Who says cheaters never prosper? Grand Theft Auto 5 has been wildly popular for years and if the internet is to be believed, you all still want to mess around with cheat codes in the single player campaign. Don’t worry, we’ve got ya and we won’t squeal. Our GTA 5 cheat guide will go over all of the cheats, in both cell phone number and command code variants. (more…)
Don’t be scared. It’s OK. I’ve got you. Hold my hand. Tighter. Come on. We can do this together. You and me. Lets… Steam Chart.
A lot of people first discover this Pulitzer Prize-winning* column via the Steam pages for their favourite games, and it’s always a pleasure to welcome in new readers to RPS’s most respected feature. So if you’re new, welcome! Please settle in and find out why Steam Charts is the industry’s most respected and revered games journalism.
Christmas is now over in GTA Online, but the spirit of the season—blowing stuff up online—is carrying on thanks to some weapons from the future. The Unholy Hellbringer and Widowmaker guns, normally sported by Republican Space Rangers, can be yours, at least if you’re able to shell out for them next time you visit Ammu-Nation.
These hefty alien-killers will set you back wee bit more than a rubbish handgun, though it’s probably just a drop in the ocean for you ultra-rich CEOs. Think of us down here, cutting corners and forgoing expensive dinners so we can afford the latest in future murder tech. The Widowmaker, for instance, costs $499,000, though you’ll never have to worry about ammo again, seeing as it’s infinite.
You’ll also be able to earn double cash and RP rewards if you dive into the Arena War series, which now includes some additional competitive modes: Hasta La Vista, Vehicle Vendetta and The Vespucci Job. All Biker business sales are paying out double cash, too. The reward bonuses will continue through January 14.
There are a bunch of discounts this week, as well, including 35 percent off Biker businesses, 30 percent off facilities and lots of cheaper vehicles. The full list list is below.
Anything tickling your fancy?
Whenever I log in to GTA Online, I'm almost overwhelmed by the amount of stuff I remember I can do in the game. I forget that I bought an Avenger, one of GTA's flying fortresses, where a dude will add cool things to my cars for a price. I have a hangar, a motorcycle club, a nightclub, a facility for the Doomsday heist, countless ludicrous vehicles and now, an Arena Workshop. I like how busy it feels, and how much extra stuff you can accumulate in Online that regular GTA 5 just never had—if I was 18 right now with nothing but time on my hands and a few friends who love GTA as much as me, I'd play this non-stop. It's a GTA game you can play forever.
When GTA 4 came out, some detractors pointed out that it'd lost the silly edge that it had in Vice City and San Andreas—Area 69, jet packs and so on. GTA 5 brought a lot of the silliness back, and GTA Online has played a big part in accelerating that. The game got jet packs in 2017, for example, and flying cars and bikes have been around for ages. I've mentioned this many times before, but I own a Batmobile (er, I mean, the Vigilante). And with the Arena War update, GTA Online got a raygun, the Up-n-Atomiser (surely a classic Simpsons reference), completing its journey to becoming even sillier than San Andreas ever was. For $399,000, you can have this:
Any time a novelty weapon or vehicle gets added to GTA Online, I am here for it. Who knows? Maybe in a year I'll be writing about portal guns or something. I wonder what Trevor Phillips would make of the Up-n-Atomizer.
GTA's numerous free cash giveaways have given people a nice excuse to jump back into the game across the last year. It's how I was able to easily afford an Arena Workshop and the weapon above, having not picked up the game as much since the After Hours update. From Rockstar's perspective, it probably acts a good incentive to get new and lapsed players to give GTA a try, and for me it's a comfortable way to keep up with the game's major updates without buying Shark Cards.
The recent Arena War update is like GTA Online's version of a themed minigame compilation, focusing on vehicle combat. Taking place in the Maze Bank Arena, it's been doling out generous double experience/cash rewards since it launched. The modes aren't all winners, but a few of them are terrific fun to jump into: Hot Bomb tasks you with passing the imminently-exploding bomb to other players by crashing into them, and it's a laugh. Games Masters has one team racing through checkpoints while the opposition blows them up with drones, turrets and other explosive goodies from the sidelines. Then, you switch roles.
What Sam described as GTA Online's version of Rocket League isn't quite that, unfortunately—Bomb Ball is about knocking a whole bunch of ball-shaped bombs into the other players' half (and sometimes the goal), but it's a bit too busy and incoherent to be as enjoyable as it could be. I'd love to try a version of this with just one big bomb, though, to see what Rocket League in GTA would really be like.
