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SSX 3 ' s sound and voice acting were widely praised, with Silverman commending the "varied soundtrack and great effects", stating that they make the game "sound terrific". [45] Perry commented that SSX 3 is "a legitimate THX endorsed game, ensuring high-quality sound clarity". [15]
SSX 3 was released in October 2003. It was released on all the same platforms that SSX Tricky was released on, as well as the Gizmondo, and was developed by EA Canada. SSX 3 makes use of an open mountain concept. [2] In earlier games, individual tracks were located around the world.
SSX Out of Bounds is a snowboarding video game developed by EA Sports Big for the N-Gage and Gizmondo in 2005, and for Symbian in 2008. It is a port of the console installment SSX 3 but downsized for the handheld. The game features multiplayer capability over Bluetooth.
SSX (2000 video game) SSX 3; SSX Blur; SSX on Tour; SSX Out of Bounds; SSX Tricky This page was last edited on 16 May 2022, at 12:29 (UTC). Text is available under ...
SSX (2012 video game) SSX 3; SSX Blur; SSX on Tour; SSX Out of Bounds; SSX Tricky This page was last edited on 16 May 2022, at 12:32 (UTC). Text is available ...
Like SSX Tricky and SSX 3, SSX on Tour features a licensed soundtrack, this time with more prominence on rap, punk, rock, and alternative music styles. The focus of punk and rock is a departure from the more electronic hip-hop, breakbeat, and techno [5] focused soundtracks of previous games in the series.
SSX is a snowboarding video game, the first in the SSX series. It was developed by EA Canada and published by Electronic Arts under the EA Sports BIG label for the PlayStation 2 in October 2000. It was the first title released under the EA Sports Big publishing label, which specialized in extreme sports titles with an arcade feel.
SSX received generally positive reviews from critics, with a Metacritic score of 82 and 81 for the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 versions respectively, signifying "generally favorable reviews". [19] [20] IGN gave SSX a score of 9/10 in their review, stating "SSX is the video game this generation has been missing". [25]