Friday, April 18, 2008

Grand Theft Auto IV


Reviews
Rockstar's approach to showing the new GTA to the world is going to be different than before. "We gave a lot of access and a lot of information away about San Andreas in the months leading up to its release, to a point where, on reflection, we thought perhaps we didn't leave enough for the gamers to discover themselves. With GTA4 our approach is going to be slightly different - we're going to make sure there are surprises."


Grand Theft Auto IV is a new story about an immigrant arriving in Rockstar's version of New York, Liberty City, how this outsider exists and survives in an alien, foreign world, and how that world reacts to and interacts with the player. "With GTA4 we do believe we're creating something wholly new and unique."


The game's main protagonist, Niko Bellic, is an Eastern European that arrives in Liberty City on a boat. He's led a pretty dark, difficult and shady life and gets lured to Liberty City by his cousin Roman who says he'll have a chance to live the American Dream. Roman tempts him with promises of extreme wealth and houses with women and Jacuzzis - but it turns out to be a pack of lies. The truth is, Roman's got a fairly humble taxi depot business, he's got mounting debts, and he's attracting a lot of hostile attention from some unsavoury characters. He's not walking into the life of riches and glamour he was promised - and pretty soon, players will start to learn that his past is going to catch up with him.


So, is this new GTA storyline still going to be one main story thread? After all, for some GTA critics, it was always something of a stumbling block in previous games that things were presented as being all about freedom, yet, if you want to actually play through the game, you pretty much have to follow one storyline that then funnels you down one path - there aren't multiple endings or anything like that.


Cars driving past really sound - and feel - like they're going past you, as the engine rumbles and the car's blaring music fades in and out. If a car suddenly brakes nearby, you don't need to see it to know it happened. The varying volume and intensity of car horns and the constant hum of traffic noise is transfixing to listen to, and the frequent deafening rattle of trains hurtling through the subway honestly make this city sound as real as the ones we live and breathe in.
Even the surfaces you walk on - regular sidewalk or a pebbly area - sound different and real.


The animation, in general, has been massively improved from the previous games. Niko's analogue-driven walking animation is fluid and real at different paces, and the standing still "waiting" animation that every game character has had since forever is in there. When he (or other pedestrians) get hit by a car, the crumpling of the body is convincing and quite alarming. "He's actually got a skeleton now," Brown points out. Approaching a car, Niko first attempts to get the door open with a couple of tugs. Finding it locked, he repositions himself to smash the window and open the door to get in - it's all really nicely animated. There'll be plenty of new car-jacking and hot-wiring animations, according to Rockstar.


And in general, the variety in traffic on the road - vehicle type and style - is such that you can see a whole lot more than just the basic make and colour of each car, like you put up with from a last-gen GTA. Traffic looks pretty much like it does in a real city.



GTA has always had the best cruise and chase driving mechanics around, and Rockstar says it's now further enhanced by utilising a brand new "vehicle physics package" - the idea is that it subtly improves the handling by adding a little bit more control and weight, while vehicles will also respond perfectly to the undulations in the road - indeed, we can see every tiny bump and shake of the car as it passes over this city back street we're slowly cruising down.


Summary
For Niko Bellic, fresh off the boat from Europe, it is the hope he can escape his past. For his cousin, Roman, it is the vision that together they can find fortune in Liberty City, gateway to the land of opportunity. As they slip into debt and are dragged into a criminal underworld by a series of shysters, thieves and sociopaths, they discover that the reality is very different from the dream in a city that worships money and status, and is heaven for those who have them and a living nightmare for those who don't.

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