The game is fully tested & guaranteed to work. It’s the cartridge / disc only unless otherwise specified. here
Wreckin Crew Sony Playstation Game
PRODUCT DETAILS
UPC:016685084266
Condition:Used
Genre:Action & Adventure
Platform:Playstation 1
Region:NTSC (N. America)
ESRB:Teen
SKU:PS1_WRECKIN_CREW
———This game is fully cleaned, tested & working. Includes the Disc/Cartridge Only. May have some minor scratches/scuffs.This description was last updated on October 28th, 2020. here
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Avon Gale & Piper Vaughn are back again with their second book in the Hat Trick series. This book is full of actual hockey (seems silly to mention, but I’ve seen a lot of books tagged as a hockey romance with out the hockey) , and these authors know their stuff! The two MCs are battling out for the starting goalie position, so there’s def some hot hate s*x scenes, if that’s your thing. I think this book really hit it’s mark. I thoroughly enjoyed the story and am already looking forward to what’s to come next from these authors. They are becoming a One-click for me, for sure.
This was a damned fun read!!!Thank you authors for providing us with two MCs of color! Diversity is sorely lacking in this romance sub genre and I heartily applaud the inclusion of people of color! ðŸ‘ðŸ‘ðŸ‘ðŸ‘I’m a huge fan of sports romances. My favorite of all is HOCKEY! Avon Gale is one of my favorite hockey MM romance writers and I gobble up everything she writes. This book was no different. I couldn’t finish it fast enough!!!After reading the first one in the series, I was hoping that this follow up would give me more. More heat, more likeable characters, more hockey. I got all of that!!Two goalies. One competition for the starting job. One goalie is a loud, out and proud, bisexual cockier than anything sizzling hot black man. He’s fresh up from the minors starting his rookie year in the NHL. The other goalie is an introverted, closeted, cool and collected J-pop stylin’ Japanese American hottie.They hate each other from the get go. So of course they decide that the best way to blow off steam from the stress of competing for the top goalie spot is to jump into bed—no strings attached. What a joy it is to see Ryu boss Emmitt around in bed. Our quiet goalie is all sorts of controlling!🔥🔥🔥Well, the sex gets hot, heavy and messy, and tangles up the guys in feelings. Feelings they try to ignore. When that doesn’t work, they try to hide them from each other, because they are too competitive to give in first and admit these feelings.Things happen. Hockey things and feeling a explode an.
I liked Goalie Interference, but, as with the first book in the series, I feel like it is a little lacking in the romance department.I really enjoy the enemies to lovers trope, and the setup here is perfect. Ryu and Emmitt are very different in terms of their personalities, with Ryu being disciplined and self-contained and Emmitt being a cocky showboat. More importantly, though, they competing for the goalie position on their hockey team. Lots of inherent conflict there!The authors did an excellent job bringing the two of them together in a way that feel realistic for the characters. Primarily they bridge the gap through Ryu and Emmitt’s shared love of hockey and their shared passion for being a goalie. The fact that they are teammates who both want their team to succeed also helps them connect, because while they may be competing for a position, they’re still invested in each other’s success. Similarities in terms of family issues help build their relationship, too.There’s a lot of discussion of hockey and what it’s like to be a part of a hockey team in the book, and that part is very well done. There are also some fairly steamy scenes that add heat to the story. However, I felt like the romance between the two men could have been more developed on the page. The reader gets told that their feelings are deepening, but rather than internal monologues about how they feel, I wanted more scenes where we see the two of them interacting outside of having sex or talking/playing hock.
I feel I need to start this review with a couple of disclaimers: 1) I am a HUGE hockey fan and have been for over 35 years and 2) I think hockey goaltenders are pretty much gods. This may or may not have affected my opinion of this but…which I loved, unexpectedly. I wasn’t really interested in Ryu from book one and while I’m a big fan of Ms. Gale’s, I’ve been hit or miss with Ms. Vaughn.This can be read as a standalone although Tristan and Sebastian are in this book quite a bit.Ryu and Emmitt’s initial animosity is passionate which of course translated perfectly to the bedroom. At first glance, this appears to also be an opposites attract story but as we get to know both characters we can see they come from similar backgrounds and upbringing. Ryu’s not surprising but Emmitt’s dad made me angry…although living in Texas I see that type of behavior all the time. Football is king here, everything else is just a leisure activity. I was surprised at the glimpses of gentleness between these – how good they are at it and how much it worked for them. I really like them together and hope we see more of them in future installments of this series.I was pleasantly surprised by how the goalie competition was handled and while the outcome was as expected, there were a couple of shockers along the way. There was one scene in particular that played out as expected but I would have been sorely disappointed (and probably would have thrown my Kindle in a fit of rage) had it not happened exactly.
