out of the game to find another server to attempt. But considering the aforementioned empty lobbies, playing online on a regular basis doesn't appear to be a viable option anyway.

While fans of the previous games will find the redesigned career mode a little foreign at first, it definitely makes for a longer game with a lot less repetition. The deeper single-player mode and improved multiplayer modes make Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 4 the most tightly packed installment in the series to date, and the slightly refined gameplay is still unmatched in the action-sports arena. In short, anyone with even a remote interest in either the genre or the real-life sport should purchase this game as soon as possible, provided he or she is willing to invest in a quality gamepad.

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About the Author

Jeff Gerstmann has been professionally covering the video game industry since 1994.