SSX Limited Edition Xbox 360
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A modern day reinvention of one of the most critically acclaimed arcade franchises of all-time, EA Sports SSX… See more
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SSX Limited Edition Product Details
Released on 02-Mar-2012
A modern day reinvention of one of the most critically acclaimed arcade franchises of all-time, EA Sports SSX will allow players to experience the franchise’s signature fun and adrenaline-packed gameplay across iconic mountain ranges all over the world.
Using NASA topographical satellite data, we’ve mapped out a Massive World for players to explore. Throughout nine expansive mountain ranges, SSX packs reality-defying gameplay into every run letting players Race, Trick, and Survive down huge open mountains. In addition, Explore, Global Events and RiderNet - SSX’s recommendation engine - headline an online feature set that will revolutionize social competition for gamers, making it fun and easy to compete with friends on your schedule.
SSX Features:- Conquer the Planet’s Mountains - From Antarctica to Africa and the Himalayas to the Alps, players will drop into nine of the most iconic mountains ranges on planet earth. Using NASA topographical data and our proprietary Mountain Man tool, each of these iconic mountain ranges have then been exaggerated to deliver a gameplay experience that is true to SSX
- Race it - Way beyond your typical racing experience, SSX allows players to race down huge open mountains with multiple elevations and no invisible walls to hem the player in.
- Trick it - Defying the laws of reality, SSX will enable players to pull off tricks that would make even the world’s greatest snowboarders cringe. Forget a 1260° Double Mctwist, in SSX if you still have both feet strapped to the board while you’re spinning 200 feet in the air then you’re still a beginner. With a refined trick system and levels designed to deliver trick opportunities at every turn, filling your Tricky meter is a must
- Survive it - A new gameplay element inspired by big mountain snowboarding, SSX asks players to survive some of the most treacherous descents on earth. Challenged by the power of Mother Nature, players will have to survive avalanches, white outs, freezing cold temperatures and much more, as they make their way down these natural boss battles.
- Advanced Physics - Harnessing the power of the current generation of consoles, SSX introduces a revolutionary physics engine that will allow players to ride and trick off almost anything in the environment, unrestricted by invisible walls and barriers.
- Upgradeable Gear - From boards of varying speeds to wing suits that let you glide for longer distances, upgrade your gear to ride faster, trick higher and survive longer
- Characters Old and New - Favorite characters, as selected by the fans, make their return to SSX along with some new faces that will be joining the franchise. Returning characters include: Elise, Kaori, Mac, Psymon, Moby and Zoe.
- Explore - Explore every drop in the massive world of SSX. Set your fastest time on Race Drops, post your highest score in Trick Drops, and descend as far down the mountain as you can in Survival Drops. In addition to a traditional leaderboard showing friends’ times to beat, ghosts of your friends’ runs are also visible in your world showing you exactly how they tackled a run. Challenge your friends’ ghosts or let your own ghost chalk up wins and losses, while you’re away from your console.
- Global Events - Constant global competition at every drop point the SSX universe against real people in real-time. Events can last for a single run, hours, or even days, with your friends and closest competitors phasing in and out of your immediate surroundings at all times. Post a time and move up or down the leaderboard even after you turn off your console.
- RiderNet - Inspired by the incredible Autolog engine from Need for Speed, RiderNet will be the players guide through the world of SSX. It will allow players to ‘like’ their favorite drops, recommend new drops and friends to the player, point players to ghosts that are beating their scores and much more.
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In our eco-friendly times, recycling is everything. But it's not just empty soup cans and milk cartons, as great ideas are increasingly being mulched down, rebuilt and turned into something cool. Hollywood, somewhat inevitably, is ahead on this curve, increasingly plucking its summer blockbusters from the TV shows, movies and even toys that we enjoyed in the past. Now the games industry is catching on, and publishers are rummaging in their cupboards for beloved franchises that are ready for a second chance.
