As any Playstation gamer who may or may not be responsible with their cash, could tell you, Sony occasionally has some incredible flash sales, offering some of the most critically acclaimed titles available for a fraction of the price.

This weekend is no different. Until Monday, May 18, at 9:00 AM Pacific, the Playstation Store is offering dozens of games for less than five dollars, some of which include The Mass Effect Trilogy, Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater HD, Okami HD, Ni No Kuni, The Walking Dead: The Complete First Season, The Wolf Among Us, Soul Sacrifice Delta and Freedom Wars! Great for our gaming habit, but bad for our backlog, this list is sure to have something worth playing for nearly every gamer.

Look over the full list here and tell us what you’re picking up! Remember, with this being a flash sale, it will only be up for a very limited time, so make sure to grab them while you can!

Briefly: All the way back in January, Geekscape Games reviewed one of the best (and definitely the most addicting) games currently available on the Playstation Vita, OlliOlli.

The game is basically a side-scrolling Tony Hawk title (before the series sucked) mashed with an extremely fast paced (and challenging) platformer. The game is a ton of fun, and unfortunately I still haven’t made it on top of the Daily Grind leaderboard; that feat is about to get even harder too, as Roll7’s OlliOlli has just been confirmed for PS3 and PS4.

The announcement states that “OlliOlli will remain a PS Vita exclusive until summer 2014 and Roll7 is very close to getting the crash bug that some of you have complained about fixed. When the patch is released we’ll bundle in a nice little update that should put a smile on people’s faces too.”

If you can’t wait until the Summer, OlliOlli is currently available on PSN (for Vita, of course). Whatever the platform, you need to play this game.

Remember when the Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater series was good?

The days (and days) that I spent with the early THPS games are some of the fondest gaming memories that I have. A batch of my closest friends and I would rush home from school each (and every) day to throw on the Playstation, turn the volume way up (until we were yelled at by the owner of whatever home we happened to be at that day), and see who could attain the best combo, or the longest H-O-R-S-E streak in the latest THPS game. If you played, you must remember the amazing soundtracks that these games had too, like this classic:

http://youtu.be/XeNKhm09Q88

Sadly, the Tony Hawks Pro Skater series faltered after numerous acclaimed titles (and hasn’t had a game worth playing in years), and as great as EA’s Skate series is, it’s never filled the void left by Neversoft and Activision.

Today, UK developer Roll7 released OlliOlli exclusively on the Playstation Vita, and today, I felt like a kid all over again. Take a look at the game’s trailer below, and read on for my thoughts on the title.

As you saw in the video above, OlliOlli is a tried-and-true arcade style skating game, just like the old Tony Hawk titles, but also a whole lot different. Instead of pushing, grinding, and manualing through a 3D map, the game plays like an extremely fast-paced 2D platformer. You’re simply skating left to right, from A to B, while trying to earn as many points (by pulling-off and combining over 120 tricks and grinds), and attempting to complete as many objectives as you can in a single run. If you complete all of the objectives in a stage, you’ll unlock the far more difficult ‘Pro’ challenges for that level, which will likely have you swearing at your Vita, while having a blast doing it.

The game is extremely simple to learn (via a simple, easy-to-understand tutorial), but it’ll take eons to master, and just like the early Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater titles, I love every second of it. OlliOlli‘s controls are fairly basic, with the X button pushing you up to speed, while tricks and grinds are handled with the left analog stick (much like EA’s Skate series), and the L/R triggers spin your character around. The game also utilizes an interesting landing mechanic; as you approach the ground, you’ll press the X button to determine how successfully you land: too far away from the pavement will result in a ‘Sketchy’ rating, which substantially lowers your score, while a ‘Perfect’ rating will net you thousands and thousands of extra points. You definitely want to make sure you don’t fall though, or you’ll have to press the much-appreciated, always present restart button in the top left corner of the screen. Almost perfecting that ‘Hard’ or ‘Rad’ run when you eat the dirt may reduce you to tears, but each level is fairly short, so as angry as I was for screwing up, I was always happy to replay (the game also loads instantaneously, so that’s a big plus for repeating levels).

Junkyard Kickflip

OlliOlli spans 50 levels through five environments, with half of the stages in the ‘Amateur’ difficulty level, and half ‘Pro’ (unlocked once you beat each Amateur challenge in a stage). Afterwards, the game feels nearly infinitely replayable, as ‘Spot’ mode has you attempting the highest score in a single combo for each level (I’m very competitive against myself), and a ‘Daily Grind’ mode that puts you agains every player in the entire world. This mode is awesome; you’ll be competing on a new level every day, and after taking as many practice runs as you want, you get one shot at the gold. Bail or fail, and you’re done until the next day. I cannot wait to attempt to top the charts for at least one day, and if my OlliOlli skills are half as awesome as my THPS ability, I’m sure as hell that I can do it (and I’ll try, try, try until I do).

The only real downside to OlliOlli (which I’m sure can be fixed with an update) is that the game keeps crashing on me. I can be in-menu or mid-grind, and all of a sudden an error will pop up and my Vita will return to its home screen. It’s frustrating, and I can’t wait until it’s fixed, as it’s really the only thing keeping OlliOlli from perfection.

