The Excellent Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 1 + 2 Captures How Skating Is a Way of Life
Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 1+2 feels like returning to your hometown for the first time in years. The things you love about it—those warm and familiar memories and touchstones—are all still there, as well as all of the parts that drove you from there to in the first place. It’s more than a remake but a little bit less than a full reimagining.
If you played either of these games when they first released, then Vicarious Visions’ remake will feel almost exactly like it did all those years ago—with the exception being that the core gameplay toolkit from Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 4 has been added to 1 and 2. There are manuals, wall plants, and reverts to ensure that your combos never end, but you can choose to play with the original games’ trick-sets if you really want to. In a way, it feels almost odd reviewing a remake that feels so true to the original games. Yes, Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 1+2 looks genuinely fantastic and the enhanced details in each level are sights to behold. But it still feels like a game from a different era—it is almost like playing through a memory. Grinding and manualing my way across School while Powerman 5000 plays on the game’s soundtrack takes me back to those late nights playing this game on an old CRT television in my childhood bedroom. It is a remake in the truest sense, even down to the original games’ flaws. Downhill Jam still absolutely sucks and Downtown is still one of my least favorite levels in the whole series.

Yet, I find myself falling in love with this game not due to how it adheres to what once was, but in how aspects of Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 1+2 have been reimagined and shifted for the sake of modernity and to fit in with the skateboarding scene of today. Firstly, the roster is more diverse and built out with female skaters, POC, and even the series’ first nonbinary skater. And these additions do not feel like they are just checking off a box; each one feels earnest and thought out. The character creator system is never gendered, and levels and outfit choices ground the game in the immediate with signs that advise social distancing and mask wearing due to COVID-19. Seeing the aforementioned inclusivity highlights how Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 1+2 fits itself into the modern skate scene because, while there is still a lot of work to be done, skateboarding has never been as inclusive as it is right now. Another interesting change is how players fall in-game. No longer does blood fly out and cake the ground. Instead, there is a pixelated visual rewind that occurs when the player falls and gets back up. This small change emphasizes how the “skate and destroy” mantra has changed. Bails are still part of the journey but they are not meant to be glorified. It’s okay to fast-forward to the trick being done. And all of the games’ original skaters have been rendered as they are now—pretty old. This game does not shy away from age and from the power of time, and through doing that it shows how skateboarding is something that lasts forever. It is a way of life. If you have ever stepped foot on a skateboard and fallen in love with it, then it will always be a part of you.
