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10 years later, Grand Theft Auto 3 still matters to me

Channel5
Thursday, October 27, 2011
EDITOR'S NOTEfrom Eduardo Moutinho

Few titles have truly blown me away during my game-playing life. I'm talking holy-crap-watershed-moment type of blown away. Grand Theft Auto 3 falls into that category. And with the maybe-not-so-coincidental alignment of GTA 3's 10-year anniversary and recent announcement of a new installment in the series, now's a great time to reminisce.

I remember the first time I played Grand Theft Auto 3. I was hanging out at my friend Tino's house. He was glued to the TV playing the game on his PS2. I saw him in a car driving around a city. I noticed how there weren't any boundaries restricting him from where he could go. He was free to go wherever he wanted. "This isn't a racing game," I said to myself.

"What is this?" I asked.

"Grand Theft Auto," Tino said.

For real? The Grand Theft Auto I remembered was the game with the overhead view and annoying radio stations. The Grand Theft Auto I knew was the one where you had to hold X to walk and the missions were hard. I wasn't a fan of the series to that point. I pretty much wrote it off as too complicated for my 12-year-old self to understand, but Tino said this cool game he was playing was part of the same franchise.

 

"Can I play?" I asked.

"Yeah," Tino replied.

I picked up the controller and began driving a Kuruma around Chinatown.

"Press L2," Tino suggested.

I pressed it and noticed the camera shifting to look out the left window of the car.

"Alright, now hold L2 and press O," he continued.

That was the moment I fell in love with Grand Theft Auto 3. Something about being able to do drive-bys just blew me away. I had a feeling that this game was a classic. I realized then that it was time to jump into the next generation of video games. No more N64. It was time for a PlayStation 2.

I had to wait a few months to finally get my own PS2, but it was all good. Not too long after I played the game at Tino's house, more of my friends had copies of GTA 3. It got to the point where you had to have played the game to be cool in my middle school. I would sleep over at people's houses just so we could play GTA 3 all night. I remember one night when my buddy Tom and I jammed to Rise FM for like two hours. We put Claude in a car and just zoned out to the six songs on that radio station.

Grand Theft Auto 3 became so popular that by the time I went to buy it four months later, I had to bring my mother because the lady at Toys "R" Us said I was too young to get it myself. It's crazy because I could have bought Halo: Combat Evolved, which had the same rating, with no problems. At the time, Toys "R" Us had games on shelves, so all you had to do was bring one to a register to purchase it. With GTA 3, I remember having to go to customer service and specifically ask for the title.

I didn't want the game because of the controversy surrounding it. I wanted it because it was incredibly fun. If it was boring but still naughty, I don't think anybody would care enough to want to play it. Instead it's this phenomenal release that just so happens to have drugs, violence, and prostitutes. And that's not my fault.

On this 10-year anniversary of Rockstar's Liberty City epic, I wonder when that next landmark game will arrive. A game that creates a new genre and gets it right. An original game that inspires copycats both good and bad but never better. A game that every player knows about. A game that unites us. It'll be here one day.

Happy birthday Grand Theft Auto 3. You changed everything.

 
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Comments (6)
Wah
October 27, 2011

Time to dust off the PS2. Certainly a timely article as we stare down the barrell of a GTA 5 release.

And 12-years-old? Seriously? Thanks for making me feel old. I'm gonna go cry into my chamomile now. Jesus, it's drafy in here... Where's my SWEATER!?

Channel5
October 27, 2011

I was actually 13 when GTA III came out. I was in 7th grade I believe... or was it 8th? Yeah it was 8th grade cause I got a PS2 for my 14th birthday and bought GTA with some money I had.

100media_imag0065
October 28, 2011

Great read...although I wish I could be there with you and everyone else in nostalgia town.

I never could get into them. I love open world games, but the GTA games never did it for me. It's the controls that does them in. A lock-on in any 3D action/shooter game is a death sentence in my book. If other 3D action games don't need a lock-on, then GTA has absolutely no excuse. It is lazy programming. And if you turn it off your welcomed to some of the worst aiming in any action game of the last 2 decades. This goes for Red Dead Redemption as well.

