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Ranking The Top 7 GTA Games of All Time

Grand Theft Auto III celebrated its 15-year anniversary on October 22, 2016. It's a celebration worth having, because GTA III is one of the most influential games ever created​. The game redefined the GTA series and essentially served as the blueprint for each one that came after. With III, Rockstar Games pushed the envelope in ways that the video game community (and those outside of it) wasn’t ready for.

Transforming the series into a three-dimensional playground of destruction offered not only a commentary on the changing landscape of video games, but its players. From completing missions that require you to plant a bomb in someone’s car (“Mike Lips Last Lunch”) to just inciting pure chaos among the citizens of Liberty City, the nihilism of III presented a psychological question that we all continue to wonder about: what do we find so appealing about violence in our art? 

As the series has continued, Rockstar has still found new ways of not only exploring that question, but offering commentary on the world we live in now. Yes, the ingenious missions still cater to our most destructive desires, but GTAhas always been more self-aware, holding up a mirror to each and every fan of the game. So give it up for GTA III and the game that changed the world.

However, although III incited change within the series, is it the best game in the series? Asking ourselves that question, we pitted it against the six other main games—I, II, VI, V, Vice City, and San Andreas—to see where the chips fall. You might be surprised which one takes the top spot.

7. Grand Theft Auto II

Year Released: 1999
Available On: PlayStation, Dreamcast, Game Boy Color, PC
Best Feature It Introduced: Side Missions

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Grand Theft Auto II wasn’t any different from its predecessor, honestly. Sure, the sequel added some features that became integral to the series, such as side missions (cab driver, bus driver) and accepting missions from multiple gang groups. But GTA II didn’t have much going on. Still, there were some memorable moments: taking missions from a gang of mentally ill people, driving down Elvis impersonators, and luring pedestrians (or Hare Krishna gang members depending on the port of the game played) into a bus to be turned into meat for hot dogs (“Hot Dog Homicide”). That counts for something.

6. Grand Theft Auto

Year Released: 1997
Available On: PlayStation, Game Boy Color, PC
Best Featured It Introduced: 2D Open World Design

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The game that started it all. Here, gamers got their first taste of a series that changed the history of video games. Sure, in comparison to its successors, GTA doesn’t compare. But remember the first time driving a tanker loaded with explosives into a police precinct, and escaping just in time to see it all collapse? Or driving a bus filled with bombs that would detonate if the player didn’t maintain a speed of 50 MPH or higher (a la Speed)? Such chaos and freedom became the reasons why we love the GTA series to this day.

5. Grand Theft Auto IV

Year Released: 2008
Available On: PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PC
Best Feature It Introduced: Morality Choices

 

Following Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, Rockstar Games proceeded to give the GTA series another boost, creating the “HD Universe,” which includes the latest GTA games. GTA IV kicked this iteration of the series off, combining crisp graphics and physics with a very, very immersive world. In the game, when the weight of the carnage and violence you incite becomes too much to handle, you could just pop into a bar for some bowling or darts. Or relax and see what’s on TV. Before this iteration, the GTA games had always felt restrained in a way, because we were really only able to engage with the characters through assigned missions. IVchanged that in more ways than one, while still giving players everything that made them fall in love with the series in the first place.  

4. Grand Theft Auto III

Year Released: 2001
Available On: PlayStation 2, PC
Best Feature It Introduced: 3D Open World Design

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Grand Theft Auto III ushered in a new era for the series that its successors took further and further. The game was a big deal—so real-seeming, and also so divisive that Wal-Mart actually began to check people’s IDs to make sure they were old enough to buy the game. This was an iconic moment for video games: from the game’s introduction to its missions, III was just as much a commentary on our fascination with violence than anything else. It held a mirror up to its players, offering a nihilistic playground that made us feel dirty. But let’s be honest, we couldn’t get enough of it.

3. Grand Theft Auto: Vice City

Year Released: 2002
Available On: PlayStation 2, Xbox, PC
Best Feature It Introduced: Ability to Purchase Businesses

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Rockstar Games has always done a great job at creating worlds that perfectly reflect tone, location, and period. Vice City is one of the best examples of that. The bright, neon colors, and pop gems of the ‘80s America combined with that era’s underbelly of corruption, drugs, and violence combined to create an undeniably addictive video game. In the center of it all was Tommy Vercetti, a man who's involved in a drug deal gone wrong shortly after being released from prison. What happens after that is your choice. Purchasing businesses, completing

missions—as Vercetti, players are able to become the king of Miami in a way reminiscent of Scarface’s Tony Montana. But with that comes consequences, which you learn throughout the incredible journey.

2. Grand Theft Auto V

Year Released: 2013
Available On: PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, Xbox 360, Xbox One, PC
Best Feature It Introduced: Control Over Multiple Characters

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Where III began the commentary on our fascination with violence, V kicked everything into hyper drive—nothing was off limits. What made this installment so incredible was how fucking meta it was. There’s a certain discomfort watching Michael, Trevor, and Franklin watch something on TV and then have them make a call or pull up the Internet on their phone. And aside from the mind fuck V can provide, the gameplay was absolutely innovative. Switching between those

three characters to complete a certain mission brought a level of strategy that wasn’t present in previous games. Seriously, “The Big Score?” Amazing. V managed to redefine GTA yet again, showing attention to detail in every single aspect of the game.

1. Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas

Year Released: 2004
Available On: PlayStation 2, Xbox, PC
Best Feature It Introduced: Character Personalization

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Of course San Andreas is number one. Similar to Vice City, San Andreas just did such an incredible job of creating an immersive world. The look, the sound—it’s all there. As Carl Johnson (a.k.a. CJ), you’re transported to ‘90s era Los Angeles (Los Santos in the video game), where you’re thrown back into a life of gang violence whether you want to be or not. The way San Andreas plays out until its memorable and climactic end is what makes it so great, even now. Sneaking into “Area 69” to steal a jet pack? Helping The Truth burn his weed stash and driving to San Fierro high as fuck? San

Andreas honed in on the comedic absurdity of its predecessors, offering such an entertaining experience that’s still so easy to revisit years later. Most importantly, its humor in terms of storytelling created a balance between great gameplay and an engaging plot.

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So there you have! Let us know if you agree in the comments!

Article first featured on Complex

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