Everything Changes
Syndicate, currently nestled in the top ten, is a prime example. First released in 1993 for the PC and Commodore Amiga, the original game was a cyberpunk strategy game in which you played as the head of a sinister international mega-corporation. Able to despatch (and then control) four-man squads of bionic agents to disrupt and destroy the competition - with little regard for public safety - the game was a subversive cult hit.
Revived last week by The Darkness developer Starbreeze, the new Syndicate flips the perspective from top-down view to first-person shooter, and casts you instead as one of the elite agents, able to augment your attacks with an array of cybernetic abilities.
Back For Good
Not all reboots opt to switch the gameplay style so dramatically though. PC cult classic Jagged Alliance also began life with a birds-eye viewpoint in 1994, but when it was revived earlier this February it had retained the distinctive turn-based strategy top-down style. Once again released for PC, the new version - Jagged Alliance: Back in Action - stays close to the original template, but injects lots of modern ideas as you train mercenaries and wage war on evil dictators across a campaign that can last 70 hours.
Have A Little Patience
Then there are the retro classics that try to have it both ways. X-COM was yet another PC strategy game from 1994, when its B-movie tale of government agents battling alien invaders was a natural fit for a world besotted with TV hit The X-Files. The series eventually fizzled out, but will return not as one reboot, but two. 2013 will bring the now hyphen-less XCOM, which re-imagines the game as a 1950s-set first-person shooter, developed by some of the team behind BioShock 2.

Before that radical re-do arrives, however, we'll get XCOM: Enemy Unknown, which stays true to the isometric 3D tactical gameplay of old but updates it with such 2012 flourishes as destructible scenery and advanced AI. Developed by Firaxis, the company behind the mighty Civilization series, it should be a real treat. Is this the future of video game reboots? One game for the purist fans, another for the modern blockbuster audience? That remains to be seen, but it's an interesting and commendable experiment.
Relight My Fire
Reboot fever isn't just restricted to cult strategy titles from the early 1990s, however. Take the Medal of Honor series, for example. The original was a sombre World War 2 shooter developed in 1999 in conjunction with Steven Spielberg's Dreamworks Interactive. A new version, still developed by veterans of the same studio, now called Danger Close, hit the shelves in 2010, updating the action to modern Afghanistan but kept the same sense of duty to its real-life military subjects. It's also the first of the modern reboots to spawn its own sequel. Medal of Honor: Warfighter arrives this October.
Rule The World
The trend has even spread beyond the obvious avenues of the FPS genre. This year the decision was made to defrost the 2000 snowboarding game SSX, and the result is on the shelves now. There's not much scope to turn extreme winter sports into a first-person shooter, so instead we get a game that sticks to the style and tone of the beloved original, but beefs up the gameplay with cutting edge physics, oodles of online social features and over a decade of accumulated wisdom regarding how best to allow players to flip, grind and spin on virtual boards. It effortlessly straddles the joys of both old and new,
Is this urge to revive and remix the past a healthy one? It would seem so. The games industry has a better track record than Hollywood of improving franchises as time goes on, and few would deny that there are some amazing games and ideas in the history books, waiting to be dusted off and given new relevance. Combining the comfort of the familiar with the thrill of today's technology, what's not to love? And which would you like to see come back?
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EA has offered gamers a reminder that the iconic SSX snowboarding series is making its triumphant return to UK games stores this week.
The new Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 SSX instalment is the first to be released in half a decade and is arriving on the crest of a wave of critical acclaim, attracting strong reviews from leading publications such as IGN.
In the new SSX, players can explore nine expansive regions based on real-life topographical satellite data, bringing a new sense of freedom to the adrelaine-fuelled arcade experience.
Race, Trick and Survival challenges will challenge fans to tackle each course in different ways, while the online multiplayer modes introduce innovative social features and a new recommendation engine to make matchmaking easier than ever.
The game also features an all-star soundtrack, including artists such as Pretty Lights, Foster the People, The Naked and Famous, Skrillex and more.
Dean Richards of EA Sports said: "We've built SSX with the latest technologies giving it a more modern look and feel, but everyone who has played it has agreed - this is 100 per cent SSX at its core."
