Escolhendo o próximo skatista.
2 notes
·
View notes
30 Years Ago: Neversoft | Tuesday, 07.02.24
Founded 30 years ago, Neversoft (formerly known as "Neversoft Entertainment") was a former video game developer previously acquired under Activision (now known as "Activision Blizzard") as they developed tons and tons of video games before they (ironically) dissolved 10 years ago.
video games developed:
Skeleton Warriors (1996)
MDK (1997)
Apocalypse (1998)
Tony Hawk's Pro Skater (1999)
Spider-Man (2000)
Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2 (2000)
Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 3 (2001)
Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 4 (2002)
Tony Hawk's Underground (2003)
Tony Hawk's Underground 2 (2004)
Tony Hawk's American Wasteland (2005)
Gun (2005)
Gun Showdown (2006)
Tony Hawk's Project 8 (2006)
Tony Hawk's Proving Ground (2007)
Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock (2007)
Guitar Hero: Aerosmith (2008)
Guitar Hero: World Tour (2008)
Guitar Hero: Metallica (2009)
Guitar Hero 5 (2009)
Band Hero (2009)
Guitar Hero: Van Halen (2009)
Guitar Hero: Warriors of Rock (2010)
Paradise Beach 2 (2011)
Canceled Games:
Exodus (PlayStation)
Ghost Rider (PlayStation)
Guitar Hero (Nintendo DS version)
Got a favorite game developed by Neversoft? Comment down below!
0 notes
Ryu Number: Nick Kang Wilson
True Crime: Streets of LA may seem like your usual mediocre tryhard third-person shoot-bang violence delight, but don't be fooled—it isn't much of a delight at all. It follows player character Nick Kang Wilson, recently suspended for repeated counts of excessive force, but now reinstated into an autonomous division with authority over the entire city of Los Angeles, which is actually pretty in-line with how real departments attend to police brutality so I can't complain about that. He's been tasked with solving a series of bombings in Chinatown, but all the while, a far more personal mystery hangs over Nick Kang Wilson like a greasy specter: Who the hell gave him a gunWhat happened to his father?
Anyway, Nick Kang Wilson has a Ryu Number of 3.
Yes, that's actually Snoop Dogg in True Crime, as opposed to just Snoop Dogg providing his likeness to a character. He says things like, "This is the Snoop Dizzle!" and, "Feels good to be the D-O-Double-G," which nicely disambiguates the issue.
Wilson is only referred to as "Nick" in the versions of Tony Hawk's Underground 2 he appears in, but both games came out through the same publisher, and the outfit "Nick" wears is an exact match for one Wilson wears in True Crime:
(Also, can I mention how maddening it is to watch Tony Hawk's Underground 2 footage and try to figure out if it's in the correct aspect ratio or not? I kept watching video after video, thinking, okay, surely this video was uploaded to YouTube without care; look how vertically squashed the skaters are—and then something circular would come across the screen, but properly executed in infinite symmetry, as the great circlemaker intended. I am beginning to suspect that, somehow, I am watching playthroughs wherein all the skateboarding—the actual gaming bits—are in the wrong aspect ratios, while at the same time all of the menus and nondiegetic indicators are properly squared away. But that can't be possible, can it? Can it?)
(Maddening.)
1 note
·
View note
THE PILE PRESENTS: AOTS! - Teaching A Handheld New Tricks (4.12.05)
It's go-time, ladies!
(4GTV - STREAM WHAT YOU PLAY!)
DONATE AND KEEP 4GTV ON THE AIR - http://bit.ly/4GTVDonate | http://streamelements.com/grupstra0/tip
3 notes
·
View notes
I miss when I was ten and my only life goal was to become a pro skater in the Tony Hawk's Underground game.
9 notes
·
View notes