5.5

Your Local Guardian: Vancouver 2010 Review

Events such as skiing and snowboarding handle almost exactly in the same, with the gamer controlling the athlete in the usual method – steering them with the left analogue stick, accelerating with R2 and breaking with L2.

When you consider all the skiing events and snowboarding events add up to a total of eight (out of 14), that doesn't leave you with much bang for your buck.

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6.2

PSX Extreme: Vancouver 2010 Review

PSX Extreme writes: "It seems that every time they try to do a game based on the Olympics, everything falls to pieces. The last attempt – centered on the 2008 Summer Games in Beijing – failed miserably due to ridiculous mechanics, clunky and sometimes impossible control, lackluster technicals and an almost complete lack of pageantry and theatricality. The latter is part of what makes the Olympics great, if we've already forgotten, and while Vancouver 2010 still lacks that, Eurocom made good strides in righting many of the past wrongs."

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psxextreme.com
6.2

3djuegos Review: Vancouver 2010

3djuegos: In an effort to recoup the mediocre Beijing 2008, SEGA revitalizes its Olympic franchise with a much greater Vancouver 2010. We are not in the final title of Olympic sports, but to a very serious leap forward and before a title is not negligible.

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5.0

Mondoxbox Review: Vancouver 2010

Mondoxbox: Vancouver 2010 offers fourteen disciplines including Downhill, Ski jumping, Snowboarding, Skating, Bobsleigh, Luge and Skeleton. These are playable in four different ways, Olympic Games, Training, Challenges and local and online multiplayer.

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