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June 4, 2009 4:00 PM PDT

E3 2009: Mafia II

by Dan Ackerman
(Credit: 2K Games)

Hitting the very definition of a cult hit square on the head, few gamers have heard of the 2002 game Mafia, developed by a small group of Czech programmers and originally released on the Xbox and for PC -- but those that do recall it regularly sing its praises as a superior open-world action/adventure.

Built on essentially the same model as Grand Theft Auto, the game transported its crime family story back to the 1930s, and evoked the Maio Puzo Godfather vibe much better than the stodgy, by the numbers, officially licensed Godfather games did later.

For this long-in-the-making sequel, Mafia II, 2K Games has brought the original developers in-house, calling the new studio 2K Czech. What we saw from them was another carefully constructed, engaging virtual crime world, this time updated to the 1940s and 1950s (perhaps not coincidentally mirroring the timeframe of the second Godfather film).

There's not a heck of a lot that's actually new or unexpected in Mafia II, if you've played GTA, The Godfather, Saints Row, or any of a dozen other sandbox-style games. But the city feels thriving and colorful, and the missions we've seen involve just enough variety (such as riding a window-washing rig down the side of building to take out a rival mobster in a conference room meeting) to keep it from being another generic car-based crime thriller.

Most interesting perhaps is the clearly Eastern European take on 1950s America. Looking at the era of Mad Men, Eisenhower, and Hyman Roth filtered through the cold war cultural memory of a former iron curtain country reveals an interesting subtext about how our mid-century lifestyle translated overseas. There's a clear love for bulbous classic '50s cars, fedoras, and retro-chic diners -- which in hindsight seems like a pretty likely picture of what Czechoslovakian game programmers would imagine 1950s America to look like.

New York native Dan Ackerman, a former radio DJ turned journalist, has written about technology and music for publications including Spin, Blender, The Hollywood Reporter, and USA Today. He hosts the weekly Digital City podcast and the New York edition of Editors' Office Hours. Dan's new album, Tales Out of Night School, is available now. E-mail Dan.
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by emarkhasin June 5, 2009 8:22 AM PDT
the first Mafia was one of the best game i have ever played! The graphics was on the level of GTA 3, but scenario - was like a very interesting movie, and you can't stop playing because you want to know what will happen next. I liked the scenario of Mafia better the even of GTA 4 which i very like.
Can't wait to see Mafia 2!
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by Dan_Ackerman June 7, 2009 1:52 PM PDT
Yeah, I saw some very impressive stuff during the two big demo sessions I've gotten on the game -- there's a lot of NPC interaction -- you usually have one or two henchmen with you -- and some interesting location-specific stuff -- like I saw the player character shoot a guy in the elbow from behind cover, and the enemy dropped his gun and grabbed his arm.
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