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Grand Theft Auto IV (PS3) | 
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| From: Rockstar Category: Video Games
List Price: £49.99 Buy New: £34.90 You Save: £15.09 (30%)
New (38) Used (4) from £34.90
Rating: 79 reviews Sales Rank: 3
Platform: Playstation 3 Rating: Suitable for 18 years and over ESRB: Adults Only Media: Video Game Number Of Items: 1 Age: 11 - 18 years Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.7 Dimensions (in): 6.6 x 5.4 x 0.5
MPN: ZED-GTAIV_PS3 EAN: 5026555400213 ASIN: B000E6HH74
Release Date: April 29, 2008 (New: Last 30 Days) Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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Amazon.co.uk What does the American Dream mean today?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.Beginning with the 1997 release of the original Grand Theft Auto, the GTA series has been one of the most prolific, controversial and down right entertaining franchises in video games history. This pedigree of success guarantees that the highly anticipated eleventh game in the series, Grand Theft Auto IV, will garner at least as much attention if not more. 
Return to Liberty City. |  The dream as Niko expected it. View larger. |  There's always a catch. View larger. |  But some skills are international. View larger. | The Plot Grand Theft Auto IV is a brand new adventure in the GTA universe following the experiences of Nikolai "Niko" Bellic, a new immigrant from an undisclosed eastern European country whose troubled pa st and the persuasion of his cousin Roman have brought him to the fictional Liberty City. Unfortunately, Niko's search for the American Dream and a much needed fresh start, hits an immediate snag when the rags to riches story Roman spun to pique Niko's interest is exposed as not only a complete fabrication, but a ploy to enlist Niko's well-known skills as a tough guy against the ample list of enemies clamouring for Roman's debt-ridden blood. Because Roman is the only person Niko knows in Liberty City he begrudgingly accepts his role as Roman's protector despite the deception. But as time goes on Niko comes into his own, and his experience on the wrong side of the tracks proves more valuable than he could have ever imagined as he fights for survival and later supremacy on the crime ridden streets of Liberty City.Game Environments Based on several of the boroughs of New York City and parts of New Jersey, Liberty City, familiar to players of previous games in the series, has been entirely redesigned for GTA IV. Players can expect visible detail down to the weeds growing in the cracks in the sidewalk, cars and buildings of visibly different ages and a much greater level if verticality in the buildings and bridges that they are able to explore as Niko moves through the city streets. In addition, pedestrians in GTA IV are much more realistic. No longer simply moving cardboard cut-outs, these NPCs are intelligent, modern, human representations that laugh, cry, eat, drink, use cell phones and ATMs, and talking amongst themselves regardless of Niko's interaction with them. Gameplay Historically GTA games have focused heavily on mission-based play, requiring successful completion of fixed tasks in order for players to progress through the game, but this has changed to a great extent in GTA IV. Players will experience an entirely new and exciting emphasis centred on the blending of on-mission and off-mission play, resulting not only in an increased sense of realism, but more interesting and unrestricted gameplay. Features Aside from the car jacking and a detailed city environment here are the new features for GTA IV: - Improved combat system - Now you can use cover and also a target lock system, which allows you to take out targets with greater ease and accuracy. Plus, you can engage in some hand-to-hand combat if you can't get your hands on a piece quick enough.
- Cell phone - Not just for basic phone calls anymore. Use your in-game cell phone to receive missions via SMS, snap photos, and ZiT (tag) songs that can be downloaded exclusively on Amazon.com/mp3.
- Free time - In between missions you can take advantage of "me" time. There are gentleman's clubs, comedy clubs, bowling alleys, and bars, which all house unique activities.
- Take a break from the storyline - A variety of side missions allow you to help run a car service, "borrow" cop cars, assassinate targets, help solve problems for those on the street, or take to the air with stunt jumps that are scattered all over the city.
- Control your own fate - Throughout the game choice moments will arrive causing you to make a decision that will affect relationships and money.
Multiplayer Give Niko a rest and create your own multiplayer "hero." GTA has added multiplayer modes allowing you to take your creation out to play online in competitive, co-op, and free form modes. Competitive mode has you fighting against the cops, jacking cars, or racing to finish odd jobs. Co-op challenges you and your friends with various tasks including Hangman's NOOSE where you are responsible for escorting a wanted kingpin to a safe extraction point. Freeform lets you and 15 others lose on Liberty City. Use this mode to hit up the bar and play virtual darts versus each other or head out to the streets and set up your own drag races. If you can dream it, you can do it in Freeform mode.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 74 more reviews...
From a 'non-gaming' gamer - GTAIV May 13, 2008 Mr. T. P. Jepson (Leicester) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Only a short one. I'm not a dedicated or committed gamer by any means; yeah, I like the odd RPG on the PS3, but I don't go in for the whole 'this game rules, your game sucks' warfare! GTAIV, however, has struck me as something that I would happily waste countless hours playing. It looks great, the controls (as sluggish as they are on occasion) are easy to use, and the gameplay is FUN (hear that, kids? I actually used the word FUN when talking about a GAME!). No, I wouldn't let anyone (anyone) under the age of 18 play this game as the content is some of the strongest that I have seen in any videogame (A warning to those parents who think that it is 'just a game' - this is violent, sweary, hooker-picky-uppy stuff. Do you want your kids making conscious descisions to do that?). For grownups who work full-time and want a bit of escapism, however, this title is just the ticket! Crackin' stuff. Just what the PS3 was made for!