I've come to regard playing GTA Online's PvP modes as seasonal: I play them for as long as the bonuses last, basically, when I can be guaranteed to find other players who want to give it a go. With Arena War, though, there's a separate point system for unlockables that could potentially support new modes for months to come. That's pretty exciting: I like the arena as a change of scenery, and vehicle combat remains as appealing as ever in GTA.
GTA Online's 2019 is hard to figure out. Arena War launched pretty soon after Red Dead Online became publicly available on consoles, which suggests some confidence by Rockstar that they can co-exist. That was something I wondered about after reading this interview quote about GTA updates from Rockstar's director of design Imran Sarwar, speaking to Game Informer in 2017. "We don't yet have a fixed end point in mind, but the rollout of updates may change a little in order to encourage players to try Red Dead Redemption 2 when it launches. It would be great to have players splitting time between two incredible worlds, but we shall see how things evolve."
GTA's peak players on Steam—so, not including those who bought the game from resellers or Rockstar itself—is at a healthy 120,000+ for the last 30 days. On consoles where GTA's player base is enormous, I have no idea, but Red Dead Online offers something very different to GTA in pace and tone. I think they can co-exist: it makes a massive difference to me when GTA Online gets a new radio station or new NPCs, or a novel update like nightclubs that offer an excuse for a bunch of fun cameos and new ways to interact with friends. They make this city feel like it's still living, over five years after I first explored it on 360. Not all the content is for me—I've never been much of a racing guy in GTA—but there's so much here that I can go uncover hours' worth of other stuff instead.
My guess is that 2017's Doomsday Heist was the last big story-based co-op content that'll be added to the game, and that 2019 will focus on packages of PvP modes in the way that Arena War does. But I'm also hoping something a little different, in the vein of nightclubs, will arrive in the middle of this year—somewhere new to hang out, maybe, or a different angle on the way GTA traditionally plays. What's left for GTA Online to focus on? The long-anticipated casino, or naval warfare?
Hell, I'll run my own beauty salon in Los Santos if given the chance. If GTA Online can keep expanding until whenever the next instalment lands on PC—which is probably so many years away it makes my hair grey just thinking about it—that'll suit me just fine.
Ho ho ho! John still hasn’t returned after Christmas, missing presumed drowned in egg nog, so I’m filling in today. Valve have already blarbed about 2018’s best-selling games so we’re back on the weekly charts. Last week’s top ten was largely familiar, though catching the tail end of the Steam Winter Sale has introduced a few surprises.
GTA Online has added a new mode called Bomb Ball to its Arena War lineup, and it's basically an explosive, multi-ball version of Rocket League.
Rockstar calls it "the Los Santos spin on soccer": two teams take to the arena in souped-up cars and try to push enormous bombs into the opposition's goal. Make sure the ball isn't in your half when it explodes.
You can get the idea from the short clip below. It'll be available to play until January 14, and anyone that gets behind the wheel will receive double GTA$ & RP.
It's part of GTA Online's series of holiday updates, which will give players free gifts just for logging on. You'll get a gift every day between now and January 1—they're all listed here (scroll down to the "Festive Calendar" section), and they include sweaters, liveries and fireworks.
Additionally, you'll receive two free T-shirts if you play before January 7, which is also the cut-off point for double GTA$/RP for completing certain activities, including biker contract missions and gunrunning sales, and discounts on various items, such as hangars and aircraft. You can read about all them all in Rocktar's post.
Lastly, there's a new sleek car for purchase called the Grotti Itali GTO, pictured below. You can buy it from Legendary Motorsport.
Hey, remember the good old days? Those giddy times I like to think of as last week? When the Charts felt fresh and new, filled with potential, as if any interesting game could take a top spot? Well, forget all that because it’s all gone to shit again.
Grand Theft Auto Online‘s latest update – Arena War – invites players to join the titular big new televised event broadcasting from the heart of Los Santos. It’s a PvP vehicular throwdown with its own playmodes, progression and special arena vehicles with their own customisation system. While free to dabble in, the real rewards are limited to players who put some GTA-bucks down on an upgradeable workshop allowing them to bolt guns, armour and Mad Max-ian gubbins onto their cars for the next fight. It’s out now, and I hear a trailer revving up below.