Scarface: Earning Money, Power, Respect
Yeah, it doesn’t get any simpler by saying hello to my little friend (insert manic homicidal laughter), but as these gameplay videos from GameTrailers for Vivendi SA is a video game developer; formerly known as Vivendi Universal”>Vivendi/Sierra‘s Scarface: Money, Power, Respect, the path to money, power, and respect usually involves overwhelming firepower. And foul language.
It certainly looks like GTA meets… er… well… it’s certainly a turn-based combat system that throws bullets and bombs and warm bodies at each other. “Power moves” include snipers, grenade launchers, and yes, as IGN notices, the crowd-levelling “Say hello to my little friend!” that help even out the odds some. All in all, a straightforward menu-based and turn-based combat system.
But that’s the point: it is straightforward. Combat becomes a battle of attrition, with opponents throwing more and more meat shields at each other until only one side (or what’s left of it) remains standing. Lather, rinse, repeat. Then again, the real-world mob wars were battles of attrition, too.
Lather, rinse, repeat: more little friends at the full article.
Yeah, it doesn’t get any simpler by saying hello to my little friend (insert manic homicidal laughter), but as these gameplay videos from GameTrailers for Vivendi SA is a video game developer; formerly known as Vivendi Universal”>Vivendi/Sierra‘s Scarface: Money, Power, Respect, the path to money, power, and respect usually involves overwhelming firepower. And foul language.
It certainly looks like GTA meets… er… well… it’s certainly a turn-based combat system that throws bullets and bombs and warm bodies at each other. “Power moves” include snipers, grenade launchers, and yes, as IGN notices, the crowd-levelling “Say hello to my little friend!” that help even out the odds some. All in all, a straightforward menu-based and turn-based combat system.
But that’s the point: it is straightforward. Combat becomes a battle of attrition, with opponents throwing more and more meat shields at each other until only one side (or what’s left of it) remains standing. Lather, rinse, repeat. Then again, the real-world mob wars were battles of attrition, too.