IOI Partners and Build A Rocket Boy have lifted the curtain on MindsEye, a narrative-driven single-player game helmed by Leslie Benzies, the visionary director behind the Grand Theft Auto series.
It is as you were for GTA Online. If you haven’t picked up the behemoth that is Grand Theft Auto V by now - or indeed have no interest - then there will not be anything new here to convince you.
What was once the standard-bearer for open-worlds has been overshadowed in the near decade since its first release. Grand Theft Auto V still holds up really well, but playing it now does feel like stepping into a time machine, such is the way that real-world and video game development has changed in the years since.
The star-studded titles that are Grand Theft Auto V and GTA Online have made their way onto a third generation of consoles, despite being nearly a decade old now. That’s right, proud owners of the Xbox Series X|S or PS5 can today head back to Los Santos (or get involved for the first time) on the most powerful of machines.
Grand Theft Auto: The Trilogy- Definitive Edition on Xbox is an overpriced and poorly produced release which does absolutely no favours to the classic games it attempts to celebrate. The experience here is far from definitive, and aside from the sheer laziness in the graphical remastering and performance, it introduces a whole slew of performance issues.
If Skyrim can be released for the hundredth time, making the most of the next-gen, then so can Grand Theft Auto. And that's exactly what Rockstar are doing with the release of Grand Theft Auto: The Trilogy – The Definitive Edition.
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