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Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas is a stupendous thrill ride that shouldn’t be missed.
Gameplay Screenshots
Description
I’m not going to beat around the bush. Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas is the single best PC title I have ever played. It’s larger than the biggest RPG, has more story than the heftiest adventure game, and has almost as many mini-games as Nintendo’s Mario Party. Additionally, it has a production value that’s second to none, boasts a faithfulness to ’90s source material with an eerie accuracy, and provides more hours of entertainment than all the previous Grand Theft Autos combined. In short, it’s a terrific unending masterpiece of a game — and one that will never fall victim to an over-exaggeration of its lofty status. It’s the defining piece of software for Sony’s successful sophomore system, and it’s almost impossible to imagine a PlayStation 2 library without it.
Now I realize that with a statement like that, I leave a lot of expectations on the table. Immediate questions from longtime GTA players (and haters) will no doubt surface regarding what kind of problems San Andreas must have. Does the framerate still stutter? Is pop-in and draw distance still an issue? Are there any collision quandaries or other graphics-related bugs? Are the sound effects still tame by other action game standards? Does the AI ever have stupid moments or not perform the way you’d want it to? And is it true that there’s absolutely no form of online play whatsoever? To be honest, the answer to all those questions is a definite yes. But an even better question to ask (and one that has a lot more direct impact) is, “Do any of the issues explored above really detract from the overall experience?” In a word: No.
But how is that possible? Isn’t that a significant number of concerns for one game to handle? Sure it may sound like the case when clumped together like that, but in practice it’s almost completely unnoticeable. For starters, the frequencies at which the graphical hitches mentioned above appear in comparison to when they don’t is so lopsided, that I’m left unaffected. Additionally, there’s literally so much to experience in the single player game that the lack of online play isn’t missed in the least, while the minor sound effect kinks and other presentational issues get completely dwarfed by everything else that the game manages to do right.
Features
Save your player stats to a HTML file, which can be put on the internet and shared with others.
Photos taken with the in-game camera can be exported as .JPG screenshot files.
Rockstar have claimed the “modding community will be supported.” Specifically in what ways is yet to be seen.
Photos taken with the in-game camera can be exported as .JPG screenshot files.
Rockstar have claimed the “modding community will be supported.” Specifically in what ways is yet to be seen.
System Requirements
Minimal System:
* 1GHz Intel Pentium III or AMD Athlon Processor
* 256MB of RAM
* 8x DVD-ROM Drive
* 3.6 GB of free space for a minimal install
* 64MB Video Card with DirectX 9 compatible drivers
* DirectX 9 compatible Stereo Sound Card
* Keyboard & Mouse
* 256MB of RAM
* 8x DVD-ROM Drive
* 3.6 GB of free space for a minimal install
* 64MB Video Card with DirectX 9 compatible drivers
* DirectX 9 compatible Stereo Sound Card
* Keyboard & Mouse
Recommended System:
* Intel Pentium 4 or AMD Athlon XP processor
* 384MB(+) of RAM
* 16x DVD-ROM drive
* 4.7 GB of free space for a full install
* 128MB Video Card with DirectX 9 compatible drivers
* DirectX 9 compatible Surround Sound Card
* Game pad with twin axis analog controls (USB or Joystick Port)
* Keyboard & Mouse
* 384MB(+) of RAM
* 16x DVD-ROM drive
* 4.7 GB of free space for a full install
* 128MB Video Card with DirectX 9 compatible drivers
* DirectX 9 compatible Surround Sound Card
* Game pad with twin axis analog controls (USB or Joystick Port)
* Keyboard & Mouse
Download Links
Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas Download