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Sega Ski Super G; Sierra Sports: Skiing 1999 Edition; Ski Air Mix; Ski Crazed; Ski or Die; Ski Park Manager; Ski Resort Tycoon; SkiFree; Skiing (Atari 2600 video game) Skiing (Intellivision video game) Slalom (video game) Snow (2019 video game) Solipskier; Sports Champions 2; SSX Blur; SSX on Tour; Steep (video game) Surf (video game)
Tim Ashburn says in his book The History of Ski Jumping that Norheim's longest jump on the circular track in Haugli ground in 1868 should have been measured at 9.4 metres alen [8] but that newspapers in Christiania reported that the length "was a little exaggerated", so the official record is everywhere written as 19.5 m.
Vancouver 2010 received "mixed" reviews on all platforms according to the review aggregation website Metacritic. [19] [20] [21] IGN said of the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 versions: "If only this game had some semblance of a career mode or anything that felt slightly like the real Olympics, then perhaps SEGA would have had a real winner on its hands". [8]
SkiFree is a single-player skiing computer game created by Chris Pirih and released with Microsoft Entertainment Pack 3 for Windows 3.0 in October 1991. The player controls a skier on a mountain slope, avoiding obstacles while racing against time or performing stunts for points, depending on the game mode.
The game has downhill, snowboarding, aeriak skiing, bobsled, ski jumping, and luge disciplines. Winter Gold is a winter sports game where players can choose between six disciplines such as downhill, ski jumping, snowboarding, aerial skiing, bobsled, and luge across four distinct olympic venues: Salt Lake City, Lillehammer, Albertville, and an unlockable city, Nagano.
Sierra Sports: Skiing 1999 Edition (also known as Skiing with Picabo Street, 1999 Edition, and, in Europe, Ski Racing: Extreme Edition) is a sports game developed and published by Sierra On-Line for Microsoft Windows in 1998. It follows Front Page Sports: Ski Racing.
Stefan Kraft holds the official record for the world's longest ski jump with 253.5 metres (832 ft), set on the ski flying hill in Vikersund in 2017. [3] Ski jumping can also be performed in the summer on an in-run where the tracks are made from porcelain and the grass on the slope is covered with water-soaked plastic.
The game is named after US alpine skier Tommy Moe and is co-endorsed with Val-d'Isère, which hosted the men's downhill skiing event during the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville, France. [4] The Japanese version of the game also features as endorsement from Italian ski equipment company Nordica , evident on the game's box.