Open world city, Car simulation driving, Good graphics
Despite the few faults, Mafia III is a great game to play with a rich open world for you to explore. It retails at Rs 3,499 on Xbox One and PS4 and Rs 2,499 on PC. It is recommended if you love crime sagas and want something to chew on till the next GTA i...
Mafia 3's strong characters and confident storytelling kept me engaged, even if the gameplay rarely delivered anything but bog-standard and repetitive open-world action. That's a bummer, because Lincoln is an incredible protagonist and New Bordeaux is a f...
Abstract: People of colour in South Africa have faced a long history of ostracism on multiple levels. Though I missed the worst of it, apartheid laws mandated racist exclusion: careers, political roles, even door entrances and homes, all were determined by race. Th...
Published: 2016-10-16, Author: James , review by: dailystar.co.uk
Abstract: DSMafia 3 starts so well. Mixing real life footage from the 60s with the back story of protagonist Lincoln Clay. It tells the tale of a Vietnam vet who comes home to a racially-split America on a revenge mission to take control of a city run by his family...
Published: 2016-10-13, Author: Richard , review by: stuff.tv
Amazing Characterisation, Surprisingly deep, nuanced story
Glitchy. Like flying cars and bottomless boats glitchy, Repetitive gameplay in a mostly barren world
Tackling tough issues like racism in games always carries a bit of a risk, but Mafia 3's dev team has managed to pull it off. The story is well executed, the city full of incidental detail and the the political commentary consistent through every rung of...
Abstract: Video game bugs may annoy and amuse, but they can also be strangely revealing. I've encountered plenty of minor and major errors in Hangar 13's Mafia 3, a hard-to-love but undeniably ambitious open-world crime sim, set in a thinly disguised remix of 1968...
When it works, in fact, it feels nearly comparable to Metal Gear Solid V, although it never quite achieves the same dizzying heights as Konami's stealth-'em-up. Sneaking through the industrial buildings dragging people into the shadows is a lot of fun, an...
Abstract: It's been a heck of a year for video games. Virtual-reality titles finally went mainstream, indies made as big a splash as their AAA counterparts, and the first-person-shooter genre became more diverse and refreshing than ever. We played games that twiste...