Published: 02/03/2012
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EA's snowboarding revival game SSX has positioned itself at the summit of the UK all-formats sales chart in its debut week.
The acclaimed Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 title has become the first SSX title ever to debut at number one in the official GfK-ChartTrack rankings, more than doubling the first-week sales of the previous top performer SSX 3 back in 2003.
A five-year wait for the new SSX helped the winter sports extravaganza to pip its EA stablemate FIFA 12 to top spot, though the ever-popular football game also had an impressive week, climbing two places back up to second.
Third place went to another debutant, Nintendo's Mario Party 9 for Wii, while PlayStation Vita hit Uncharted: Golden Abyss placed fourth, having topped the charts last week.
Other top-selling titles included the likes of Mario & Sonic at the London 2012 Olympic Games, UFC Undisputed 3 and Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3.
Next week will see a number of big new games hitting shelves, including crossover fighting game Street Fighter X Tekken and Nintendo 3DS stealth adventure Metal Gear Solid: Snake Eater 3D.
Published: 05/03/2012
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Extreme Snowboarding
SSX on PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 offers adrenaline-packed snowboarding gameplay that sees players battling nine of the world's most treacherous and diverse mountain ranges, from the peaks of the Himalayas to the solid ice ranges of Antarctica, and the deadly jagged rocks of the Alps to the volcanic tunnels of Kilimanjaro.
There are various goals to complete across a number of game modes, from being the quickest to cross the finish line to simply making it to the end of each course in one piece as Mother Nature dishes out deadly assaults. You're also challenged to beat your objectives with the greatest amount of style possible in levels designed to offer gravity defying daredevil trick opportunities at every turn - in SSX, you're a beginner if you still have both feet strapped to the board while spinning 200 feet in the air.
To come out on top, players will need to master the game's physics-driven snowboarding. There's no traditional acceleration or braking, just the speed you build up and regulate through physical interactions with the environment, although pulling off combinations of tricks rewards you with a handy boost function.
Hit The Slopes
World Tour mode is a solo campaign set across nine mountain ranges, each featuring three different peaks and roughly five to seven events. It's dressed up as a story-driven offering - it has a wafer-thin plot, in which you're challenged to put an old member of your snowboarding crew in his place by conquering each peak and slope - but largely acts as a tutorial for the main event, Explore.
Explore mode lets players soak up every inch of the massive game world in over 100 challenges, and allows you compete in asynchronous competitions against online rivals, setting fastest times on race events, posting highest scores in trick ones, and descending as far down the mountain as you can in survival ones.
The game might not offer traditional head-to-head online races (although if you're competing on a track at the same time as a friend you'll also be able to see their ghost in real-time), but the excellent use of jazzed-up leaderboard systems drives a sense of constant competition. Like the best social networking platforms, the game learns what you enjoy playing and pokes you whenever your records get beaten, offering you a non-stop flow of new challenges without ever having to return to the main menu.

Survival of the fittest
SSX also introduces 'Deadly Descent' events for the first time in the long-running series. Offering some truly epic cinematic set pieces, these challenge you to make it to the end of a run while surviving brutal natural hazards such as avalanches and rock slides. They deliver plenty of nail-biting, varied gameplay as you carve your way around dangerous icy chasms with a pickaxe, bid to overcome the freezing Antarctic cold by staying in direct sunlight, and don a special jumpsuit which adds surface area to your body to enable a significant increase in lift as you glide over gaping chasms.
Getting the most out of SSX requires a combination of skill, instinct and timing that can initially be tricky to master, but once you get the hang of things it makes for some of the most fluid, fast and satisfying gameplay available in any genre. We've been eagerly anticipating a new game in the SSX series since 2007's SSX Blur on Wii, and this long-awaited series reboot doesn't disappoint.
GAME's Verdict
The Good:
- Fluid, exhilarating gameplay.
- Some inspired Deadly Descents.
- Addictive online, social networking features.
The Bad:
- No split-screen play.