Stop There You Whining Little Maggots May 13, 2008 Elvis P (North, UK) 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
If I hear one more reviewer crying like a little girl cause he can't "go to the gym" in this version like you could in San Andreas... Well carry on playing San Andreas and working out in your beloved virtual gym, whilst the rest of us push on forward with next generation gaming. I've been playing video games since back in the days of Manic Miner and I can safely say that GTA IV is trully a masterpiece that will be remembered for years to come as a GROUNDBREAKING GAME. I am really astonished by peoples reactions on here... the amount of love and attention that has gone into this game and all people can moan about is the fact that its not like the other GTA's. No it's not - it's bigger, better and more realsitic than it's predecessors. Get over it. Start a Grand Theft Auto Fundamentalist Club and you can all have a good natter about the good old days of 2D video gaming. For the rest of us gamers (ie. not those who complete the full game in about eight hours - you know us normal folk who treat gaming as a bit of fun between bouts of real life) then this game rocks. 10 OUT OF 10
I agree, save your money May 13, 2008 Harry Holiday 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
see the review,so get the game.The first day was fun, but start to get a bit bored. My main concern is the game is aging, the story line and the graphic are poor for a PS3 game, check devil may cry4's graphic, it is much better for the next generation. Well, only my opinion.
A new era has begun...apparently. May 12, 2008 Dan Morgan-kane (U.K.) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Being one of the three hundred reviewers previously mentioned, I felt it necessary to have a good crack at GTA IV first, and listen to some other perspectives before largely slating this game, which was what I was about to do. Because, initially, I found myself particularly underwhelmed with GTA IV. I seemed to spend the whole time (first night) slothing around with Niko's annoying cousin Roman, saving his skin and popping off his enemies with little conscience. You see, the problem with the GTA series, is that the 'sims on wheels, guns and drugs' style of gaming that I've become accustomed to has been, largely, stripped. It is about Niko, not you. You can't go around buying which houses YOU like, you can't go around customising cars the way YOU like, and you can't have the girlfriends YOU like. You have to start (and finish) things in an unceremoniously grotty manner, and according (largely) to how Niko would do things. Even his European accent can at some stages make you want to grate your teeth. It seems to be case of better technical depth, in exchange for the experience. This put me off for quite some time after I bought it and, as I'd done with San Andreas, nearly sold it after only a short time playing it. Another area I found to be somewhat irritating was the number of people Niko meets. He seems, initially, to be just stuck with only with a few, annoying, useless allies, and then all of a sudden you get invaded with all of these characters and their life stories. The shooting system, in my opinion, is improved from the previous titles, but nothing revolutionary. However, it is still satisfying to pick a precise shot with the PSG-1, and even more so when you take down a chopper with an RPG-7. But in the long run, I found it to be, for the most part, somewhat monotonous. Mission after mission of going into buildings and wiping out lots of trash-talking bad boys who think that their inconsistent trigger finger is going to out-gun your M4 left me feeling a bit deflated. I didn't know what I was expecting, but what seemed like more of the same with better graphics and no parachuting wasn't what I was hoping for. I found myself simply pushing to finish it and move on; and I still haven't quite got over that. But I have learned get over most of my jitters about this game, and to appreciate the finer things in GTA IV, such as the depth of Liberty City; whilst I feel a bit 'boxed in' compared to San Andreas, it is simply exhaustive. It must've taken, what seemed like, forever to get every shop and every street light positioned and ready for exploration. I have also learned to appreciate the delicacies of the SIXAXIS function, and the handling that feels much less arcade-y, and much deeper and simulative, and yet still quite fun. It is actually quite rewarding to burn rubber and escape a three-star manhunt. The story, whilst in a generally more linear game, does actually seem to leave more room for the player to input themselves into, which is strange, but also a comfort from a fear of a do-this-do-that style of game. There are a few great twists that can really hook you in, and which is one of this game's strengths. The characters have depth, some are irritating (which I feel contributed to my lethargy towards this game), some you look up to and some you can't help but just lol at. It seems to run on a similar engine to GTA III, but it's much better, and more malleable. I guess the underlying point of this review is to point out that GTA IV is what it is, and (if you're like me) it's up to you to come to the table and enjoy yourself. If you are looking to hit the gym, order salad and have a little you run around the new Liberty city, then you are likely to be let down. If you're hoping to spend most of your time playing with a vast library of toys and side quests, you are likely to be let down. But I've hardly stopped playing this game since I got it. With brilliant presentation, a new next-generation experience via an epic story on an epic stage, Rockstar have done alright.
one of the best gta May 11, 2008 Mr. Philip I. Pottinger (oxfordshire) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
this is far most the best gta ive played got on day it came out am now happy that have finished the game was a good challage four me took 8 days to complete but still worth the money lots to do in game to keep u busy good cut scenes and good story hope to see a gta 5 and hope it will be more of a challange than this one
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