Recuerdo cuando mi padre me lo compró, valían 5 bolívares... Baratísimo, no jodo, barato.
Era un día lluvioso cuando llegó a casa con el juego, me lo dio, lo puse, me puse a jugar, mi padre con cara de decepción me mira y me dice "eso es lo que te compré???" y yo "siiiiiiii", en mis pobres 10 años no entendí, y a mis 26 años pues como que entiendo un poco porque la cara, pero te garantizo disfruté como animal el juego haha gracias pae xoxo
Era un día lluvioso cuando llegó a casa con el juego, me lo dio, lo puse, me puse a jugar, mi padre con cara de decepción me mira y me dice "eso es lo que te compré???" y yo "siiiiiiii", en mis pobres 10 años no entendí, y a mis 26 años pues como que entiendo un poco porque la cara, pero te garantizo disfruté como animal el juego haha gracias pae xoxo
Whilst I accept this iteration does somewhat improve on the original those improvements are minimal and I always felt the writing in the first was sharper, and it is the writing that to this day I find most compelling about GTA.
I actually played the expansion for the original GTA (GTA London 1969) more than this on release, I suppose because I was enamoured with the idea having so rarely seen my own country featured in a game - so I admit of all the games in the GTA series this is the one I remember least.
I actually played the expansion for the original GTA (GTA London 1969) more than this on release, I suppose because I was enamoured with the idea having so rarely seen my own country featured in a game - so I admit of all the games in the GTA series this is the one I remember least.
A nominal improvement over its predecessor in-terms of polish and control, though its gameplay loop and map are still a bit dull if the original didn't win you over with its formula or concept. GTAIII feels like it has more in-common with Body Harvest on the N64 which I could see more fans of modern GTA being able to appreciate over the archaic and primitive top-down entries on PS1.