- There's a steep(ish) learning curve to overcome.
- We had to wait so long for a new SSX.
Published: 14/03/2012
- Fluid, exhilarating gameplay.
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Remember SSX? It helped launch Sony's PlayStation 2 back in 2001, and was part of a wave of extreme sports titles that seemed to dominate gaming in much the same way that the first-person shooter does today. And if Activision's Tony Hawks was the Call of Duty of its day and of its genre, then EA's SSX was the Battlefield - slick, polished and with a certain European flair that its competitor lacked.
It seems that EA Canada remembers SSX well enough, and after a handful of fumbled sequels and an extended hiatus the trick-heavy snowboarding game is back, and it's an assured return to its former glories.
Having tinkered with the idea of doing a gritty reboot - when it was first revealed, this game had the subtitle Deadly Descents and sported a dark, almost militaristic look - EA's been wise enough to return to what SSX is really about, which is candy-coloured slopes with which to pirouette and leap from in what's at heart a refreshingly pure experience.
Snow Joke
So at heart it's the same SSX that many will remember fondly from over a decade ago - and even if you don't remember the original, it's simple enough to get to grips with. In SSX, you're presented with a selection of the world's greatest slopes - and in a first for the series they're now modeled upon their real-life inspirations. From there you're either asked to Race It, Trick It or Survive It.
Race It's self-explanatory, while Trick It involves you racking up as many points as possible before reaching the bottom of the peak. Survive It, on the other hand, sees each peak come alive in snarling fashion as you're tasked with simply staying alive in adverse conditions - some mountains will throw avalanches your way, while in others riding in the shade will see your body temperature dip, forcing you to seek the sunlight in order to stay alive.
It's admittedly simple stuff, but SSX manages to extract from its three simple modes a game that's incredibly tense, and one that's incredibly deep to boot. It helps that control's slicker here than ever before; now, when you're gliding in the air, tricks can be performed with the right stick, allowing deft combos with little effort on your behalf.
Trick Shot
The real skill, then, comes in reading the slopes, and in figuring out how to maximize air-time with smartly thought out trick-runs and making sure not to repeat yourself. Sometimes, just getting to the bottom can be a task in itself, and SSX can at times be a cruel and unforgiving experience, demanding that you learn each incline and ravine if you want to taste success.
And there are many, many flavours of success in SSX. The single-player part of the game is the smallest slice, and it's only when each deadly descent has been conquered that the game really opens up. Taking cues from its EA stablemate Need for Speed's Autolog feature, SSX offers up Ridernet. It's a familiar system whereby friend's achievements, scores and times are presented for you to beat.
In truth it's not quite as slick as it was in the likes of Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit, but it's a welcome addition nevertheless, and one that gets to the heart of the score-attack play that SSX is really about. It's a return to the peaks of the series then, and also to the heights of the once-great extreme sports genre.
Our Verdict:
What's Good?
- Fun, dynamic trick system
- Excellent soundtrack
- Characterful mountains
What's Bad?
- Can be a bit of a muddle sometimes
- A little unforgiving in places
- Fun, dynamic trick system
-
In our eco-friendly times, recycling is everything. But it's not just empty soup cans and milk cartons, as great ideas are increasingly being mulched down, rebuilt and turned into something cool. Hollywood, somewhat inevitably, is ahead on this curve, increasingly plucking its summer blockbusters from the TV shows, movies and even toys that we enjoyed in the past. Now the games industry is catching on, and publishers are rummaging in their cupboards for beloved franchises that are ready for a second chance.
Everything Changes
Syndicate, currently nestled in the top ten, is a prime example. First released in 1993 for the PC and Commodore Amiga, the original game was a cyberpunk strategy game in which you played as the head of a sinister international mega-corporation. Able to despatch (and then control) four-man squads of bionic agents to disrupt and destroy the competition - with little regard for public safety - the game was a subversive cult hit.
