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Grand Theft Auto: Chinatown Wars |  | From: Rockstar Games Category: Video Games
List Price: $19.99 Buy New: $11.54 as of 3/11/2010 16:25 EST details You Save: $8.45 (42%)
New (31) Used (14) Collectible (2) from $11.53
Seller: moviesandgamestore Rating: 80 reviews Sales Rank: 545
Platform: Nintendo DS Genre: adventure_games Color: Nintendo DS ESRB: Mature Media: Video Game Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Number Of Items: 1 Batteries Included: No Age: 17 - 20 years Operating System: Nintendo DS Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 5.2 x 5.4 x 0.6 Cartridge Save Legal Disclaimer: Brand new and factory sealed game! Ready to ship. All standard shipping games ship via first class mail with free tracking and insurance! Expedited items are shipped via USPS Priority Mail. All of our games, new and used are backed by a solid 90-day warranty.
MPN: 710425353000 Model: 710425353000 UPC: 710425353000 EAN: 0710425355677 ASIN: B001CRM3RI
Publication Date: February 28, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Use the DS' touch screen as a PDA device to set GPS waypoints, change radio stations, communicate via e-mail with in-game characters and order weapons on the Internet. | | • | Largest DS game ever, features include a world full of pedestrians, weather and traffic patterns, five different radio stations and four different sprawling boroughs to explore. | | • | Endless gameplay, complete with mature storyline 70+ story missions, dozens of side quests, collectibles, contextual mini-games and the all new mission replay feature. | | • | Nintendo Wi-Fi mode allowing for head-to-head and co-op multiplayer mayhem. | | • | Free access to Rockstar Games Social Club where players can chat, trade items and commodities and compete in online tournaments and leaderboards. |
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Product Description Brand new and Sealed Nintendo DS & DS Lite Game. Backed by a 45-day guarantee.
Amazon.com Product Description Grand Theft Auto: Chinatown Wars is the highly anticipated first game in the GTA franchise designed for play on the Nintendo DS. But although it comes in a small package, this is a full-fledged game that stands on its own. With an all-new, deep story that approaches the familiar sights and sounds of the infamous Liberty City from a different perspective, an innovative control system and multiplayer options, Chinatown Wars captures the tone and flavors of the long-running GTA series in unique ways that both longtime players and those coming to it for the first time will find hard to put down.  | Grand Theft Auto: Chinatown Wars Players: Offline: 1; Online: 2
Gameplay Modes: Single player; competitive & coop multiplayer via Nintendo Wi-Fi connection. |  | |  Kick some tail as Huang Lee. View larger. |  Use the DS stylus like never before. View larger. |  Reconquer Liberty via PDA. View larger. | The Story: Left for Dead in the Worst Place in America Following his father’s murder, Huang Lee is given what seems a simple mission: to deliver an ancient sword to his Uncle Kenny to ensure his family retains control of the Triad gangs of Liberty City. Huang is a spoiled rich kid who expects everything to run smoothly, but his trip does not go exactly as planned. Only minutes after arriving at the Liberty City airport at the far end of town, he is robbed and left to die. Only through quickly thinking is he able to survive and make his way back to his neighborhood, but the damage to he and his family has been done. Now his destiny is to search for honor, riches and revenge in the most dangerous and morally bankrupt city in the world. Gameplay The largest DS game to date, Chinatown Wars is set in the Grand Theft Auto IV-imagined version of Liberty City, and contains most of its boroughs and neighborhoods. In exploring and exploiting this vast area, players use the game's rotatable camera to take in a 3D, 360-degree view of their environment, providing an elevated and somewhat skewed third-person perspective, that switches to first-person with the appropriate player action. Assuming the role of Huang Lee your goal is to rise up in the ranks of the underworld to challenge the Triad of Chinatown gangs that have usurped your family's position and recover the stolen heirloom and your lost honor. In true GTA fashion this entails gameplay that embraces the seedy underbelly that Liberty City is famous for. Throughout the game's 70+ missions -- all of which can be replayed even after completion -- and its myriad of side quests, players earn cash by completing jobs ranging from petty street crime, all the way up to drug dealing and assassination. As in other GTA releases, rising competence at crime raises the amount of attention received by police, but unlike previous games here players can not simply outrun alerted authorities. With each additional star added to your 'wanted rating' players must disable or destroy more of the pursuing police units to keep them off your tail. In addition to mission play, the game also contains many opportunities, such as the safe cracking and car hot-wiring mini-games and the various items and weapons hidden throughout the game that demand skill with the DS' touchscreen and stylus for success. By whatever means, once players have attained a certain level of cash and street cred they will also be able to recruit members for their own gang who pledge their loyalty by allowing themselves to be tattooed with the mark of the player's choosing. Cars and Controls Cars and control schemes play a prominent role in Chinatown Wars. All cars feature GPS functionality based on available roadways. Directions are shown on the lower of the DS' two screens as part of the in-game PDA interface, but players may take vehicles off roads wherever possible, with the GPS automatically resetting when back on the pavement. While driving players also have access to five in-game radio stations and use of their weapons. Your PDA provides efficient management tools for your growing crime empire, including quick weapons switching, a running total of available cash, in-game e-mail and Internet access and nearly instant game saves any time. The control scheme in Chinatown Wars utilizes an easy to use and comfortable to play combination of steering via the D-pad, choice of action through the face buttons and/or stylus taps and manual and automatic weapon locks and unlocks via shoulder buttons. Key Game Features: - The Largest DS Game Ever - Contemporary Liberty City is a massive world complete with pedestrians, weather and traffic patterns, five different radio stations and four different sprawling boroughs to explore.
