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As with other exploits, a common response to duping is to ban the involved players. Banning players for duping can be controversial though depending on how the game developer determines a player to be "involved" in the dupe. In Star Wars Galaxies some players learned how to dupe the currency. [3]
SSX (standing for "Snowboard Supercross" [1] [2]) is a series of snowboarding video games published by EA Sports, created by Steve Rechtschaffner, who is the inventor of the Olympic snowboarding event boardercross. [2] [3] The SSX series are arcade-style racing games with larger-than-life courses, characters, and tricks. [4]
Title Platform Released date Extreme Air Snowboarding: Mobile phone: December 31, 2003 [3]: Final Fantasy VII Snowboarding: Mobile phone: March 29, 2005 [4]: Big Mountain Snowboarding
SSX Tricky, also known as SSX 2 or SSX 2: Tricky, is a snowboarding video game, the second game in the SSX series published by Electronic Arts under the EA Sports BIG label and developed by EA Canada.
A sequel, We Ski & Snowboard, which adds snowboarding to the game, was released in 2008. A spin-off, Go Vacation, which featured dozens of sports and several open worlds to explore, was also released for the Wii in 2011, and was later re-released on the Nintendo Switch in 2018.
ESPN Winter X-Games Snowboarding (ESPN ウィンターエックスゲームズ スノーボーディング, ESPN Wintā Ekkusu Gēmuzu Sunōbōdingu) is a video game developed and published by Konami for PlayStation 2 in 2000–2001. A sequel, ESPN Winter X-Games Snowboarding 2002, was released in 2001.
ESPN Winter X-Games Snowboarding 2002 (ESPN ウィンターエックスゲームズ スノーボーディング 2002, ESPN Wintā Ekkusu Gēmuzu Sunōbōdingu 2002), known in Europe as ESPN Winter Games Snowboarding 2, is a video game developed and published by Konami for PlayStation 2, Game Boy Advance, and Xbox in 2001-2002.
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.