Gangstar: New Orleans Review

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Gangstar: New Orleans

Not Really Worth the Trip

Avg. Rating: 4.33 / 5

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Categories/Tags:

action rpg adventure

(Android - For most Android based phones and tablets.
See download page for specific requirements.)

(iOS - For most iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch devices.
See download page for specific requirements.)

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DFG Exclusive Review Summary

Very below average, this game is not worth your time.

Pros

  • Looks good
  • Being able to select missions via the map is very handy

Cons

  • Feels really unpolished
  • Frustratingly unresponsive controls

3.0

Bad

DFG SCORE

Read Full Gangstar: New Orleans Review

Game Description

If You Must

So you've decided to set up your own criminal empire and take over New Orleans in the newest Gangstar. That's cool, that's cool. You'll probably need some help, though. Crime bosses can't boss crimes all on their own you know.

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Mission-Minded

Completing missions will be your bread and butter while you try to expand your nefarious influence.

  • Play fast. Missions have timers that keep track of how long you take to complete them. The faster you finish, the better your rewards. Try to keep this in mind if you want to earn three stars and the best loot.
  • Replay missions to try and earn better times. If you come up short in the first attempt, you can try again until you finish fast enough.
  • Play on Hard (or Expert) for even better rewards. You can't attempt Hard until you beat the mission on Normal with at least one star, and you can't try Expert unless you beat Hard with at least one star. Once you meet the requirements you can totally take advantage of the higher risk/higher rewards thing.
  • Mind your rating. Your character is given a numerical rating based on the overall strength of their weapons, and if your stuff isn't powerful enough you're likely to have a more difficult time of things.

On The Job

You can't complete a mission if you're dead, right?

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  • Know what you can use for cover. The little 'cover' button will activate whenever you're close enough to something you can put between you and bullets, and a similar icon will appear on the objects themselves as you near them. This should give you a good idea of where you can hide from the inevitable hail of gunfire.
  • Always reload in between the action. If you have a moment of quiet before encountering more enemies, tap the weapon icon in the top-right corner of the screen to reload your selected firearm. It's better than having to reload in the middle of being shot at.
  • Keep track of enemies. They aren't super smart but they will try to take cover and get a better angle on you when they can. Don't given them the opportunity to get behind you!
  • Monitor your health. No matter where you hide, you're probably going to take damage during a shootout. If your health close to zero, tap the Medkit icon (just under your health bar) to heal up.
  • Use the Run button to climb over obstacles. To my knowledge this isn't really explained anywhere, but it'll make your life easier.

Better Worlds Than These

Gangstar: New Orleans is a sound idea on paper but sort of a mess in practice. Despite the price tag of zero dollars (to download, anyway), you're much better off buying an official GTA.

Gangstar: New Orleans Review

Free-to-Play GTA

The Gangstar series has been a thing for several years at this point, but I've honestly not given much thought to any of the games up until now. It could be because I'm less interested in playing an open-world crime spree simulator on mobile, or it could be that I vastly prefer the absurdity and fun of Saint's Row over the more real world simulacra of Grand Theft Auto. Regardless, this is the first Gangstar I've touched in a long time - and I'm far from impressed.

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Anything I Can Do, You Already Do Better

I want to be clear and state upfront that I actually like the idea behind this newest Gangstar. Yeah it's basically GTA with freemium elements, but the concept sort of makes sense. You can complete missions to earn rewards, with faster clear times earning more stars (up to 3) and more stars meaning better earnings, which I like because it gives missions more meaning than just progressing the story. I also appreciate how you can earn/randomly draw things like weapons and vehicles, then upgrade them using certain items and spending a bit of cash. It's a freemium mechanic that works well within the structure of an open world crime thingy type game.

To Gangstar: New Orleans' credit, there are some other worthwhile things happening here. The game does look pretty good, if a bit cartoonishly stylized, and there are lots of contextual buttons for things like taking cover and hoping into vehicles that will smartly pop in and out depending on what you're close to. I also really, really like being able to simply tap on mission icons from the map screen to start them, instead of needing to set waypoints and drive there all the time.

But then there's everything else. The story and characters don't hold a candle to either popular open-world series you could compare Gangstar to. There's an energy system that prevents you from playing too many missions back-to-back (though you can at least wander around the open world while you wait, I suppose). Someone thought having a Global Chat window automatically pop up in the middle of the screen would be a good idea (it isn't a good idea). Pointlessly repetitious 'tips' that remind you of the blatantly obvious pop-up before and after taking on missions. Driving doesn't feel good, crashing isn't satisfying, and smacking into pedestrians actually slows your car down quite a bit - heck, I've actually gotten cars stuck on pedestrians and failed missions because of it. There are even cutscene glitches, with thing like awkward pop-ins for objects and body parts, and in one of the earliest videos my character phased through a car door when getting out of the vehicle rather than opening it.

It doesn't stop there, though! I could honestly look past the glitchy, unpolished, and questionably designed bits for the most part so long as playing the game was fun in and of itself. Unfortunately that's not the case thanks to some spectacularly moody controls. I hadn't even played for an hour and was already experiencing getting hung up on objects in the environment, snapping to the wrong cover (which was farther away than the cover I intended to use, no less) in the middle of a firefight, having to try at least three times to simply guide my character through a doorway, somehow losing touch with the virtual movement stick and instead rotating the camera, and stepping out of cover for no reason.

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No Thanks

The happiest time I've had with Gangstar: New Orleans is putting my phone down to write this review, knowing that I won't ever have to play it again. I wish that wasn't the case because, as I've said, I think the core concept is a sound one. However, there are so many problems with the execution that even being free isn't enough to make the download worthwhile. Maybe earlier games in the series are better, I don't know, but I have a hard time imagining them being worse than this one.

Player Reviews

Screenshots

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Gangstar: New Orleans - Screen 1 Gangstar: New Orleans - Screen 2

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