Grand Theft Auto V (Multi-Platform)

Grand Theft Auto V is rated M, which means it’s intended for players over the age of 17. That’s too bad—you pretty much need to be in middle school to dig this game’s story or sense of humor. It’d be perfect for the sixth graders who doodle naked ladies onto their desks.
As a game and a pastime and a thing people can do Grand Theft Auto V is amazing in a few crucial ways. It’s the latest and the hottest and the biggest, if size and youth are your thing, and when you’re merely existing in its world it’s hard to dislike.
Rockstar’s even come close to fixing the camera, the controls and the checkpoint system, long the greatest technical catastrophes of these games. Basic actions like walking and shooting are no longer blood feuds between you and the controller, and when you’re terrible at a mission you’ll only have to be terrible at certain parts of it again and again instead of the whole damn thing. Past GTAs have broken down into frustrating tedium when you actually have to play through a mission, but now you’re able to enjoy the absurd chaos and violence of the game’s major set-pieces without feeling straightjacketed by technical issues. These are fine choices and earnest attempts to curry our favor and trust.
This version of Los Santos is an open world city with life and character, a sprawling, unplanned weed of a town where the borders between neighborhoods and classes sneak up suddenly but with loud fanfare. Just by recreating the layout and architecture of Los Angeles GTA V does more to make us think about socioeconomic disparity than almost any other videogame. Between the barred windows and cramped quarters of Franklin’s neighborhood and Michael’s faceless, tasteless mansion in the hills, it’s impossible to travel through this game without dwelling upon some of America’s hardest truths.
GTA is known for its music as much as its mayhem, and V might have the best soundtrack yet. Once again its music stations combine iconic hits with deep cuts and cult classics across the spectrum of musical genres. This must be the only videogame with a Hasil Adkins song in it, and surely the only work in any medium that features Adkins alongside Aphex Twin, Gregory Isaacs and Eddie Murphy’s “Party All the Time”. When you’re cruising through Los Santos, blasting one of those expertly programmed radio stations and observing its carefully constructed imitation of life, you’re as close to the real world as blockbuster games get. Ain’t that America, something to see?
And then, as often happens with games, goodwill withers when characters open their mouths. GTA V purports to be satire, but its unrelenting cynicism, negativity and contempt are exhausting. The attempts to shock, the derisive social commentary and the would-be satire are all hackneyed and obvious. Its observations never dig deeper than the surface and, most importantly, the game is rarely clever or funny. It’s got the shit-eating smirk and smug satisfaction of South Park without that show’s occasional bite. And it’s absolutely smothering, laying the Vice schtick on thick during almost every cut-scene, on every website and television station, and on all radio commercials or news reports. If a non-lead character is talking it’s probably supposed to be funny, but it almost never is. It’s an internet comment section turned into a game.