Download Mafia 3 Highly Compressed in 50 Mb
Mafia III is about Lincoln Clay who after returning from the Vietnam War, is back to his home in New Bordeaux where he is struggling to escape from his criminal past. But after he came to know that his surrogate family has been trashed and wiped away by the Italian Mafia, he once again reunite the ones left and starts a military like revenge from the ones who are behind this chaos. Now for taking the revenge you need to be involve in intense gun fights plus you need to perform hand to hand fights. Mafia III is all about action and you are at the center stage. Just plan in such a way that you can get the revenge from this ruthless mafia. The game has got awesome visuals and the sound effects are also quite commendable. You can also download GTA 1.
Mafia 3 sets out to do something noble: It tries to eschew the parody and juvenile satire driving most open-world crime games in favor of a plot with deeper characters and more serious themes.
While those themes — especially racism — are new to the series, much of Mafia 3feels shrouded in the legacy of 2010's Mafia 2, which received decent reviews but drew criticism for its empty open world. Mafia 3's open world is not empty; it flings to the opposite extreme, with a seemingly endless supply of side missions and collectibles.
Mafia 3 developer Hangar 13 has embedded that open-world fluff into every corner of the new game, and indeed into its very structure. What this leaves is a game that wants to forge a deeper, more serious narrative, but gameplay that depends on constant repetition of less meaningful tasks.
Framed as a historical documentary, Mafia 3 tells the story of Lincoln Clay, a Vietnam War vet who returns from combat to find his home city of New Bordeaux (a spin on New Orleans) caught up in a struggle between various underworld crime organizations. After an exhilarating first few hours that include a bank heist mission played out between flashbacks, Clay sets out on a path of vengeance, vowing to kill everyone between himself and a rival mafioso leader.
The setup is standard rags-to-riches crime story cliché. Clay starts at the bottom — or, rather, restarts there after everything is taken from him — and must not only destroy his enemies but slowly build up a crime empire of his own, recruiting allies to run each district of the city that he takes over. What sets the events of Mafia 3 apart is the element of race: Lincoln is black, and in a southern U.S. city in the late '60s, that means everything.
In general, Mafia 3's plot is full of promise that the the game's structure rarely delivers on. Its characters are sharply written, smart and easily relatable. Lincoln Clay is a likable protagonist — if only just slightly deeper than the average action game hero — and he interacts with a wide cast of interesting friends, such as Father James, a priest torn between helping Clay and chiding him for the terror he's causing. Even bad guys, such as the goofy, glad-handing "Uncle" Lou Marcano are a lot of fun to watch in cutscenes.
The problem comes packed into the very DNA of the actual game portion of Mafia 3. Developer Hangar 13 has built a world and characters I wanted to spend time with, but there's only really two ways to interact with them: shooting and driving. In a 10-hour action game with more linear design, this could work fine enough. In a 40-hour open-world game, however, it slowly drains the narrative of any lasting drama.
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