
… but don’t get too excited – Rockstar founder hasn’t even thought of a setting yet; Exec discusses media bias
Rockstar founder Dan Houser has publicly talked about the next iteration in the GTA series for the first time.
However, the exec has told The Times that he hasn’t even thought of a City to set the game in yet – let alone a plot.
In a fantastic interview, Houser also talks to the paper’s Nigel Kendall about controversy over violent projects, the lack of recognition given to the industry, his reluctance to talk to the media – and the status of video games as ‘the new rock’n’roll'.
Talking about the release of Manhunt 2, Houser said that the controversial content of the game actually came back to bite Rockstar, as “when a game is banned it means we’re not doing our first job – of making the investors back their money".
However, his opinion of the ‘games cause violence’ argument was less charitable.
Advertisement
He added: “It feels at last like we’re moving on from that debate. The audience is getting past 30 so it all becomes a bit silly. That’s not to say that all games are for all people; we’ve never said that. GTA has always been rated 18 and we’ve always been very happy with that.
“Nevertheless, we do get frustrated when video games are singled out and movies are given a free pass. Manhunt 2 was banned in the same week that Saw was released. The arguments become quite ludicrous quite quickly when people argue that games are somehow more dangerous than full-motion video.
“Within Rockstar, sometimes we feel that some of our games get singled out and held up as pariahs. All we want to do is tell a story with rounded characters. Like Goodfellas, which is a key film for us, our rounded characters happen to be criminals.”
The paper reports that Houser will soon start work on GTA V, which will involve co-writing a script of around 1,000 pages – ten times as much as a feature film.
“We'll think of a city first, then the characters,” he added.
Comments
Is that it?
Is that it?
UK
Got to do a UK one, most the Yanks love britain so why not make it Uk.
They could revolve around our crooked government. Tax you for going in and out london.
Charge £50 for games from GAME but then go to supermarket ingame and pay £25. With a retro 2D GTA london Game, built in.
Make you pay £1.10 for a litre of fuel.
Create footballers to beat up women and crash cars but still get off the hook.
Have Fat boy Chris DJ moyles on the radio, but make him funny and racist like an ulter ego of himself.
Have racial wars with whites vs asian from brum or bradford. Like the future of a civil war.
There is an enormous amount that can be done with London
Come on rockstar
Poor
What a terrible article, I'm sure he's also thinking about GTA 6 too.
poor title
To be fair it was actually quite a good article, except that it wasn't actually about GTA V as the title suggested.
Should have been "Houser comments on game censorship" or something like that. Less disappointment all round.
Leave a Comment
HOT TOPICS
Religious leaders slam Modern Warfare 2 130
Microsoft hails its ‘killer weapon’ in battle with PS3 and Wii 36
Russia pulls Modern Warfare 2 from sale? 16
The Hut rebuffs AC2 date break claims 14
MW2 sales pass $550m worldwide 13
The Producers pulls out of Trilogy partnership 12
60% of UK 360s have failed 11
Xbox Live class action begins 10
Facebook hitting PS3 today 8
Call of Duty inspires new retailers 6
RELATED STORIES
Rockstar: ‘GTA IV will send tabloids mad’ 12
GTA IV trailer arrives tonight 1
NY outrage at GTA IV setting 1
Creativity first, business second, says Rockstar 3
Pachter: PS3 will 'win GTA IV battle' 21
Rockstar boss: We’re the new Elvis Presley 5
GTA IV smashes day one sales record 40
Microsoft: ‘All GTA 360 owners will join Live’ 3
Gamestop: GTA IV is encouraging PS2 owners to upgrade to PS3 3
UK retail prepares for 'manic' GTA weekend 2
ABOUT US
MCV is the leading trade news and community site for all professionals working within the UK and international video games market. It reaches everyone from store manager to CEO, covering the entire industry. MCV is published by Intent Media, which specialises in entertainment, leisure and technology markets












