Vancouver 2010 Review
Xbox 360 | PS3 | PC
Vancouver 2010 box art
System: X360, PS3, PC Review Rating Legend
Dev: Eurocom 1.0 - 1.9 = Avoid 4.0 - 4.4 = Great
Pub: SEGA 2.0 - 2.4 = Poor 4.5 - 4.9 = Must Buy
Release: Jan. 12, 2010 2.5 - 2.9 = Average 5.0 = The Best
Players: 1-4 3.0 - 3.4 = Fair
ESRB Rating: Everyone 3.5 - 3.9 = Good
Bronze
by Leon Hendrix III

Let's be honest with ourselves: the Winter Olympics are the diet Mr. Pibb of the sports world. They might resemble a somewhat more acceptable product, eg. the Summer Olympics, but even that can't help distract from the fact that we'd rather be watching the playoffs of most any other professional sport. In the video game world this makes the development and purchase of a game based on the Olympic Games something of an anomaly.

Vancouver 2010 screenshot

Why make a game based on a property that struggles to find an audience for the actual event? At least in the US, this makes Vancouver 2010 an oddball especially for a publisher as venerated as SEGA. Even more puzzling: why would you strip a game marketed to a very particular audience of all the things said audience likely expected when they bought it?

That's what the developer Eurocom managed to deliver in this interactive ode to snow sports. Vancouver 2010 is a very stripped down and rarely enjoyable game about an event that already has a considerably small following. The gameplay is, for the most part, uninspired, and the graphics are repetitive and the presentation is noticeably lacking. There are few bright spots in this blasé affair. I suspect that Eurocom, which has occasionally delivered solid gameplay (most arguably in the N64 Mortal Kombat days), put little effort into this one, and it shows.

The Winter Olympics consists of far more events than are represented here, and inexplicably, Eurocom has chosen to select a random assortment of 14 events, each of which can only be competed in the women's or men's division (another arbitrary decision). But this may be the least of the wrong turns as you could argue that selecting only a few events allows a focus on gameplay. Unfortunately, truth be told, gameplay is mostly just ok.

Most events use the right and left trigger to carve turns, the 'A' button to launch and start various meters and the left thumbstick to steer. It's not really a complicated control scheme, and considering the actual sequence of actions you often have to perform, it's a smart move on Eurocom's part. The competitions come down to holding, releasing, and pressing any combination of these buttons to stick a landing, lunge for a finish line, jump out of a gate, or what have you. The 'B' button allows players to switch to a first-person view. This is a welcome addition and puts the player right into the middle of the action in a nice way, but it makes executing jumps and judging turns a bit more difficult. The controls are fairly intuitive to learn and they become easier with time, to the developer's credit.

Vancouver 2010 screenshot

Among the events are probably some of the most recognizable competitions like Speed Skating, Freestyle Aerials, and Slalom. It doesn't feel like there's much variety in spite of the actual number of events. This may be due to the fact that there's so little practical difference between some events like Skeleton, Bobsled, and Luge. The fact is there's not much difference between sledding whether you go down face first, with a partner, or on your back.

The most interesting event is ladies aerials which requires all of the aforementioned timed button pressing but puts a twist on the completion of the trick routines. At the beginning of the run, players select the routine. When you jump off the ramp, a display pops up with a ball or pair of rotating balls on two concentric circular tracks with green and blue shaded sections, respectively. Gamers complete the routine by rotating the thumbsticks (each corresponding to one of the balls) to keep the balls within the two shaded segments. It's an interesting concept. Easier tricks are fairly simple to pull off as the ball or balls rotate slower. The harder tricks require more dexterity and focus as you attempt to find an early rhythm and rotate the sticks, at times, in opposite directions. This is easily among the most challenging and fun events (and the best looking). It really forces you to think like a champion as you select your tricks, mixing a simpler trick with something more difficult to maximize your points.

Vancouver 2010 screenshot

The only problem I had was with the display, which surrounds your athlete mid air as time slows down. You become so enraptured in sticking the trick that you can't actually watch what she's doing. For a sports game this is critical, especially one without a manual replay option. Consider this: what if every time you were going to tackle someone in Madden you had to mentally freeze and glue your eyes to an onscreen prompt to deliver a solid hit, you focus all your energy on actually completing the movements and you succeed, but afterwards you just go onto the next play. You can hear the pop of shoulder pads and the crowd's collective sigh, but you can't really see the hit yourself. Unfortunately, this is a demonstration of Vancouver's larger problem, even in its biggest successes it fails because, ironically enough, you feel too much like you're actually an Olympic athlete. Shaun White doesn't get to see himself do a tailgrab (unless he has a video camera) but he's got a gold medal to show for it. Vancouver makes you work just as hard, for no reward, unless you like hearing the national anthem of Portugal.

Overall, gameplay reflects the incredible difficulty of being an Olympic athlete, and unmanageable turns at breakneck speed, overcompensating, etc. are the norm. This unforgiving curve means that most gamers won't be earning a medal anytime soon. This game seems more suited for the Wii's family-oriented slate. I suspect it may be easier to actually train for the Winter Olympics, at least there I wouldn't ask myself why I was doing this to myself every two seconds.

Screenshots / Images
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