Version: 2008
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SSX Tricky (Game Boy Advance)

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You'd be hard-pressed not to enjoy SSX Tricky on the Game Boy Advance.

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GameSpot editors' review

SSX Tricky on the Game Boy Advance is quite a marvel. Never mind the fact that it includes 12 riders and eight courses from the PlayStation 2 version of the game, or that it features an arsenal of more than 50 different tricks. The most impressive aspect of this version is its graphical presentation. The game uses a polygon engine to display a fully three-dimensional course in front of the rider. As you launch off jump ramps and twirl in midair, you'll actually get to see the landscape pass by in real time.

SSX Trickyscreenshot
The GBA does a nice impression of the PlayStation.

If you're familiar with SSX Tricky for the PS2, you'll recognize the courses in the GBA version. The forks, turns, and shortcuts are missing, but the environmental decorations are dead-on. The overall texture quality is on par with comparable PlayStation games, and the surrounding hills and valleys are quite realistic. At the same time, your rider is lifelike and performs every trick with reasonable fluidity. Though, the same isn't true of the CPU-controlled riders, who look like two-dimensional cutouts pasted on top of the gorgeous 3D backgrounds. This and the relatively close draw distance are the only nagging flaws in the game's graphical presentation, but they don't feel all that significant when you're actually playing.

Thanks to the 3D presentation, SSX Tricky plays much like the snowboarding games on more powerful consoles. You can lean forward and crouch to gain speed or jump higher, while the GBA's four main buttons are used for grabs, grinds, and tweaks. Flips and spins are performed with the directional pad, which means they'll take a little getting used to since you can't adjust your pitch in midair like in most snowboarding games. There are three main events--race, showoff, and time challenge--and you can tackle them separately on each course or in a competitive world circuit mode.

The game is also true to its namesake in that the best way to maximize your boost meter and earn the most points is to continually perform complex trick combinations. Basic tricks and combinations build the meter to the point that you can perform an ubertrick. If you successfully perform an ubertrick, you'll earn one of the letters that spell the word "tricky." Once you complete the word, your boost meter stays put at maximum and you can perform the outlandish super ubertricks. Taken together with the various trick multipliers and speed boosts scattered throughout each course, the super ubertrick mechanic allows you to execute some absolutely impossible tricks.

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SSX Tricky (Game Boy Advance): $13.99
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SSX Tricky (Game Boy Advance)