

Skatebird just isn’t as responsive as it should be the physics are far too floaty for this game style and are generally just too difficult to gauge and predict.
SKATEBIRD SWITCH PRO
The reasons why Skatebird felt so off compared to Pro Skater were apparent within ten minutes. Was I just always bad at these Tony Hawk-style games? So I loaded up my copy of Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 1 + 2 as a refresher maybe I just needed to recalibrate my frame of reference. Somewhere along the lines of playing Skatebird, I felt like maybe there was something that I was doing wrong or something that I was missing. “Why was this game feeling so tricky? Why was I fighting so much with the controls?” As I played Skatebird, I became increasingly annoyed with it. Skatebird had the makings of a fun game, but ultimately, it failed in the essential parts that it needed to be a fun game: gameplay and level design. It is always great when a developer makes a game that anyone can access. For example, you can change the game speed if things are going too fast for you and you can’t keep up. There’s also a nice amount of accessibility in this game. I also loved how the developers proudly feature the smaller artists featured in Skatebird. There’s a good variety of tunes with genres like ska and skate punk here, as is expected. Skatebird has a decent soundtrack comprised of an original OST best described as “lofi bird-hop” and a selection of licensed music from smaller artists. I loved this concept you go skatebirds, stick it to those suits. It doesn’t pretend to be anything that it’s not you’re a bird that can skateboard, who needs anything more? The main storyline is centered around a rad and colorful group of skateboarding feathered friends trying to cheer up their depressed Big Friend, who has been shackled to the confines of tech startups and abandoned his skateboard long ago. It’s lighthearted and also funny at times.

Skatebird is a game about doing your best and just having a good time. Right at the start, this game has an inviting and comfortable aura to it. Unfortunately, Skatebird has let me down immensely as nothing more than a mediocre Tony Hawk clone with a novelty concept that does more to hurt it than help it.įirst things first, though, there are some really great, commendable qualities to Skatebird. Playing as a bird instead of the birdman, neat. I was excited to check out this neat concept of a game skateboarding birds. There has been such a massive gap in the skating video game scene for so long, and it is only now being patched up through remakes, reimaginings, and reinventions, with Skatebird being the latest to try and get in on the action. Like the relaxed control scheme, SkateBIRD‘s customization options are all about self expression.I’m a big fan of the Tony Hawk games, I grew up with them, and they will always hold a special place in my heart. Become the world’s first tiny hawk to pull off a backside 540 or see if a pygmy parrot can nosestall on a magazine halfpipe. Don a cowboy hat or a fez while shredding around your Big Friend’s office, or keep it mellow and strap a backpack on for a quick session in the bedroom. Grow your flock and wow them with fluttering flicks, owlsome combos, and impeckable tricks.Ĭhoose from more than 30 species of birds and kit them out with wild wardrobes.
SKATEBIRD SWITCH FREE
Or free skate through the world at a leisurely pace. Complete missions to progress through stages ranging from your Big Friend’s bedroom to a scenic rooftop and a sick server room prime for top-secret sessions. Rack up high scores that are nothing to crow at. Boardslide down staplers, 360 flip off a repurposed eraser kicker ramp, and carve perfect bowls-just watch out for leftover cereal! Tackle five levels flush with trickable materials and DIY parks. In SkateBIRD, pulling off tricks is nice, but doing your best is really all that matters.
