Review Mazinkaiser 3/5 · Nov 12, 2024
1080° Snowboarding: Trick or Treat
1080 is a difficult game to fully enjoy due to its disparate elements - on the one hand, racing is mostly fun and engaging and learning how to manage each course's twists and turns is very rewarding. And on the other hand, the trick system is awkwardly implemented and feels poorly thought out.
There's no particular story to 1080 - …
1080 is a difficult game to fully enjoy due to its disparate elements - on the one hand, racing is mostly fun and engaging and learning how to manage each course's twists and turns is very rewarding. And on the other hand, the trick system is awkwardly implemented and feels poorly thought out.
There's no particular story to 1080 - the player selects one of five (initially, there are unlockables) snowboarders and a type of snowboard with various stats such as landing, technique, speed, and other values. The player may either race to the bottom of a track or do modes that involve snowboarding past flags and doing tricks.
Racing seems simple enough once the player knows the general snowboarding secret (always crouch, never jump) and balancing jumps and turns can be a little tricky (landing never quite feels 100% accurate) but it's very fun and fast to race down slopes and the player can run into their competitor and play a VS mode for more fun.
As for tricks, the player has a general set of direction + B button tricks that can do fun tricks where the player grabs the board and then spin tricks, which have very unintuitive notation and very finnicky requirements to pull off (if the player can stick the landing). A 720 can be managed as long as you know to hold down the buttons, rotate, then release but once the Z button gets thrown in as well as the landing it becomes extremely frustrating, and the nature of rotating the control stick doesn't work nearly as well as you think it should. Combining these two type of tricks results in a batch of samey but cool tricks and infuriating spin tricks that are more trouble than they're worth. Even the most trick-friendly snowboarder types struggle with these.
As for track visuals and audio, the soundtrack feels like a mix of high energy electronic and dance beats that could be mistaken for a Jet Grind Radio soundtrack. It's not as legendary but it's fun enough for racing background music. Visuals are where the game shines the most - snowy vistas are bright and well designed and the game has additional touches like time of day for specific tracks (the sunset version really shines in this one). Snowboarders have general "cool" designs but come off as a little bit generic.
1080 has some fun modes if you're willing to get into the tricky nature of snowboarding and landing, and some not fun modes unless you want to deal with a messy trick system. Stick to the fun modes and you should have a great time!