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Tag Archive | "chinatown wars"

GTA: Chinatown Wars: Why hasn’t it sold well?


Grand Theft Auto: Chinatown Wars was meant to be a massive hit. It goes back (somewhat) to the old days of Grand Theft Auto, having a top-down view (albeit isometric rather than true top-down) rather than a Third Person View. It had all these features, great controls, and yet it hasn’t sold so well so far. In the first two weeks, it only sold 90,000 units in the US, a figure paled by the release of Pokémon Platinum, a recent title with similar fanfare, with over 800,000 in the first nine days, mathematically almost 14 times more successful in the same period of nine days.

There are reasons for this; reasons I’m going to explain.

grandtheftautochinatownwarsLet’s get it started. The DS has long been heralded as a handheld console for everyone. From your kid to your grandmother, apparently everyone can find a game on the DS that they will fall in love with, and will loop them into buying more games for the system. This has long been Nintendo’s marketing campaign, and has been successful, managing to make even obvious crapware titles sell relatively well, and allow unheard-of titles to explode in popularity. Therefore, when a title that has such a status quo about it like Grand Theft Auto comes into the mix, it has already alienated a large amount of its audience that has a DS, simply because it’s a GTA title.

When people think of Grand Theft Auto, if they are not genuine gamers, rather than the casualcore hybrid that the DS and Wii have spawned, they will see this as the title that they wish to avoid. They think GTA, they think Fox News Exclusive, about how person X murdered person Y and it was all because of Grand Theft Auto. We all know otherwise, but an informed minority can always be outweighed by the uninformed majority, unless they are in a seat of power. The DS has been billed as the console for everyone, yet here is a Grand Theft Auto title; a series well known for appealing to the ‘hardcore’ gamer.

new-grand-theft-auto-chinatown-wars-screensjpg

A screenshot from the game, depicting what made GTA famous: Running for your life from Blues.

Chinatown Wars also suffers from the M rating. M titles are often associated with blood, violence, connotations of sex and nudity, amongst other things. Let’s not forget that GTA: CW’s main focus is on drugs. The Mature rating means that it’s kept with the other games of its caliber ie out of the reach of children, and more likely than not, out of the line of sight, too. We all know that parents buy Mature rated games for their children, but couple the Mature rating with GTA’s perception in the eyes of the media, the chance of a parent buying this for a child are next to nothing. There are obviously some that will take pride in their child’s maturity, and want to buy them this game, but that’s a fraction of the potential DS audience that I was talking about before. Despite how the ratings are not legally binding in the United States, it doesn’t change the fact that if someone bought Assassin’s Creed and looked a year or two underage, the store clerk might let it slide if his job didn’t depend on it. GTA? Almost no chance.

So just by being a GTA title, and having the M rating, we’ve thinned down the audience to genuine gamers above the age of 17 that have a DS. This is excluding any of the game’s content, regardless of good or bad. So let’s consider the piracy angle. Piracy was covered pretty thoroughly by Matthew Latino in his article, but let me be specific about handhelds. The piracy community in handhelds is thriving. The DS piracy community has many reasons to exist, the main one of which is that it is extremely expensive to buy DS games new (at least in the UK). I know for a fact that I can get a hold of a DS flashcart and a MicroSD card to use it with, cheaper than a real DS game. There are the obvious reasons that some people just want to do it because they can, and some that consider it sending the publishing companies a message.

The R4 is Nintendo's primary target in the fight against DS Piracy.

The R4 is Nintendo's primary target in the fight against DS Piracy.

But, back on topic, I would make an educated guess that about 80% of the genuine gamers that own a DS at least know of a method of piracy that they could easily obtain and use.  I’m not saying that 80% would actually pirate the game, but with DS piracy getting to the point where Nintendo themselves are launching attacks against specific devices (and the resultant backfire), a good chunk of that ‘hardcore’ gaming crowd that uses the DS has to be using said hardware. Now, we all know that in gaming, curiosity is what drives us forward in games; the urge to know what happens, or what surprises are around the corner, or what challenges are to be faced. Therefore, it’s a solid conclusion that the majority of those that are interested in GTA: Chinatown Wars will in fact download it and try it. Then they will play it, get bored, and not purchase it.

Game Over. Sale lost.

