
Eventually, of course, it would be nice to see what Roll7 can do when not making amazing skateboarding games (which is why I’m eagerly awaiting Not A Hero, which is due out in a few months), but for now, there’s no reason why you shouldn’t be enjoying a talented developer refining their formula to perfection.

#Olliolli2 welcome to olliwood vita how to#
It really knows how to use stars as rewards, slowly upping the degree of difficulty for each star on each progressive level, until you look up at some point and realize the game is asking you to do some really insane stuff.Īnd you know what? You’ll want to do it, too, because OlliOlli2 is just that good and that fun. The good news (if that continued dedication to being insanely hard doesn’t count as good news for you) is that OlliOlli2 is also just as addictive as its predecessor. And if you want to really master the game? You might want to invest in buying a back-up Vita, just to be on the safe side. As I said, OlliOlli2 is still pretty darn hard just passing each level requires you to whip your Vita’s thumbsticks around in a way that can’t be good for the system’s longterm physical health. In the big scheme of things, though, the differences between the two games are pretty minimal. It’s still an insanely hard game to master, of course, but at least OlliOlli2 makes an effort to help you learn. The tutorial levels hold your hand a little more than the first game did, which is nice the original OlliOlli challenged players right from the get-go, so it’s great that they’ve tried to make the sequel a little more user-friendly. OlliOlli2: Welcome to Olliwood Drop in to Olliwood and prepare for finger-flippin’ mayhem in this follow up to cult skateboarding smash OlliOlli. OlliOlli2 also tries to make its mechanics a little easier to understand. (Not that it necessarily needed it, mind you - we’re talking about a skateboarding game, after all not some huge RPG where you need a story to sustain your interest through endless grinding.) Obviously we’re not exactly talking a huge narrative step forward, but it still provides a cohesion that may not have been there the first time out.
#Olliolli2 welcome to olliwood vita movie#
While the visual differences may not be too great, there’s at least an attempt to tell a story here - OlliOlli2 has borrowed a page from the Joe Danger playbook, and situates its levels on movie sets. In fact, there’s an argument to be made that it might even be ever so slightly better.


OllliOlli2 may lack that thrill of discovery that accompanied the first game, but it makes up for that by being its equal in every way. The first OlliOlli was pretty phenomenal, so I’m not going to complain that Roll7 haven’t innovated all that much the second time around. That’s not the worst thing in the world, of course. Roll7 Devolver Digital (PC, Android) Team17 Digital Ltd(Xbox One) Released. I mean, there are some minor cosmetic differences here and there, but on the whole, the two games are basically identical. I have to be honest: if someone were to place screenshots or videos of OlliOlli and OlliOlli2 next to each other and told me to pick which was which, I’m not sure I’d be able to tell the original from the sequel.