Revived last week by The Darkness developer Starbreeze, the new Syndicate flips the perspective from top-down view to first-person shooter, and casts you instead as one of the elite agents, able to augment your attacks with an array of cybernetic abilities.
Back For Good
Not all reboots opt to switch the gameplay style so dramatically though. PC cult classic Jagged Alliance also began life with a birds-eye viewpoint in 1994, but when it was revived earlier this February it had retained the distinctive turn-based strategy top-down style. Once again released for PC, the new version - Jagged Alliance: Back in Action - stays close to the original template, but injects lots of modern ideas as you train mercenaries and wage war on evil dictators across a campaign that can last 70 hours.
Have A Little Patience
Then there are the retro classics that try to have it both ways. X-COM was yet another PC strategy game from 1994, when its B-movie tale of government agents battling alien invaders was a natural fit for a world besotted with TV hit The X-Files. The series eventually fizzled out, but will return not as one reboot, but two. 2013 will bring the now hyphen-less XCOM, which re-imagines the game as a 1950s-set first-person shooter, developed by some of the team behind BioShock 2.

Before that radical re-do arrives, however, we'll get XCOM: Enemy Unknown, which stays true to the isometric 3D tactical gameplay of old but updates it with such 2012 flourishes as destructible scenery and advanced AI. Developed by Firaxis, the company behind the mighty Civilization series, it should be a real treat. Is this the future of video game reboots? One game for the purist fans, another for the modern blockbuster audience? That remains to be seen, but it's an interesting and commendable experiment.
Relight My Fire
Reboot fever isn't just restricted to cult strategy titles from the early 1990s, however. Take the Medal of Honor series, for example. The original was a sombre World War 2 shooter developed in 1999 in conjunction with Steven Spielberg's Dreamworks Interactive. A new version, still developed by veterans of the same studio, now called Danger Close, hit the shelves in 2010, updating the action to modern Afghanistan but kept the same sense of duty to its real-life military subjects. It's also the first of the modern reboots to spawn its own sequel. Medal of Honor: Warfighter arrives this October.
Rule The World
The trend has even spread beyond the obvious avenues of the FPS genre. This year the decision was made to defrost the 2000 snowboarding game SSX, and the result is on the shelves now. There's not much scope to turn extreme winter sports into a first-person shooter, so instead we get a game that sticks to the style and tone of the beloved original, but beefs up the gameplay with cutting edge physics, oodles of online social features and over a decade of accumulated wisdom regarding how best to allow players to flip, grind and spin on virtual boards. It effortlessly straddles the joys of both old and new,
Is this urge to revive and remix the past a healthy one? It would seem so. The games industry has a better track record than Hollywood of improving franchises as time goes on, and few would deny that there are some amazing games and ideas in the history books, waiting to be dusted off and given new relevance. Combining the comfort of the familiar with the thrill of today's technology, what's not to love? And which would you like to see come back?
Published: 01/03/2012
-
In our eco-friendly times, recycling is everything. But it's not just empty soup cans and milk cartons, as great ideas are increasingly being mulched down, rebuilt and turned into something cool. Holl…
-
SSX drifts into stores this week (02/03/2012)
The new Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 SSX instalment is the first to be released in half a decade and is arriving on the crest of a wave of critical acclaim, attracting strong reviews from leading public…
-
SSX reaches peak of UK sales chart (05/03/2012)
EA's snowboarding revival game SSX has positioned itself at the summit of the UK all-formats sales chart in its debut week.…
-
SSX - Review (14/03/2012)
SSX on PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 offers adrenaline-packed snowboarding gameplay that sees players battling nine of the world's most treacherous and diverse mountain ranges, from the peaks of the Hima…
-
At heart it's the same SSX that many will remember fondly from over a decade ago - and even if you don't remember the original, it's simple enough to get to grips with. In SSX, you're presented with a…
-
Rebooting The Classics: The '90s Game… (01/03/2012)
In our eco-friendly times, recycling is everything. But it's not just empty soup cans and milk cartons, as great ideas are increasingly being mulched down, rebuilt and turned into something cool. Now …
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