L.A. Noire is an action-adventure detective game developed by Team Bondi and published by Rockstar Games for PC, PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 in the year 2011. The game is set in late 1940s where the player controls Cole Phelps an Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) officer as he rises through the ranks by solving cases and arresting criminals across five departments. If you are a fan of crime, noir and mystery games like L.A. Noire and looking for more games with similar gameplay then find the recommendations for it here.
Former Rockstar Games Technical Director Obbe Vermeij has finally revealed why some planes would randomly crash in GTA: San Andreas.
This fly by feature was on the cutting room floor due to the random plane crashes and it's one of those things I'm so thankful made it into the final version as these random fly by and crashes make the world seem more alive on the extremely limited PS2 hardware you needed everything you could possibly get in a open world to convey that feeling.
And accross hundreds of hours of gameplay I probably died around 3 times as a result of these fly by failures but I loved every time it happened
It made the world feel more human, and honestly kinda insane that even today with all these open world games, almost no one can capture that like R* even when compared to their ps2 games
Lol, I remember those. I vaguely remember dying from one crashing into my car once too.
Hanzala from eXputer: "I do appreciate GTA 6, Rockstar, but if I could trade it for a new L.A. Noire or a Bully game, I'd do so in a heartbeat."
How are they lost? You can get L.A. Noire on Steam, PS5, Xbox Series and Nintendo Switch and Bully is on the PS5 and Xbox Series too.
Whenever gta 6 launch we won't be getting another rockstar title for another 10 years lol but on the positive side they bou to come back n show how open world supposed to be done 🔥
Ahmed from eXputer writes "Video game leaks have become a major cause of concern for Triple-A studios, as they're becoming increasingly malicious and dangerous."
You mean games that make you think you are solving cases but the story actually progress the same way doesn't matter what you do?
None of these games are even remotely like L.A. Noire, and how dare this author lump Blade Runner into the mix.
L.A. Noire was a broken POS that was 25% chase this guy until he stops running (I mean why bother? None of the chases were difficult and they always ended the same way.) 25% driving across the huge map only to be told you now need to drive to this other point, also across the huge map. And 50% trying to make logical connections between the evidence the characters, when the only thing that matters was if they were giving you a visual tell or not.
However, I thoroughly enjoyed the story and will admit with no shame that it is the only game I've ever used a FAQ for. Otherwise the investigations would have angered me too much and I would have quit.