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"A Toronto-based freelance journalist specializing in consumer technology, including video games, computers, and home theatre components"

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The Mean Streets of Liberty City: A Grand Theft Auto IV player's diary

05/02/08 | by Chad Sapieha

Day One: Off the Boat

Niko Bellic, antihero of Rockstar’s new crime epic, is one of the most compelling characters ever set to silicon

Niko Bellic, flawed antihero of Rockstar's controversial new game, Grand Theft Auto IV, isn't really a bad guy. Much like The Godfather's Michael Corleone, another pop culture criminal we can't help but love, he's a decent fellow driven to evil acts in order to protect his family.

I'm 150 minutes into this epic game (I'd be further, but my time with this decidedly mature interactive entertainment is constrained to the hours during which my three-year-old daughter sleeps), and already it is apparent that Niko is one of the most interesting and conflicted characters the game industry has ever spawned.

Fresh off the boat from Eastern Europe, Niko is looking to start anew in America and forget his upsetting past, which so far has only been hinted at with comments like: “Just don't tell me you've stolen this stuff from a hospital for sick kids—my conscience is troubled enough already.”

Alas, it doesn't look like he's going to find much peace in Liberty City.

He's already been forced to kill to protect his cousin, who lied to him about the ease with which success comes to American immigrants, and he's slowly but surely being drawn into higher profile crimes in order to protect the people he cares about and make good in the big city. And while I've seen little about Niko that suggests he has the stuff of an all-powerful lord of the criminal underworld, I think we all know that's where he's headed.

But at least he's managing to find time for a bit of awkward love.

I've steered Niko into a couple of nights out with a shy but good natured girl named Michelle. She kicked Niko's (my?) butt at bowling on their first date, then on the second rewarded his decision to call a cab rather than drive home drunk by inviting him into her aparment.

Nothing happened—Michelle's too smart a girl to jump into the sack with a character like Niko after just a couple of dates. However, the heartfelt chat they shared that night did earn me an Xbox Achievement, which was cleverly named “Warm Coffee” in reference to the fact that this romantic encounter was decidedly less lewd than the controversial X-rated “Hot Coffee” mod associated with Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas.

And what of the depraved, character-destroying activities that the game's critics have warned us about? I haven't witnessed anything much worse than the beating up and stabbing of bad guys. That said, I suspect that there's plenty of contentious content to be found in GTA IV's free-to-explore and stunningly lifelike world by players who go in search of it.

Indeed, I will probe the depths of the game's debauchery in a future instalment of this GTA IV diary.

However, now that my baby girl is back safely asleep in her bed, it's time for her papa to head back out onto the mean streets of Liberty City.

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Chad Sapieha is a Toronto-based freelance journalist specializing in consumer technology, including video games, computers, and home theatre components. He has been writing about technology since 1997, and is a frequent contributor to several national publications, including HUB: The Computer Paper, The Globe & Mail, and CBC online. He has appeared on television as a video game expert for CTV, Global, and the CBC, and produced spoken columns for national and local radio stations. He spends his days at home with his young daughter, who enjoys helping him test not only games and gadgets geared for toddlers, but also the durability of devices never intended to come into contact with a curious three-year-old.



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