Unlock the Hangar level to unlock Big Head Survival mode. Robomodo Robot: Successfully complete all Hawkman Objectives. Ollie the Magic Bum: Get 100% completion on any character's Projectives. Old School Tony Hawk: Successfully complete Career mode with Tony Hawk.
Officer Dick: Successfully complete Career mode with anyone but Tony Hawk. Successfully complete the indicated task to unlock the corresponding character: Slo-Mo Speed: Successfully complete 60 goals in a skater's career. Alternately, complete 50 objectives in a skater's career. Invisible Skater: Successfully complete 40 goals in a skater's career. Ghost Skater: Successfully complete 10 goals in a skater's career. Dusty Skater: Successfully complete 30 goals in a skater's career. Successfully complete the indicated task to unlock the corresponding cheat:īig Head mode: Successfully complete all objectives in Big Head Survival mode with a skater. $999,999,999Īt the character selection screen, hold LT and press Y, B, A. Max all statsĪt the character selection screen, hold LT and press Y, X, A. All tricksĪt the character selection screen, hold LT and press A, X, Y to unlock all tricks. All skatersĪt the character selection screen, hold LT and press Y, B, X to unlock all skaters. Level selectĪt the character selection screen, hold LT and press Y, X, B to unlock all levels. All game modesĪt the character selection screen, hold LT and press A, Y, B to unlock all game modes. Pro Skater 5 doesn’t even come close to the content or replay value found within its predecessors.At the character selection screen, hold LT and press A, B, Y to unlock all cheats. Pro Skater’s past has been all about content, massive amounts of glorious content. Collecting the words “skate” and “combo” isn’t original, nabbing a VHS tape is no longer cool since I haven’t used one in probably ten years, and busting out predictable combination-lines is nowhere near what it use to be. I would have been a little less disappointed with the replay value, let alone the entire game, if the game were presented as a Pro Skater 1 remake, because that’s exactly how it feels. Yes, I understand this has been the Pro Skater format since day one, but at least give us some variety and a storyline or a reason to complete these challenges. However, almost all of the missions are presented in a rinse and repeat format - the only difference is the setting in which you bang out these challenges.
The replay value initially seems to be rather robust with 8 environments, 80 different challenges, 10 pro skaters to choose from (including Lil’ Wayne for some reason), and the ability to simultaneously play with 20 players online. The only quarrel I have with the music department is the lack of in-game sounds for particular actions such as ollieing, kickflipping, and wiping out- they're completely nonexistent. The cool aspect about the music chosen is that it doesn’t overpower the intended gaming experience and offers a good variety of bands that synch well together.
Each track blends perfectly with the last and the flawless compositional choice is on full display. No Tony Hawk game is complete without a solid soundtrack and Pro Skater 5 definitely has the tunes to keep gamers working through the basic challenges and game modes. The music blends flawlessly with the fast-paced gameplay and actually makes the experience a little more enjoyable. The one bright spot contained within this confusing mix of questionable development choices is the stellar soundtrack. Blood and Gore, Crude Humor, Language, Mild Violence, Tobacco Reference