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It's up to you to run the streets. In Activision's and developers Luxoflux's True Crime: New York City players must wield the ultimate power as a rogue street cop in New York City.
You are Marcus Reed, a former criminal turned cop, using and abusing your authority to hunt down the murderer of your mentor while cleaning up the 'hoods of New York City, from Harlem to Chinatown. Your undercover investigation leads you through a murderous web of gangs and deceit as you battle crooks, your past, and everything else the city can throw at you. Welcome to New York City.
Due out on the GameCube, Xbox, and the PlayStation 2 - True Crime: New York City lets players truly live the street Cop life as they bust criminals, take down foreign and local gangs, search and seize, extort, interrogate, and dispense justice your way - by the book or indulge in the temptations of the job.
This title includes a free-roaming authentic neighborhoods, GPS-accurate streets and subways, landmark buildings, and also countless interiors. As a Cop you can take advantage of the dynamic environments, which provide unprecedented environmental gameplay - use ovens, stoves, machines, coolers, pots, pans, chairs or anything else you can grab to pound enemies. Virtually every aspect of each city block - including people, streets, and buildings - reacts and changes based on your 'law enforcement' decisions and ability to combat crime.
As with the last True Crime title players will once again be able to race through the streets of New York in shootouts, while pulling off stunts with motorcycles, sports cars, trucks, buses, with more vehicles to be announced.
As a Cop your are privy to brutal combat styles, as you switch fighting styles on the fly from street fighting to a variety of martial arts modes, opening up an array of moves and strategies to take down enemies. Fists not enough? Then use heavy weaponry including high-powered police issue weaponry, bats, swords, and other melee weapons, or obtain black market arms like flamethrowers and grenade launchers.
The in-game soundtrack features licensed tracks from some of the biggest names in music from Bob Dylan, The Ramones and Blondie to Run DMC, Public Enemy and DMX, as well as new music from Redman, including 'Rush The Security' from his upcoming album Red Gone Wild and two original tracks written for the game. True Crime: New York City, set to hit store shelves in November, also features an in-game customizable play list option that allows gamers to order the music based on their personal taste.
More on True Crime: New York City - as we get it.
John Grothier
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