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Dark Summit
 
 

Dark Summit

by THQ
PlayStation2 Teen
3.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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Product Details

  • Shipping: This item is also available for shipping to select countries outside the U.S.
  • ASIN: B00005QWWM
  • Media: Video Game
  • Release Date: November 27, 2001
  • Average Customer Review: 3.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #12,787 in Video Games (See Top 100 in Video Games)

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Product Description

Amazon.com Product Description

Dark Summit invites you to explore and uncover the mystery atop Mt. Garrick through 45 mountain-based challenges and missions. This is the first action-adventure snowboarding video game with mission-based objectives. It offers a huge mountain to unlock and explore, from the bunny slopes to the summit, and an innovative reward system based on the player's status on the mountain. There are long, expansive runs to shred, and a physics-based board simulation for tight, responsive controls and realistic carving, shredding, and jibbing. High-tech equipment upgrades include boards, bindings, and gear. The multiplayer modes including competitions in mountain challenges, the half-pipe, and more. The six playable snowboarders in multiplayer mode each has his or her own physical characteristics, personality, and attitude.

Amazon.co.uk

Extreme sports just got a little more bizarre with Dark Summit, which mixes snowboarding with espionage. And somehow, it works. The plot involves the efforts of boarder Naya as she investigates the wacky activities at the decidedly snowboarder-unfriendly Mt. Garrick. Naya must complete a long series of stunt-based missions in order to gain enough lift points to get to the top of the mountain. In general, the pacing isn't nearly as fast as that of snowboarding king SSX Tricky, yet Dark Summit's weird cast of characters and emphasis on combos and timing make for a deeper game.

Despite the cartoony physics, you'll find the controls very responsive and will soon be pulling off cool-looking stunts. The visuals won't raise new standards, but they are nicely detailed and move fast. Curiously, while you can earn points to buy snazzy clothing and boards, none of them affect actual gameplay. Also, the repetitive nature of trying to complete your goals will make speed-seeking snowboarders impatient. Still, while not quite as quick and stylish as SSX Tricky, Dark Summit delivers a strong just-one-more-try feel that challenges players while still being fun. For those with the skills and patience, Summit is an arcade snowboard ride of a slightly different kind. --Mark Brooks


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Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (3)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.1 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A fun and entertaining game, with too short a shelf life, January 29, 2002
This review is from: Dark Summit (Video Game)
I've never been a big fan of the whole skateboarding/snowboarding genre of games, but Dark Summit turned my head. Whereas in most games of this type, the object is simply to do tricks to get the highest point total, Dark Summit has a storyline and a goal. Snowboarders have been banned from a mountain, and your goal is to find out why. Turns out the government doesn't want them there due to the tendency of snowboarders to go off-trail; they are afraid that the snowboarders will discover the secrets they harbor in this mountain.

You discover more about the mystery through a series of challenges, which range from showing your skills by doing tricks to avoiding ski patrols. Doing tricks earns you equipment points, which are used to get different outfits & board upgrades. Completing challenges gets you lift points, and when enough are accumulated, a higher level of the mountain is unlocked. You can actually pass through the lower levels you start out with when you go down the upper levels, which brings a nice sense of continuity to the game. There will likely still be challenges to be completed on the lower levels when you unlock the upper levels, so this prevents you from have to go back and do them.

The controls are pretty easy to pick up. Special tricks are accomplished by 3-4 button combos, which must first be unlocked by catching special trick icons during your run.

For the negatives: the plot is REALLY thin, and generally has little to do with the challenges. Equipment options are limited; I had accumulated enough points to have all costumes & the best board before I unlocked the third slope, making doing tricks outside of challenges pretty pointless. Also, the costume changes are pretty minor, with about 3 different looks being altered by adding sunglasses or something even more minor. Finally, although there are several characters to select from, you can only use the primary one until you finish the game.

In all, this was a fun game...a bit short probably, and the lack of additional modes of play (a race mode of some sort outside of the main game would have been nice) give it too short a shelf life. A solid effort though, this game is a good buy.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Awful, plain awful, December 4, 2003
By 
"equipgod" (Dorchester, NJ United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dark Summit (Video Game)
This is one of the worst games, I have ever played.

First, the speed of the snowboarding is too fast, totally unrealistic.

Second, the graphics are poor at best and the levels are so repetitive its unreal.

Third, the game does not give you any incentive to learn the tricks. Good snowboarding games like the SSX series are much better.

Fourth, the music and sound is awful, so annoying I had to turn the volume off just to play it.

Last, this is a very WEAK attempt to cash in on the success of the SSX games. Save yourself the $10 for this awful game and get a decent game like SSX if you are into snowboarding.

This game is so awful, I could easily fill up the 1,000 word maximum I can type in this review just talking about the specific reasons this game is so bad.

Trust me, unless you get this game for free, dont even waste your money to rent it....

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Surprisingly fun snowboarding adventures, February 24, 2005
= Fun:3.0 out of 5 stars 
This review is from: Dark Summit (Video Game)
What happens when you cross the X-Files with an extreme sport and Gen-X slacker sensibilities? You end up with the video game Dark Summit. The premise of the game is odd, to say the least. You get to play as a snowboarder who has to uncover the dark government coverups and conspiracies, and who has to find out the truth behind all of the recent UFO sightings. Conveniently, all of your investigations can be accomplished while you are snowboarding down the slopes of your favorite ski hill, disrespecting authority, and performing extreme stunts and tricks.

As a snowboarding game, Dark Summit is a little weak. You can accomplish a fair number of different kinds of tricks, jumps and railgrinds, but the game is not as sophisticated as something like the SSX series. I do like how the snowboard leaves a trail in the snow in Dark Summit, but sometimes the trail gets "twisted" or "folded over" so that it seems like the character has Saran Wrap trailing from the end of her snowboard.

The game doesn't have that many stages, but there is a very high replay value for each stage. Each level has multiple pathways, so you need to run through several times just to see the whole level. In the levels that are higher up the mountain you can choose either to stop at the end of the level or to continue down the mountain through a lower level that you have already been to. As you go down the hill you can activate challenges, such as evading the snow patrol for a certain amount of time or performing a certain number of tricks in a set time period. The challenges are set up so that the some activation points contain multiple challenges. The player has to return to the same activation point multiple times in order to complete all of the challenges. Most of the challenges are fun, but a couple are frustratingly difficult.

The player works to earn two different kinds of points. One kind is equipment points, which you get from performing tricks. Equipment points unlocks new outfits and new snowboards. The other kind of points is chair lift points, which you get from completing the challenges as I have described above. As you get more points you open more levels on the mountain. I found it much, much easier to get the equipment points than the chair lift points--I had already unlocked all of the outfits and most of the snowboards before I had even finished the first level. Once you have completed the game you can play as other characters. This is disappointing, especially because the final challenge is particularly difficult--I got stuck for a while with only one challenge left to go before I could play as the other characters.

The two player option is fairly fun. There are three modes: racing, tricks and demolition. Each mode only has one track, but each track is different than the other two player modes. Unlike the single player story mode, all of the characters are available from the beginning in the two player option. The two player option isn't as deep as it could be, but in my opinion more games need multi-player options--it's nice to see one here.

In conclusion, Dark Summit is a somewhat uneven game at times, but it has enough going for it for me to give it a positive review. This is a rare case of the creative combination of different game genres that actually works. While the idea of an X-Files adventure game melded with extreme snowboarding may not appeal to everyone, I found this game to be enjoyable. There are a few issues related to game design and graphical shortcomings, but one can easily overlook them. The game is available at budget bin prices--this is easily one of the best games that I have found in a budget bin.
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