
The game is an open world game and gives you a lot of freedom on how you play and interact with the world. The most recent game in the series is the GTA 5, which was first released in 2013 for the PS3 and later re-released in 2014 for the PS4 and Xbox 1 with improvements, and was also released in 2015 for the MicroSD Windows fit. New version that will be released in 2021 for the next PS5. So since all this is going on with GTA 5 we will see GTA 6 soon? Let's find out
Expected release date
There are no fixed dates for the release of the GTA 6 although we are sure it will not come in 2020 or 2021 as two GTA games are not likely to be released in the same year for Rockstar Games. However, the GTA is definitely under construction as the GTA 5 was originally launched and the makers must have been working on something new all this time. We'll keep you updated as we learn more.
What will be the story?
We don't know much about the story of the game, although some rumors suggest that the story of GTA 6 is over. However, most of the rumors are not true. Also, the storyline for Red Dead Redemption 2, the second game of the Ruststar Games, was narrated by 2012, but was later revised in early 2017 and early 2018 so nothing is certain yet.
Rockstar Games is a huge company but they know how to keep secrets and there are hardly any leaks so we can’t be sure about the current storyline and have to make an official announcement.
How will the gameplay be?
With the immense success of GTA 5 Online, we will probably see GTA 6 based on that. He wants all the elements that make GTA 5 so successful and more. The game is a bit off the horizon so accurate gameplay cannot be predicted yet.
What's the new update?
Rumors of a game announcement were coming in from all over the place last month, with some even claiming that the game's announcement was imminent although it was all fake, with voice actors for the characters Michael de Santa, Ned Luke and Franklin Clinton, as Shawn. Fonteno came on Instagram and asked fans to stop saying 'click bets', 'rumors' and 'leaks', If you hear it from Rockstar, you know.
Rockstar could make the Grand Theft Auto 6map smaller, or it could let more players join multiplayer matches. Given that the former probably won't happen,the latter seems like the way to go. The technology is there. Battlefield 5 lets 64 players fight it outa time. In Fortnite and PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds,100-player battles are the norm, and those are two of the biggest games on the planet. They must be doing something right. Now, in many games, small and intimate match-upsare probably better than large-scale free-for-alls - but Grand Theft Auto isn't "many games." GTA thrives on chaos.
You want to make things really crazy? Open the floodgates and let dozens and dozensof people play at once. Trust us, madness will ensue - and it willbe glorious. Technically, Grand Theft Auto 6 doesn't needto let fans play as police officers.
Whether they're supposed to or not, they'vealready been doing so for years. While Grand Theft Auto 5's main campaign keepsplayers strictly on the wrong side of the law, Grand Theft Auto Online has become ahaven for anyone who wants to put on a uniform, hop behind a police cruiser, and roleplay,make COPS-like reality shows, and even mod the game to support their law-and-order fantasies. On the other hand, there's clearly a willingand passionate audience out there, so Rockstar might as well go ahead and include cop playas an actual feature.
Besides, Grand Theft Auto has been makingus criminals for over 20 years. Getting to see how the other half lives wouldn'tjust be a nice change of pace, it could drastically shake up GTA's reliable but increasingly familiarformula, and offer all kinds of new ways to enjoy Rockstar's detailed open worlds.
Oh, and if you're worried that focusing onthe boys and girls in blue might dull Grand Theft Auto's unsavory edge, don't be: Americanpolice departments have a long history of corruption and violence.
If committing crimes is your jam, you'll stilldo just fine. For years, a subset of Grand Theft Auto 5players obsessed over the Mount Chiliad mystery. A mural adorned with a UFO, an egg, and ajetpack started the trend, and online communities devoted to unraveling the mountain's secretsquickly popped up.
sleuths started digging throughGrand Theft Auto 5's code, discovering new clues, hidden secrets, and even special missions. Eventually, they found the UFOs. They dug up the alien eggs. The jetpack, however, remained elusive. Then, the Doomsday Heist update appeared. The series of Grand Theft Auto Online missionsseemed poised to answer all of players' questions. It didn't. Many dangling plot threads remained unresolved. Oh, the jetpack appeared, but it wasn't allthat fun to use, and it wasn't a reward for uncovering Mount Chiliad's secrets, like manyhad assumed. You could just head to the shop and buy one- for $3 million of in-game cash.
