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DS Roundup

Simpsons, Lego Star Wars, COD4, Tony Hawk and ProStreet.

Need For Speed ProStreet

There's something odd about ProStreet on the DS. It's not the horrible Career menu, which spreads your progress colourfully across an asphalt background like partially digested carrot chunks rolling along Western Road at closing time. It's not the music, which while packed in with surprising density roars from the DS' troubled speakers like a smoker's cough auditioning for X Factor. And it's not that you still hate being called Ryan Cooper. It's that apart from that, it's actually not bad.

In racing sections the touch-screen shows an overhead view of the track and damage read-outs, while drag races display your rev-meter and other gauges, and the top-screen shows off developer Exient's surprisingly handsome game engine. The cars are basic, and the combination of jagged pixels and miles of concrete inevitably unite to look a bit like the carpet in a dentist's waiting room, but the cars are also satisfyingly shiny, and at least you can clearly see where you're meant to turn in, which isn't always true on the home console versions.

The handling's noticeably friendlier too, allowing you to tear round the courses at what feels like a decent old speed, even observing the sorts of rules that govern actually driving, like braking before turning into a corner rather than effectively having to pull over and deploy a parachute half a mile before the turn to avoid smashing into an advert for Madden.

This is presumably because the developer's been carving its own technological path away from the PS3 and 360 team, allowing them to borrow or adapt many of the proper game's better features (like the customisation systems and their influence on race outcomes, and online racing for four players), and dodge some of its flaws. Even the drag races, which I found desperately dull on Xbox 360 and PS3, are slightly better here. Slightly.

All in all it's one of the better examples of a DS companion to an established game series - not much threat to Mario Kart in pure playability stakes, but home to surprising depth and fun all the same, providing you can look past the fact it's designed for people to play when they're not the one talking on Jeremy Kyle.

7/10

Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare

The last time we heard from the chaps at n-Space - or at least the last time I was paying attention - was with oft-delayed Cube FPS Geist, in which you could possess dogs, cats and all sorts of other things and then sneak around and scare people. That obviously wasn't the amazing springboard to success it might have been, though, because here they are applying their talents to the DS version of a graphics-heavy console and PC first-person shooter - a task that sounds like it would be innately, er, dispiriting. Sorry.

If you're a lefty, they push the buttons to the right of the map. How thoughtful!

Not that they've done a terrible job. The controls are the now traditional d-pad or face buttons for movement and strafing (depending on whether you're left or right handed), with the shoulder buttons firing whatever you're holding and the stylus controlling head movement. 3D shoot-'em-up action happens on the top-screen and the touch-screen doubles up as a map, inventory and toggle for peering down the sights.

What with the DS being rather simple in the head, Modern Warfare here even looks a bit like Geist did, full of blocky, angular environments and characters, and explosions that look more like dancing orange spheres than bursts of fire and shrapnel.

It's certainly basic, then, and if you've never enjoyed this handheld control scheme in other FPS games then you won't start doing so here, but there's a fair amount of content for single players, and n-Space is sensible to change the pace occasionally with back-of-the-Humvee on-rails bits. You won't be eulogising set-pieces in end-of-year roundups as you would with the more modern Modern Warfare off in PS3 and Xbox 360 land, but you won't find it too annoying either, although the decision to couple a dodgier control system to a new-found need to shoot everyone four billion times before they fall over is a little confusing.

And while single- and multi-card multiplayer options are always welcome, the absence of online play is keenly felt - not just because Call of Duty is renowned for its internet action, but also because the DS has had that bar set for it once already by the still-arresting Metroid Prime: Hunters, which remains a better option for fans of Friends Codes and other Wi-Fi Connection quirks. Worth a look, then, but probably only if you're in a very exclusive set: FPS-obsessed gamers who only own a Nintendo DS.

6/10

Tony Hawk's Proving Ground

After "doing the wrong things reasonably well" in last year's Downill Jam, Vicarious Visions is back to making companion games for the real Tony Hawk series, and this latest example - based on the PS3, 360, Wii and PS2 based game of the same name - demonstrates the DS' growing aptitude for rendering proper-game graphics despite the obvious drawback of being powered by a 1980s Casio wristwatch.

Some special tricks require simple touch-screen inputs, but nothing particularly exciting. It's still more of a challenge than American Sk8land was though.

Whether this is something to be drawn in big happy red letters all over your deck or ground unhappily beneath the trucks is a fairly subjective matter; players with more Tony Hawk experience will probably tire quickly of its routine marriage of superhero skating and Simon Says tasks, but those of a less jaded hue will probably become rather enamoured with it.

It's got huge play areas, it delivers most of the THPS series' control scheme (bar some of the nattier recent additions) allowing for similar degrees of flexibility and depth in the process, and it's even part of an elaborate network system that allows for global stat-tracking, and four-player online games with voice-chat for people who have swapped Friends Codes beforehand. Even without Internets, questing for each of Proving Ground's single-player "Sick" goals will probably take you as long as Hawk's head has been warmed by 2007's money-hat.

It might have been nice to have a bit more colour to the environments, a bit less soul-crushing music and street-speak from the assembled skaters, and an interface that looked less like an MTV tribute, but you can probably forgive these things in light of just how much content you get and how fit the game is to bear its mother-series' name.

DS ports are often guilty of capturing and even exacerbating the original game's flaws without adding anything, but Proving Ground on the DS is actually slightly simpler and a bit more likable. It won't get you out of your Tony Hawk funk if you're already bored to death, but then you've already got SKATE for that so hurrah.

7/10