

- #WHY DOES GTA THE LOST AND DAMNED FULL#
- #WHY DOES GTA THE LOST AND DAMNED PLUS#
- #WHY DOES GTA THE LOST AND DAMNED DOWNLOAD#
- #WHY DOES GTA THE LOST AND DAMNED FREE#
#WHY DOES GTA THE LOST AND DAMNED FULL#
Starting with the story it must be said that it is not as engaging as GTA4, but then it is not as full a game so perhaps that is understandable.
#WHY DOES GTA THE LOST AND DAMNED PLUS#
This plus some other characters sees Johnny sucked into actions and situations that he would otherwise have avoided. In Johnny's story he has been doing good business with the gang and now the President Billy has returned from jail, hell-bent on war and destruction – threatening everything that has been built. The first extra chapter to the game sees you step into the shoes of one of the motorcycle gang "The Lost", who you will have met a few times already as he was involved in the diamond theft and double-crosses with mobster Ray. Being bad still feels pretty good.While playing Grand Theft Auto 4 you will have had contact with a lot of characters within the criminal underworld – all of whom have their own stories in this big city. Despite its occasional stumbles, “The Lost and Damned” sets a new standard for what a downloadable console add-on can achieve. I got through the main story in about 8.5 hours (and then spent about the same amount of time exploring and completing optional shootouts and races).įor $19.99, that is a great value. So while “The Lost and Damned” includes about a third as many missions as the original, it takes significantly less than a third as long to complete. It often requires you to drive a motorcycle (another contrast with the original game, in which players usually could choose from a range of vehicles), and the bikes’ handling is significantly more forgiving than in the original game. In terms of the actual mechanics of driving and shooting, it’s significantly easier than Grand Theft Auto IV. The new episode gets away from that a bit.
#WHY DOES GTA THE LOST AND DAMNED FREE#
But a vital part of the Grand Theft Auto experience has always been giving players free rein to define their own tastes and preferences. That’s fine if you like hard-core thrash metal. In “The Lost and Damned” there is no way to change the hard-core thrash metal coming from the radio in your disgusting kitchen. In Grand Theft Auto IV you could choose the overall vibe of your lifestyle (what you drive, where you live). In “The Lost and Damned,” your only beds are some ratty mattresses in a couple of filthy, run-down buildings. In Grand Theft Auto IV, you could move into a penthouse if you liked. Ultimately, this is the story of a small-time biker gang in New Jersey, little more. The writing here is as streetwise and sassy as in the original game, but perhaps it is somewhat inevitable that the scope of Johnny’s story feels much smaller and less epic than Niko’s journey last year. (The new episode will probably become available for the PlayStation 3 and PCs once Rockstar’s exclusive deal with Microsoft expires, but it is unclear when that will happen.)

Anyone who enjoys Grand Theft Auto IV should get it.įrom a business perspective, 2009 may be shaping up as the year when downloads become a viable path to develop and release significant console games if so, “The Lost and Damned” will be leading the way. But there is no question that it is the most fully realized, thoroughly produced and substantial downloadable add-on yet released for a console game. “The Lost and Damned” suffers from a few curious and unfortunate design decisions players often have less freedom than in the original that will probably prompt most to return to the original game after completing the new episode’s main story. Like the original, the new episode conveys a humor, wit, intelligence and sense of cultural satire that, although sophomoric at times, at least never takes itself too seriously. While dystopian, this vision is not nihilistic.
#WHY DOES GTA THE LOST AND DAMNED DOWNLOAD#
This week, Rockstar is releasing the first additional episode for the title as a $19.99 download available only for the Xbox 360 via Microsoft’s Xbox Live Internet service (it is not available at retail stores).Ĭalled “The Lost and Damned,” the new episode is set in the same dark, vibrant, often hilariously sarcastic version of the metropolitan New York area that provided the backdrop for, and was the most compelling element of, the original game. Grand Theft Auto IV and its tale of the Balkan immigrant Niko Bellic were a revelation last year. A scene from the new episode of Grand Theft Auto IV.