An incredibly interesting, exciting, hot and sexy story featuring two goalies—both playing for the same team. Competition? Yes, loads. Sexual attraction? Just as much. From the moment I picked this up and started to read, I couldn’t put it down. The excitement and tension surrounding not only the relationship between the goalies, but also the hockey games and potential to go all the way to the Stanley Cup, kept me riveted.Both MCs are men of color in a traditionally white player’s sport. Not that pro sports isn’t changing, but for now it’s best to keep their sexuality to themselves. Both men show support for young persons of color to pursue their dreams in professional sports, with a special emphasis on their support for hockey.Ryu Mori grew up with Japanese traditions as the son of a surgeon—his mother—and a skating coach—his father, who is also a former Olympic Medalist figure skater. From the moment he first tried hockey, he knew it would be his life. And though his parents didn’t actively encourage him in the sport, they did encourage him to be perfect at whatever he does. Emmitt Armstrong grew up as the son of a former pro football player who wanted him to follow in his footsteps and never acknowledged his preferred professional career in hockey. His only interest is football—for himself and for Emmitt. Divorced, both parents now live in different states, and Emmitt chose to live in the Chicago area with his mother, who supports his career wholeheartedly, cheering him on.
Oh, it’s been too long since I’ve read an Avon Gale–Piper Vaughn book. They’re the gold standard of m/m hockey romance for me, and Goalie Interference didn’t disappoint. I loved the enemies-to-lovers (while still remaining rivals) progression, and the secondary characters (with bonus updates on past protagonists) sparkled. My only complaint is that after a delicious buildup, the last… 20%? felt rushed to me. I’d have been delighted with another several chapters with a lot more hockey and a lot more relationship-building. That said, what *was* on the page was excellent, and I’m looking forward to finding time to go back and reread what came before.My thanks to A Novel Take PR for an advance copy of this book.
Book 2 from a series which can read as a stand-alone.The main characters from book 1 are also in this story but more as secondary among others.Emmitt is the new goalie and it seems Ryu, who is already the goalie, got competition.Ryu got a strong aversion against Emmit. There is a lot of tension and the best way to get rid of that is to blow off the steam occasionally, with the other.When occasionally turns into regularly and hate turns into something else they even work out as dual goalies. Until their coach put a halt and tells them only one will play and the other occasional. Emmitt wants to be the one and no way they can have any sort of relationship.“We’re not talking, you’re monologuing,â€I really enjoyed this one. Is was about more than only the two men. There are family matters, team members, especially Morley, who I loved. Maybe he will have the next book?Ryu in the closet felt a bit unnecessary, it didn’t have a real dealing part in this story.For me, I would have loved a more defined end.Is was an entertaining story, nicely captivating written. Overall a good addition to the series.
This is one of those books that I don’t think would have worked if there was only one POV. Especially since Ryu and Emmitt had very strong feelings about each other in the beginning – and not the romantic kind. It would have been hard to sympathize with either character if you only saw things from one of them.In order to chose a starter for the Venom, their coaches pitted them against each other. Ryu felt cheated out of a position he thought he had worked hard to earn. Emmitt wanted to prove himself to his new team and earning a starting position would do that for him. A friendship between these two rivals seemed impossible, but a romance… regardless of their initial feelings toward each other, the physical attraction couldn’t be ignored.Ryu came from a family of over achievers. They weren’t opposed to anything that Ryu decided to do with his life as long as he did his best – and was the best at what he did. They were kind of passive in their disapproval when they directed it toward him, but even if others didn’t notice, it was always clear to him. Emmitt had a mom who was super supportive and a dad who wasn’t. His dad never forgave him for choosing hockey over following his footsteps in football. They both felt like at times that they didn’t quite measure up.One quick hook-up wasn’t enough, but they also had to be careful. They were still part of a world that wasn’t easy to “come-out†in. Regardless, once they got a taste of how things could be, they both realized that they.
I love this series and really liked Ryu in Tristan’s book and was so glad he got his own HEA. This is definitely a different angle of two goalies on the same team falling for each other but for Ryu and Emmett, it worked. Can’t wait to see who’s in the next book!
I love the hockey in this series. Sports themed m/m is my favorite, especially hockey, and the authors clearly know their sport. That may not sound like a big deal, but for a huge hockey fan and general sports nerd, it’s hard to enjoy a book, no matter how well written, when the reference to a line change or a playoff series only make sense in an alternate universe where the NHL has a completely different set of basic rules. I love that the hockey in both Off The Ice and Goalie Interference is so well done to match the overall writing. The story, the dialogue, it all works for me. I love the background of the two characters we see, especially their families and their upbringings. I appreciated the community outreach, and how in this dream of a goalie tandem with both goalies being men of color, they recognize the players who came before them (love the Grant Fuhr poster!); their own position given kids who look up to them and could decide to play as a result; the acknowledgement that the NHL, and hockey in general, still has SO far to go with diversity in every sense of the term. I liked seeing a bit more of Tristan and Seb in this book, too. Hope there’s more to come in the Hat Trick series! I wouldn’t mind seeing more of what makes Morley tick.