Review KillahMonk 4/5 · Jun 14, 2026
A Massive World with Missed Depth
Grand Theft Auto V is a great game—fun, detailed, and still visually impressive today, especially with the enhancements in the upgraded version. I spent a lot of time just getting lost in the world, doing side missions and running into random encounters that are surprisingly well-written and well-acted. There’s clearly a lot of effort put into content that many players …
Grand Theft Auto V is a great game—fun, detailed, and still visually impressive today, especially with the enhancements in the upgraded version. I spent a lot of time just getting lost in the world, doing side missions and running into random encounters that are surprisingly well-written and well-acted. There’s clearly a lot of effort put into content that many players might never even see.
The world itself is massive and full of things to do, and I actually like how easy it is to miss content. It makes the game feel more alive, like things are happening whether I’m part of them or not.
That being said, I think the tone is a bit of a miss. The satire doesn’t land as well as it should because it’s often too on-the-nose. For example, something like “LifeInvader” as a parody of social media feels overly obvious, and the game relies too much on that kind of humor.
The game is also very long—and it shows. There’s just too much driving. After a while, it becomes tedious, to the point where I started using taxis just to skip it. While the story is entertaining, by the end it feels like it has nothing meaningful to say. Similar to GTA III and Vice City, it leans heavily into chaos and violence without much depth, moral consequence, or real character development. Progression also feels off, since you don’t really get to enjoy most of the money you earn from heists until the very end.
Overall, it’s a good game carried by its technical achievements, detailed world, and fun mission design—but in the end, it feels like a lot of wasted potential.