Of course, it doesn't mean that you can start trying other ways of playing only after you have mastered engraving and sliding. In the novice period, you can practice jumping such as head-tail balance, pop, ollie, nollie, etc. in the non-sliding state on the flat ground, which will be helpful to improve your board control ability and experience skiing fun. After reaching the level that you can change the blade smoothly on any snowy road and slow down the brakes, try jumping and turning in the taxi, or try simple props on the platform. Ensuring safety and step by step is the only way to play any sport. Have a nice skiing.
The only skating competition is the steeplechase, and the platform event needs to ensure the speed, so it needs to take off with a blade. The game you said should be a chase. If you sculpt and skate, you need the width of the field. The terrain of the chase is not suitable for skating like that. Skiing is always a pleasure. Nobody said it had to be engraved. You can also play fly bags, swing bars, flat flowers and so on. Many mountain conditions do not allow carving it. Just slide happily in different snow trails and control your direction and speed freely. I feel that there are two roads to veneer, one is freestyle and the other is carved and slippery. Chasing is in between. If everyone likes to play around, so be it. All the masters I have seen are double degrees.
Carving slip is an extreme form of sliding, which can experience strong centrifugal force. Mastering carving and sliding proves that you can control the deformation of the board to the extreme, use the force you exert on the board to change the radian of the board, and the edge will take you forward and turn. The whole board touching the snow one by one is caused by the influence of the track and the content of the competition. Skiing is dangerous, so you need to study carefully. Beginners learn to control the speed step by step, slide smoothly, and there are few scenes of the whole board.