I kept trying to get into them. I played GTA 3. I played Vice City. I played San Andreas. I played the two PSP spin offs. I played GTA4. I played Chinatown Wars and I tried Red Dead Redemption. Every single time, I just got so bored so quickly I just couldn't stand it any more. I know a lot of people who love the series and I don't fault them for it. I love games that other people hate as well. I can only hope that Rockstar actually tries to marry a good story with good gameplay mechanics this time instead of one or the other.

Give me variety in the missions. Give me shooting mechanics that don't need a lock-on due to lazy programming. Give me characters that aren't stereotypes. Give me a story that isn't Scarface repackaged 6 times. Give me an open world with things to do in it, instead of GTA4 which had a few pieces of paper floating in the air in an alley or two and literally nothing else.

I want so badly to love these games, but I just think plenty of other open world games can do open world better than Rockstar. Oh boy and don't get me started on the animations in GTA4 which force you to wait for the animations to finish, which makes it feel like you are controlling a tank for the whole game.

There is nothing worse than an animator/developer so in love with their animations that they force you to sit through them even when you don't want to. It wasn't as bad as Lost Planet, but it was close.

Channel5
October 29, 2011

I'm not a fan of some popular series as well. I want to like Metroid Prime & God of War, but I just can't. I have a better chance of picking up Dark Souls, which probably isn't gonna happen.

I thought Grand Theft Auto IV vastly improved on the shooting mechanics in the series. I turned auto-aim off and never looked back. I took pride in my ability to get head shots. The auto aim looks silly now that I look at it. I thought it worked in the older GTA's though. I remember having more of a run and gun approach to GTA on the PS2. Aiming in Chinatown Wars was nuts. Having to use your finger to point where you wanted to shoot was crazy. If Rockstar puts GTA 3 on the 3DS (which they should,) I hope they don't use the same shooting mechanics as Chinatown.

I didn't like Read Dead Redemption either. I got tired of listening to stories while I rode a horse. I actually don't care to know how the game ends. I'll just assume they lived happily ever after.

I thought LA Noire was a great game. The way the game is presented is great. One of the few games where I followed the story from beginning to end on the first playthrough without drifting off. That game is really one of a kind.

What opened world games do you think are better than Rockstars? I think Saint's Row does a good job at expanding on what Grand Theft Auto used to be. I think Rockstar raised the bar for what an open world sandbox game could be with GTA IV. I'm eager to see what's in store for Saint's Row 3.

You could skip cutscenes in GTA IV. That's what I do whenever I play the game now. I like how you can skip driving by taking a taxi to wherever you want to go. I like how whenever I took a taxi with this guy Muhammed we'd have the funniest conversations. I learned a learned a lot about a bunch of characters in Liberty City. I love that place.

Pict0079-web
October 29, 2011

I didn't play my first 3D Grand Theft Auto until a year ago, when I played San Andreas. I still have problems with the odd glitches in the mission system, but it was very unique. I don't think I've ever played a game that permitted me to keep cars and motorcycles in my own garage. On top of that, I could fulfill random missions just because I had a police car or a fire truck.

All the possibilities really impressed me. My downloadable version for the XBOX 360 had a choppy frame rate, but it was still a great game to mess around with.

Even to this day, I think GTA: San Andreas impressed me more than any other sandbox game. Mass Effect 1 might have allowed me to explore planets and endure intense, story-driven missions. However, GTA: San Andreas allowed me to cruise down the streets, bumping G-funk rap on my radio and shooting down hoodlums dressed in purple.

Oh, and I guess I have to play the other 3D GTA games eventually. But GTA: San Andreas is still incredibly fun.

Channel5
October 29, 2011

San Andreas is dope. The trade in value on that game is still pretty good. That'd be a good game to keep in my collection. I just might have to download it.

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