By this point, it's become clear that Rockstardidn't have any kind of grand plan in place, and that any clues it doled out to its audiencedidn't add up to anything. It didn't have to be that way. The Mount Chiliad conspiracy proves that secretsare a great way to keep players engaged, and we'd love to see Rockstar embrace that witha Grand Theft Auto 6 mystery that pays off in a satisfying way. If players are going to work hard, rewardthem. They've earned it.
Is virtual reality still a niche market? Absolutely. Would a fully-featured Grand Theft Auto gamebe incredibly difficult to implement in VR? For sure. Would it make a certain subset of the audiencevomit like crazy? Get your apron and galoshes ready
. "I feel the power! "Hup! Hup! Hup!" But there's no denying that a completely realizedvirtual reality-friendly Grand Theft Auto game would be extremely cool for anyone luckyenough to have the hardware to run it. After all, Grand Theft Auto 5's first-personmode already proved how much more immersive GTA can be after a simple shift in perspective.
Actually surrounding yourself with a digitalcity to wreak havoc in would push things even further. If Rockstar devotes its considerable resourcestowards making the next Grand Theft Auto VR-friendly, we're sure that they could come up with somethingtruly groundbreaking - and we can't wait to try it.
Grand Theft Auto has always pushed boundaries. Usually, however, GTA couches its most unsavoryelements in satire or humor. For the most part, characters act and behavelike cartoons, so it's fine to treat them as such. Missions like "Friend Request" end in extremeviolence, but that usually follows something more nuanced - in this case, a pitch-perfectparody of Silicon Valley culture.
"I think someone's trying to dock with me. Hello?" "Ohhh!" Franklin's paparazzo missions, which haveyou snapping photos of celebrities doing stuff and bumping uglies, aren't in particularlygood taste, but at least they have something to say about fame and tabloid culture. But believe it or not, there is a line. Sometimes, Grand Theft Auto crosses it. GTA 5's "By the Book" obliterates it entirely. In the mission, Trevor Phillips tortures asuspected terrorist in an interactive minigame. The better you are, the higher your end score.
"By the Book" is gruesomely violent, uncharacteristicallyrealistic, and worst of all, its satire seems to go over most gamers' heads. Sure, it's awful - but it parallels real-worldgovernments' use of such horrific tactics. And it pokes fun at the fact that, yeah, weget it wrong. A lot. "Now, our friend here… he claims he doesn'tknow anything." "I don't - I don't know anything. I don't know… I already told nothing. Nothing. I don't know an-an-anything." By forcing players to work on Ferdinand Kerimov,Rockstar makes them face these ugly realities.
It's hard to watch, and it's bleak, cruel,and in sharp contrast to the game's otherwise lighthearted nihilism - but that's the point. All that said, "By the Book" is still prettydamn terrible. In fact, it's unpleasant enough that manyplayers try to skip it. Some give up on the campaign entirely. Look, we're not squeamish. When we play Grand Theft Auto, we know whatwe're getting into. We're just asking Rockstar to stick to whatit does best - ridiculous, over-the-top chaos - instead of sacrificing fun for.
well,the horrors of our modern world. In the long run, the game will be better forit. In the end, the thing we want most from RockstarGames' next open-world crime spree is the chance to play it with our friends - to talkabout it with our fellow gamers. That means releasing GTA 6 on the NintendoSwitch.
It also means that launch day sees PC gamersgetting the chance to cause some mayhem from the start. Add in a fully functional mobile version,and cross-platform online play, and then we'll really be talking. If Epic Games' Fortnite can bring gamers onevery platform together in one online battlefield, Rockstar should push to do the same. Sure, Fortnite and Grand Theft Auto aren'ton the same level in terms of scale.
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