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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.
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 (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]
An endless slope is a sloped treadmill that allows skiers and snowboarders to refine form and strengthen muscles. Practicing on this treadmill that simulates snow allows carving, edging, pressuring, steering, and balance on skis or a snowboard, allowing the rider to experience the same muscle workout as on the mountain while developing the skills needed to gracefully move on snow.
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.
Nevertheless, some ski areas require the use of a "leash" that connects the snowboard to the rider's leg or boot, in case the snowboard manages to get away from its rider. This is most likely to happen when the rider removes the board at the top or the bottom of a run (or while on a chairlift , which could be dangerous).
Winter X Games XX (re-titled Winter X Games Aspen '16; styled as Winter X Games Twenty in the official logo) were held from January 28 to January 31, 2016, in Aspen, Colorado. They were the 15th consecutive Winter X Games held in Aspen.
Snowboarding in Valfréjus, France Snowboarder riding off of a cornice Freeride snowboarding, in areas off of the main trails. The first snowboards were developed in 1965 when Sherm Poppen, an engineer in Muskegon, Michigan, invented a toy for his daughters by fastening two skis together and attaching a rope to one end so he would have some control as they stood on the board and glided downhill.