18. Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 3 (GBC)

Taking up development duties on the previous GBC games from Natsume, HotGen made the best of it and turned in a passably entertaining, nicely animated, OlliOlli-style side-on skater (well, more like three-quarter view, actually). On a system that was always going to struggle to capture the spirit of perhaps the best games in the series, this 'demake' was pretty impressive.

17. Tony Hawk's Pro Skater (GBC)

Natsume's Game Boy Color version of the celebrated original game was a huge downgrade and related to the PlayStation/N64/Dreamcast version in name only. Future handheld ports on the more powerful Game Boy Advance would inject their own charm and creativity into the handheld arena despite diverting from the 3D source material. Tony Hawk's Pro Skater on GBC, however, is a very limited, unimaginative game.

16. Tony Hawk's Underground 2 (GBA)

A perfectly competent game in the style of the previous GBA entries, Vicarious Visions' Tony Hawk's Underground 2 suffers from the same problems as its home console counterparts — after so many entries, the formula was starting to pall. Taken on its own merits and without having played any of those previous entries, this is still a great portable version of a fine game, though.

15. Tony Hawk's Underground (GBA)

The first non-'Pro Skater' game in the series, this GBA version of Underground offered a decent take on the old isometric formula of the previous Game Boy Advance entries and even revisited levels and elements from older games while polishing up the experience and adding new details like board customisation.

Obviously, this was very different from its home console brethren, but THUGBA (as we've decided to call it from now on) was yet another sick handheld boarder from a team that always nailed the basics.

14. Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 4 (GBA)

Vicarious Visions kept up the studios high standards with this third GBA version with new tricks, various tweaks and a host of minor improvements. The developers did the real hard work with THPS2 — all the extras here are just gravy, to be honest, but there's an argument to be made that this is the best GBA Tony Hawk of all.

13. Tony Hawk's American Sk8land (DS)

One of the big selling points of the cel-shaded Tony Hawk's American Sk8land on DS was that it was the first third-party release on the system to support online play. Vicarious Visions were at the handheld helm again for Tony's DS debut, and although you couldn't hop off your board here like you could in American Wasteland, the look and feel of this porta-boarder gave DS owners a fine version of its big brother 'boarder and a genuine treat to enjoy while away from their TV.

12. Tony Hawk's American Wasteland (GCN)

This was the final Tony Hawk game for a Nintendo console that Neversoft would deliver. 'No loading times' was one of the big selling points of Tony Hawk's American Wasteland, although the open world in this game was gated through 'corridors' between areas, so while the marketing point that sold it as one contiguous space was technically correct, it didn't feel like the wide open expanse some skaters expected.

Not a bad game by any means, but perhaps too many rough edges to be one of the greats.

11. Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 3 (GBA)

With the hard work done in the previous GBA game, Vicarious Visions' sophomore effort polishes things up with subtle improvements across the board (ha!) and adds a dusting of features from its home console counterparts that make it arguably the better game, even if the previous entry sticks in our mind from sheer shock at how good it was.

This one doesn't have Spider-Man, though. 4/10, then.

10. Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 3 + 4 (Switch 2)

Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 3 + 4 is another welcome return to the franchise's glory days, presenting the third and fourth entries with revamped visuals across the board while retaining the same slick gameplay. Some folks might be unable to get over the structural changes to Pro Skater 4, and we have to admit to being a little disappointed at the lack of classic music tracks, but overall, the positives absolutely outweigh the negatives.

If you're looking to inject a hefty dose of nostalgia into your life, or you simply want to see what the Tony Hawk series was like at its absolute peak, then this should prove a fine addition to your Switch 2 library.

9. Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2 (GBA)

Vicarious Visions managed to distil the essence of the full-sized Tony Hawk titles into an incredible isometric version that feels tight, responsive and very much not the obligatory downgraded handheld port you might have expected.

Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2 on GBA is genuinely one of our favourite entries in the overall series, with great music and cracking visuals. And Spider-Man. What's not to love?