If you see a dusty copy at a garage sale—or stumble upon that old rip on an ancient hard drive—give it a spin. Just remember to patch the audio drivers first.
The "no load times" promise was a lie, obviously. You still had that long, awkward tunnel sequence between L.A. and the hills. But the vibe ? Unmatched. American Wasteland was the first time the series felt truly open. You could skate from the gritty East L.A. riverbed, through the city streets, and all the way up to the Hollywood hills without a single splash screen. It felt revolutionary.
7.5/10 (Skateboarding physics: 9/10, Voice acting: 4/10, Nostalgia factor: 11/10) Tony Hawk--s American Wasteland -Buka--ts.ru-
Also, the Create-A-Park mode. I spent hours building half-pipes that defied gravity, trying to launch my custom skater (dressed in the most obnoxious neon baggy jeans) over the Santa Monica pier.
Revisiting the Shack: Tony Hawk’s American Wasteland and the Summer of No Load Times If you see a dusty copy at a
For the uninitiated, was the publisher that handled the PC port for the Russian audience. Finding a copy floating around the digital ether with that .ru suffix always felt a little sketchy, like downloading a virus from a LimeWire link named "Linkin_Park.exe." But back in 2006, if you wanted to skate through L.A. without a PS2, you took the risk.
I recently dusted off the old Xbox 360 (and subsequently had to wrestle with a dying disc drive) to revisit Neversoft’s 2005 swan song before the franchise got... weird. And let me tell you, sliding that disc in—specifically the version I found buried in a folder labeled —brought back a flood of memories. You still had that long, awkward tunnel sequence between L
American Wasteland is the messy, middle-child entry of the golden era. It isn't as tight as THPS2 or as clever as THUG1 . But it is the last time the series felt genuinely ambitious. It tried to kill loading screens and build a living world. It failed at both, but it failed spectacularly.