Grand theft auto iv liberty city
This game isn't the best of games but for the price, it is a very good deal. There is also new weapons in both games which are fun to use. In this one, you can participate in "drug wars" where you make drug deals and such. You feel closer to the character than you do in the Lost and the Dammed. You play Gay Tony's assistant, Lusis Lopez. I haven't played online with this one yet so I can't comment on it but, I heard lots of wonderful things about it and can't wait to try it. In this one, it is going to take some effort to get knocked off 'em. It is really hard to fall off these things now, I remember in GTA 4 were you could barely touch a car and go flying 10 feet. The motorcycle's are easier to ride now also which is a nice thing. A positive part to this one is you can participate in gang wars now. The gameplay is 6-15 hours long on this one. Johnny isn't a likable character and the missions aren't entertaining for the most part. You play as Johnny from "The Lost Motorcycle Club" in the Lost of the Dammed.
Guns are similar to The lost and damned but at the same time there are little bit of new ones that are intense like sticky bombs, M60's, P90's and more! Once again there are ten trophy's to work for and extra's like pigeon tracking, fight clubs (become the champ) base jumping (pretty fun to do and challenging) and drug wars (you and your friends steal H from others to improve your business, up to fifty drug wars.Liberty City Liberty City. Like base jumping onto an enemies building, riding on the top of a train, controlling a buzzard (military helicopter) to destruct anything in your path. In my opinion this game is the best out of the two, Each mission give off a good old crazy and wacky vibe of last generation of Grand theft auto games. Experience the story of Luis Lopez, part-time hoodlum and full-time assistant to legendary nightclub impresario Tony Prince. Liberty City's four boroughs, as well as the adjacent state of Alderney correspond to. The Ballad of Gay Tony injects Liberty City with an overdose of guns, glitz and grime. The Grand Theft Auto IV (also featured in The Lost and Damned, The Ballad of Gay Tony and Grand Theft Auto: Chinatown Wars) rendition is portrayed as a caricature of New York City, with Liberty City's landmarks and geography based heavily on New York City's. The Ballad of Gay Tony follows the exploits of a new protagonist, Luis Fernando Lopez, an associate of a Dominican street gang and the personal bodyguard of Anthony "Gay Tony" Prince. There are about five trophy's to obtain and somewhere around forty pigeons. The city itself is pretty much the same, little minor and unnoticeable details are within and that's it. Once the player has completed a certain amount of them, weapons spawn in either the clubhouse and/or safe house depending on how far the player has progressed in the story, and every subsequent 10 gang wars up to 50, a new weapon will spawn, there are also biker races. Another addition to The Lost and Damned is gang wars. Terry, for instance, will drive to a location near to Johnny and sell him weapons and armor, while Clay can deliver a bike of the player's choice to a nearby area. You are able to telephone various members of the Lost to provide assistance. However, his way of handling vehicles is less proficient than the way he handles any motorcycle. Additions to the game include new weapons, such as a grenade launcher, Automatic Pistol, half of a pool cue and pipe bombs, as well as sawn-off and automatic shotguns and new vehicles, such as Johnny's custom-made motorcycle. The Lost and Damned features similar game play to Grand Theft Auto IV. Johnny finds himself in the middle of a vicious turf war with rival gangs for control of a city torn apart by violence and corruption. In The Lost and Damned, experience Liberty City as Johnny, a veteran member of The Lost, a notorious bike r gang. The reason for it's low score, each story is told from a different character's perspective during the events of the original Grand theft auto game. The story line's are fairly short compared to other Grand theft auto games, on both episodes the amount of missions range up to the mid twenty's.
Note that if anything, don't buy just one of the episodes over the PSN, you must have both episodes to get the experience because one of the games on their own doesn't justify the fun.
For forty bucks it's just about worth the purchase.
Grand theft auto IV: Episodes from Liberty City has two games within it on one disc, it's stand alone and does not require the original Grand theft auto to play. Episodes from Liberty City packs a little extra.