Port Fakie Ollie

Packed with content, and featuring kick-ass 2D visuals and excellent sound, OlliOlli is the most addicting game I’ve had the pleasure of playing on the Playstation Vita, and I can’t wait to stop writing this and get right back to it. The title brings me back to the glory days of the Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater series, while being completely original on its own, and it’s really an incredible breath of fresh air in the all-but-dead skating genre. OlliOlli is now available on PSN for a cool $12.99 ($10.39 for Plus members), and it’s worth. every. penny.

OlliOlli scores a sick 4.5/5.

Before Tony Hawk released garbage like Ride and his countless other cash-ins, there were quality skating games like Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater, which many of us waste hours and hours on after school, mindlessly breezing through each area to pull off sick tricks, collect video tapes, and snag high scores for bragging rights. This was a much simpler time, before you needed open worlds or fancy peripherals to have a good time. It was the game to play if you were an aspiring skater.


Fast-forward 13 years to 2012, where Activision has graced us with Tony Hawk Pro Skater HD, one of the closest revisions to the original game we’ve seen. It’s more than just an HD remake — it’s almost like a reimagining, and one that we’re immensely appreciative of. This is how future remakes should be handled.

Bravo to Activision for handling developmental duties to Robomodo, who from the ground up recreated the addictive gameplay we remember from Tony Hawk’s first adventure — it’s all here. From your first trip out on the board (which you can’t get off of, back to normalcy) you’re instantly transported back to a time where the grinds felt just right. A time when you didn’t have to fight with the interface, skate to missions, or contend with open-world mechanics you didn’t ask for. And those familiar tunes you rocked out to all those hours? They’re back as well — Goldfinger, Public Enemy, and more. This is, simply put, nostalgia at its finest.

You can choose from 10 different characters (and a few hidden ones here and there) and you’re still on the hunt for those elusive video tapes, except these days in our modern age we have DVDs. As a die-hard ’80s-’00s junkie, I was a little disappointed to see they had replaced the familiar VHS tapes I had collected in the original. But since it’s just a cosmetic change, I wasn’t bothered too much.

The addition of Xbox Live avatars actually softened the blow of the removal of VHS tapes for me. You can use your personal avatar as a skater, which is an interestng oddity and a pretty cool addition to the normal human skaters that area available. My avatar, grinning wide with her shiny shark teeth took some hilarious spills, and as strange as it feels to say it I felt more connected to my skater than any of the premade characters. I would have preferred to have been able to create my own skater, but the inclusion of avatars was something I wasn’t expecting.

I was very much impressed with the overall look and quality of the game as a whole, as well as the classic soundtrack — not to mention how well the controls seemed to translate to the Xbox 360 controller. It’s rare that this happens, as HD remakes seem to be in a perpetual state of flux — a few great ones, a few horrible ones here and there — it’s fantastic to see developers making an effort to improve upon and retain what we loved about the original games without making too many alterations.

While in many aspects it’s not perfect, but it still manages to capture the feeling of staying up until 3 AM in your underwear, chowing down on pizza, and staving off school the next day, where you’d likely talk about your exploits with Tony (or some other random late-’90s game) and how unfair your parents are. For ten bucks, it’s a great trip down memory lane, if nothing else.

Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater HD is available now for $15

Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater franchise is very near and dear to a lot of gamers hearts. Growing up, every kid and myself had a blast grinding around an abandoned hanger bay as Spider-Man. Should those memories be left in the past? Or should you pick up your virtual skateboard for another round this summer?

As I was playing, I had someone come up and ask me how the gameplay was. After a couple of failed attempts at reaching the top of the hanger bay, I calmly told him it was familiar and new at the same time. Now, knowing that answer may have sounded incredibly philosophical and provided no help at all, I quickly handed him the controller. It was after a long and “Sloppy” list of tricks when he agreed with my statement.

I’m not worried for Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater HD, in fact, it may be even more fun with friends. There’s no question this HD treatment will cause some nostalgia. In fact, Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater HD contains maps from both the first and second game from the 90’s. And if that wasn’t enough, Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater HD will feature songs from the original two games.

Anyone who was good at any of the past installments should be able to pick up a controller and know what they’re doing. I had trouble my first go around due to having an extensive amount of hours logged in using a Playstation controller rather than an Xbox 360 controller. Still, you’ll find that you can adjust easily.

The full list of features is as follows:

– HD Upgrade: Game was rebuilt and polished by Robomodo using Neversoft’s original code.
– Classic levels: The style and feel of the best 7 levels from THPS and THPS2 (Warehouse, School 2, Mall, Phoenix, Hangar, Marseilles and Venice) refreshed for today. Tony Hawk himself put a call out to his fans on Twitter during the summer of 2011 to decide the final levels.
– The Top Pros: Today’s biggest skate pros round out the cast including: Nyjah Huston, Chris Cole, Eric Koston, Andrew Reynolds, Rodney Mullen, Lyn-z Adams Hawkins (Pastrana), Riley Hawk and, of course, Tony Hawk himself.
– Refined controls: The skaters’ animations, tricks and combos reflect the evolution of the THPS games. For example, you can do manuals in levels from the first THPS, a trick that didn’t enter the franchise until THPS2. However, reverts are not part of trick combos, as the scoring system is based on THPS2.
– Endlessly fun objectives:  Players pursue the same global and level-specific goals as the original games, including S-K-A-T-E, Secret DVD (used to be VHS tape!), and many more.

Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater HD is set to come out his summer as part of Xbox Live’s Summer of Arcade line-up.