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Dark Summit GCN Review by: Kazooie

I bought Dark Summit a while back without renting it first, because I thought it would be like Tony Hawk but I won't say I was totally wrong. The game is pretty interesting and somewhat challenging and I'll tell you what I think of it. And how it compares to THPS. Dark Summit takes place on the ski slopes of Mt. Garrick, where snowboarding has been banned. You take the role of a female snowboarder named Naya, an outlaw of the slopes who is trying desperately to unveil the mysteries of the mountain. Your rivals are Chief O'Leary, the man in charge of Mt. Garrick, and his henchman. The game designers seem to be shooting for the kind of subversive "screw the establishment" mood that Jet Grind Radio evokes. However, the attempts seem forced and ultimately fail because of it. But thank you, Radical Entertainment, for including such risqué words as "crap," just in case we forget that the game is "extreme". It's also hard to take the mood seriously, when they developers don't take their own story seriously. The convoluted, incomplete storyline also contains allusions to illegal toxic waste dumping, Nazi-like rhetoric spouted from loudspeakers and something to do with cows that I'm not going to reveal. Sounds pretty stupid right? It is. For whatever reason, Radical Entertainment decided a ridiculous, mildly humorous storyline would be more appropriate than a more realistic one. If you enjoy over-the-top farces, you should get into the story that drives Dark Summit.

The actual gameplay of Dark Summit revolves around completing various challenges. The challenges range from outrunning skiers, to grinding 5 rails in a certain amount of time (like a training mode), to collecting bombs. Yes, I said bombs. What better way to stick it to the man than by blowing the crap out of a mountain? Anyway, the challenges are fairly fun, and the developers seem to understand, for the most part, that having to try a mission a few times over makes it challenging…while failing a few dozen times before getting it right is just frustrating. The difficulty level of the game is fairly solid. Unfortunately, the original approach to the genre is the only thing that Dark Summit has going for it. It isn't as realistic of a simulation of snowboarding as 1080 on the N64; it doesn't have the speed of SSX Tricky; and it doesn't even come close to the Tony Hawk series in terms of rock-solid trick-based gameplay.

Still, developers Radical Entertainment tried hard to give gamers all the moves they could handle. The X-button handles all grabs, with each different direction and X giving you a different grab. Holding a direction with a grab will result in either a rotation or a flip. Pressing and holding the Y-button on an object will result in a grind, also known as a jib. Holding forward or back while grinding will result in a manual grind…it's never adequately explained what this is. Holding the B-button at the top of a half-pipe will make your character do a lip move, but this you'll never use this trick after the first time. There are also special tricks, a nice addition, which take a button combination to complete. Most of the tricks move clumsily, without polish. This is particularly true of grinding, which ends of animating nothing like what its real-life counterpart looks like.
The graphics in Dark Summit are - in direct contrast to it's name - bright and colorful. They get the job done, but certainly aren't going to wow you. The GameCube can do much better than this. Cut scenes are done using the in-game graphics instead of FMV, which is acceptable since the cut-scenes are short and unmemorable anyway. The music in this game had a good mood to it. I didn't get tired of hearing the same tunes as sometimes happen with other games. The sound effects are okay, except when you're doing one of the first challenges and the character keeps saying '' your mother wears army boots...'' That got on my nerves after a while, as I had to restart the challenge several times before I completed it. But overall the sound effects are okay.
So, rent or buy, you ask. I say rent it first, as with most games. In my opinion, there's not a whole lot of replay value to it once you've beaten it, or if you can't beat it, you may just grow bored with it. Which can happen, trust me. I give Dark Summit for the GCN a 7/10.

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