![gta london gta london](https://i1.wp.com/mypcgames.net/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/GTA-London-Download.png)
There's no question in our minds that this isn't real or 'leaked' as the website suggests, but it's certainly food for thought and an interesting design for how we wouldn't mind seeing the map implemented. You can see the map below, which we think looks pretty cool. "Now, fans think that Grand Theft Auto 6 will be set in the UK and gamers are convinced that this map from the unreleased game has been leaked." "Rockstar have offices in the UK and are very in touch with British culture – Grand Theft Auto V recently saw the arrival of iFruit Radio which housed tracks from J Hus, Skepta, D Block Europe, Headie One, AJ Tracey, Skepta and more." writes the site. One such example, via, concerns a GTA Map for the city of London. But such is the clamor for a new game that these things happen.Īnother unexpected consequence is the flurry of cool creations and we see shared. So much so that in recent weeks we've seen some Twitter users spamming the Rockstar account with tweets demanding a GTA 6 announcement even when Rockstar is trying to convey they're letting staff work from home during the Coronavirus outbreak. Gor blimey.GTA fans are getting increasingly more desperate for Rockstar Games to announce a new Grand Theft Auto game.
![gta london gta london](http://speed-new.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/3464634645534463465.jpg)
Which with any luck will be set in London too. but we're more interested in getting our hands on GTA II. We love the setting, the music, the sense of humour. If you loved GTA and you've been hankering for more, go ahead. The new missions are nicely varied (not to mention funny - especially the one where you kidnap tourists on a sightseeing bus), but they're also very familiar.
![gta london gta london](https://download.gtanet.com/gtagarage/files/image_67150.jpg)
Still, it's a game, not a documentary, so perhaps we're being picky? The main disappointment is that as a mission pack the London makeover doesn't really add anything fundamentally new to the proceedings (apart from driving on the left). By contrast, the streets in GTA London are serene, orderly. Check out the London A To Zand you can see what a hotch-potch mess the city's streets actually are, winding hither and thither like the hairline veins in a drunk's bloodshot eye. There's no room for curved roads, or even diagonal ones. Grand Theft Autds streets are based on the grid system, which, by happy coincidence, is also prevalent in American cities. The main problem is that the engine demands compromise. Which is a pretty major flaw when you think about it. Despite the changes, despite the new sound effects (passers-by shout "Twat!" and other British pleasantries at you when you try to kill them), despite the use of real place names and landmarks, it doesn't really feel like London. If you live in, say, Manchester, it means nothing, of course, but for native Londoners it's a hoot. Particularly satisfying for residents is the use of 'proper' district names: if you're in southwest Camden, and you're told to high-tail it to north-east Battersea, you've got a fair idea of which way to head, without having to refer to the map or locator arrow. Several of the major landmarks are there - Big Ben, Trafalgar Square, Hyde Park - and the streets are cluttered with scarlet double-deckers and black taxicabs. Whereas the sprawling metropolises of the original GTA had made-up names and made-up locales, GTA London is set in, well, London, dumbo. Of vital importance, of course, is the city itself. Out go the wailing Starsky And Hutch cop sirens, in come old-school bee-baw numbers out go Studebakers and Cadillacs, in come Minis and Bentleys (well, they don't use the actual names, but close-as-dammit pseudonyms) and references to Michael Caine those shadowy Italian-American wiseguys who muttered at you down dark alleys in the original game are replaced by gruff, growling cockneys while the soundtrack consists largely of Sound Gallery-style cheesy listening workouts.įor some, this is worth the price of entry alone. If you're a Brit, it's a pleasing make-over. Unless we're mistaken, stupid or just plain wrong, this is the first time 'Swinging London' in all its absurd Austin Powers glory has been used as the backdrop for a game. Now here's a welcome prospect: a mission pack for Grand Theft Auto that whisks the game away from its contemporary Stateside setting and sends it hurtling backward through the dark purple tunnel of time, leaving it stranded, kicking and screaming in old London town circa 1969.