So, the audience that this game appeals to (DS owners that are 17 or older, and into Grand Theft Auto, or know of it’s genuine mechanics rather than those spouted by the media) will, in the majority of cases, try the game via piracy or via an emulator. Each person that tries that is an almost-guaranteed loss of sale. It’s not very often in the gaming world that this can be said, but with the Grand Theft Auto license as it is, and the opportunity to rent a DS game purely at the discretion of Nintendo (of which, in the UK, they have been pretty strict about), a company that is known for being stingy on such a matter, the only two real ways to try a DS game, is to buy it, or pirate it.

It’s disappointing to see an obviously highly polished title go this way, but it is the world we live in. We may see this become a Brain Training of the DS, with constant sales that line Rockstar’s pockets. But as a release, it’s not gone well.

Posted in features, nintendo DSComments (6)

Messy, but effective: New GTA Chinatown Wars video


web_gta_ctw_logoRockstar just shot us the newest trailer for GTA Chinatown Wars, entitled, appropriately enough, “Rampage.” We assure you, the Flamethrower IS twice as much fun as it looks :-)

Chinatown Wars is out today for the Nintendo DS. Subsequently, all articles being drafted by this Associate Editor for the rest of the week have been canceled…

Posted in embedVideo, nintendo DSComments (5)

DS Releases: Week of March 17th, 2009


DS March 17th

  1. Valykrie Profile: Covenant of the Plume | Square-Enix: The third installment in the critically acclaimed Valkyrie Profile series follows Wylfred in a darker-than-usual storyline as he seeks revenge on Lenneth Valkyrie.
  2. Grand Theft Auto: China Town Wars | Rockstar Leeds: What’s left to say about this? Plenty. Not only do you forget you’re playing this on a DS, but it packs as much gameplay punch as its console rivals, and utilizes every unique aspect of the handheld perfectly. We dare say it breathes fresh and funky life into the aging Nintendo DS. This one is a must-buy, but we can promise a review in about a week, for those of you still on the fence.
  3. Henry Hatsworth in the Puzzling Adventure | EA: Is ole’ Henry a walking contradiction? Can he handle the blend of puzzler and action/platformer? Can he in fact defeat world-ending bosses while stunning us with his quirky demeanor? Can he discover the 12 secret levels? Can he compete with Grand Theft Auto? Well….
  4. Suikoden Tierkreis | Konami: This RPG franchise was introduced over 12 years ago, but this release marks its debut on the DS, and it’s an exclusive! Konami has even tapped the Nintendo WiFi connection for some truly innovate community features involving parallel worlds.
  5. TrackMania DS | Atlus: The popular build-a-track PC racer finally lands on the DS in the careful and loving hands of Atlus.
  6. Scrabble | EA/Hasbro: Available for both the PSP and DS today, we prefer the stylus control over the cleaner PSP graphics. This iteration of Scrabble should make wordsmiths happy, with the opportunity to hone their skills, build their pattern recognition skills, then thwomp all over friends, family, and an adaptable computer AI opponent.

Portable Offerings Pick of the Week? Without question, it’s ChinaTown Wars. How about you? Snagging any of these new releases?

Posted in Portable Offerings, nintendo DSComments (5)

New ChinaTown Wars Trailer: Ok, NOW We Believe!


cw-coverUpdate: I’m going to blatantly steal the following comment on this article and repurpose it as a subheading:

Roblef said: “Oh, cool. Drug etiquette and communication strategies training, now for the DS! Sweet”

I’ll openly admit that I’ve been skeptical about this one, in a downright frowny-faced, preaching-the-end-of-the-world fashion. But over the past few weeks my doubt has been softened by a steady stream of positive buzz and actual hands-on time with ChinaTown Wars.

From what I’ve seen, Rockstar has made no compromises, and has siphoned out every last drop of ingenuity and horsepower they could muster for this, their first outing on the Nintendo DS.

The icing on the cake was this trailer, which convinced me once and for all that, excuse my high school lingo: This game is going to F#*ck!ng Rule! And THIS is just the drug-dealing mini-game…

Posted in Portable Offerings, embedVideo, nintendo DSComments (3)

New GTA: Chinatown Wars Screenies!


I’ll be blunt: It took a leap of gamer faith for me to believe that Rockstar could convincingly deliver a mature, true-to-its-roots iteration of Grand Theft Auto on the Nintendo DS. I’m still suspended in mid-air, time frozen, waiting with anticipation to experience the full game in mid-March before the jump is complete.

Until then, the dozens of assurances from Rockstar that Chinatown wars has not been watered down are enough to pacify me. Also: they have a damn good track record, folks.

Now that I’ve completed those requisite two paragraphs: LOOK! NEW SCREENS! OMG!!!

Posted in News, nintendo DSComments (1)

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