- Endless Gameplay - Mature storyline with over 70+ story missions; plus dozens of side quests, collectibles, contextual mini-games and the all new mission replay feature.
- Street Economics - Addictive drug dealing side game with 6 different drug types, 80+ drug dealers and a supply / demand driven narcotics economy.
- Play with Friends - Nintendo Wi-Fi mode for head-to-head and co-op multiplayer mayhem.
- Bragging Rights - Chat, trade guns and commodities with your friends, and compete for glory via online tournaments and leaderboards on the Rockstar Games Social Club.
- PDA Interface - Use the touch screen as a PDA device to set GPS waypoints, change radio stations, communicate via e-mail with in-game characters and order weapons on the Internet.
Online Bragging Rights and Multiplayer Care has been taken to ensure that players can share their Chinatown Wars experiences with friends and fellow players in different ways. First, players will have access to the Chinatown Wars as well as the greater Grand Theft Auto communities through the Rockstar Games Social Club. Here they can chat, trade commodities, purchase special in-game items with in-game currency, check the leaderboards and compete in online tournaments. The DS' Wi-Fi capabilities also gives players the opportunity to take their game online as they battle for supremacy in their own little corner of Liberty City in both head-to-head and co-op multiplayer battles.
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 80
My Favorite GTA February 26, 2010 Scott Fowler (Gainesville, GA) I've played Vice City, San Andreas, and IV, and this game took Vice City's place as my favorite title in the Grand Theft Auto series.
Graphically, I thoroughly enjoyed almost every piece of artwork in the game. The world is 3D and has a very cartoonish cell-shading that is not characteristic at all for GTA games on the bigger consoles. A few things were off-putting to me (especially the artwork used for rummaging through dumpsters), but overall the visuals were so good that I had serious doubts about how free and large this GTA world would be on a DS.
The world proved to be fairly large. Large enough that size wasn't a concern to me. That is, I never felt that the cities were too small. I was always exploring a new area somehow... And thankfully the game has an incredible GPS system for navigating. You can look up and find people you have met or places of interest that are automatically saved in the game's GPS system, or you can add your own color-coded waypoints (four colors available).
The gameplay is almost exactly everything I would ever ask for in a GTA game. There are plenty of weapons, well-designed missions, lots of random pedestrians, a good deal of side missions (in the form of pedestrians that periodically talk to you), and tons of little things to do, including ramping through all advertising billboards, destroying all security cameras, dealing drugs for insane amounts of money, discovering and beating all rampages, finding and beating the go-kart time trials, buying scratch-off lottery tickets (touchscreen!), and more.
Overall, I truly enjoyed this game.
One last sentence: I've heard it's much closer to the original GTA games.
One of the Best Ds Games!! February 25, 2010 O. yasin (texas) Great game. definitely a Mature game by the way. My only complaint is that there is no wifi battles, but that is resolved with the hours of storyline, minigames, and side missions. amazing game.
What the hell!?! February 15, 2010 Jean Jacques Bohl 0 out of 4 found this review helpful
Dude why would these people put a game originally made for a DS be put onto a PSP?
At first it was all "Yah, finally another GTA for the PSP!", but then when I got it I was very very surprised to see a very fun game turn into this. I hope Rockstar next time does it right when it comes to the PSP. Do not buy this if you don't like overhead views and very poor effects.
Terrible on PSP February 7, 2010 1biggeek (Boca Raton, Florida) 1 out of 7 found this review helpful
This is like going backwards in time on PSP. The graphics are just terrible. If the DS people are happy about this quality, it's time to buy a PSP and see what real portable gaming can be like
an excellent game January 22, 2010 James Pierce (California) fun level is through the roof. gameplay is awesome, story is very good. the only (small) complaint i have is the camera. sometimes it can get a bit wonky. but other than that, its addictive from beginning to end. i do not think youll regret buying this one. i sure didnt.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 80
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