Street Sk8er
Street Sk8er - known as Street Skater in PAL territories - is a skateboarding video game for the PlayStation. It was first released in Japan in 1998 under the name Street Boarders, then was licensed by Electronic Arts for distribution in America in 1999. It was re-released later in Japan as part of the Simple 1500 series of budget games under the name The Skateboard. On 6 May 2008 it was released on the PlayStation 3 in Europe as a download via the PlayStation Store.[1]
Street Skater | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Atelier Double |
Publisher(s) | |
Platform(s) | PlayStation |
Release | |
Genre(s) | Sports |
Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
Gameplay
Players attempt to clear each track by scoring a minimum number of points within a set time limit. The tracks consist of obstacles to perform tricks on, including rails, benches and half-pipes. By clearing a stage the player earns experience points that can be used to make the skater faster, more agile, able to jump higher, etc.
Soundtrack
The game's soundtrack features music by various punk bands, including:
- H2O - "Everready" & "Thicker Than Water"
- Less Than Jake - "Sugar in Your Gas Tank" & "All My Best Friends Are Metalheads"
- The Pietasters - "Out All Night"
- I Against I - "Maybe Tomorrow" & "Ordinary Fight"
- Gas Huffer - "Rotten Egg"
- Straight Faced - "Against"
- All - "Honey Peeps"
- Weston - "Liz Phair"
- Plastilina Mosh - "Monster Truck" & "Encendedor"
- Bow & Arrow - World Is Breaking (this appears on the demo stage)
All other music composed by Toshiyuki Kakuta.
The game disc could be inserted into any CD player with the entire soundtrack playable.
Reception
The UK Official PlayStation Magazine rated Street Skater 8 out of 10.[4]
Next Generation reviewed the PlayStation version of the game, rating it two stars out of five, and stated that "In the end, Street Sk8ter is mildly diverting, but it just isn't polished enough to be a standout title. Skateboarding fans will just have to keep playing 720° until a triple-A skating title hits the market."[3]
Sequel
Street Sk8er 2 - known as Street Skater 2 in Europe and Street Boarders 2 in Japan - is the official sequel to Street Sk8er, and received better reviews than the original. It was released on March 1, 2000 in North America, on August 10, 2000 in Japan and in 2000 in Europe again only for the PlayStation. On March 12, 2009 it was released on the PlayStation Network in Europe.
Soundtrack
- 8stops7 - My Would-Be Saviour
- 8stops7 - Satisfied
- Citizen King - Better Days (And the Bottom Drops Out)
- Citizen King - Under the Influence
- Deftones - My Own Summer (Shove It) (Mid Winter Mix)
- Del the Funky Homosapien - Catch All This
- Ministry - 10/10
- Shootyz Groove - Blow Your Top
- Shootyz Groove - Mad for It
- Showoff - Coalition
- Static-X - Push It
- The Chick Magnets - Fear of Girls
Similar Titles
References
- "PS3 Fanboy: European PSN Store PlayStation Day 2008 update".
- Alan Marriott, Scott. "Street Sk8er". AllGame. Archived from the original on November 14, 2014. Retrieved October 22, 2020.
- "Finals". Next Generation. No. 54. Imagine Media. June 1999. p. 93.
- Official PlayStation Magazine, Future Publishing issue 44, page 106, (April 1999)