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The Grand Theft Auto franchise has been around for nearly two decades, and the series includes over a dozen titles. Some GTA games are excellent, others..not so much. Let’s take a moment to rank every GTA game, from worst to best.
We originally ranked GTA games a few years back, but that was before GTA V—so, you can consider this an update of sorts. I built this list taking into account how these games play in 2017, rather than just going with my fond memories, which means some “classics” might be lower than you expect.
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Maybe you disagree with my rankings. That’s OK! Each entry also has some fun facts and bits of trivia, so don’t get too mad if [Insert Your Favorite GTA Game] doesn’t take the top spot.
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13. Grand Theft Auto: Advance (Original Release: Gameboy Advance, 2004)
GTA Advance is a mediocre and ugly game that was likely hindered by the hardware. There’s only so much you can do on the GBA, after all. Due to lack of storage on GBA carts, each car has a short instrumental song that loops instead of the usual radio stations featured in GTA games. This gets repetitive quickly.
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FUN FACT:GTA Advance is a prequel to GTA III, and it actually explains why 8-Ball was arrested. It even shows King Courtney, a character that is only heard but not seen in GTA III.
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12. Grand Theft Auto (Original Release: PC & PS1, 1998)
The game that started it all. And yet, GTA 1 is also the least necessary game to play in the main series. Everything within GTA 1 is majorly improved in future games. GTA 1 just hasn’t aged very well, thanks to difficulty spikes that vary from mission to mission.
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FUN FACT: See that on the cover? That is Trump Tower. The Tower also appeared in GTA IV,with the description that it “was built by Lyle Cleethorpes V purely to demonstrate to the world his great wealth. As a filthy-rich heir to a, quite frankly, awful family, fame obsessed Cleethorpes will do anything to get his face or name up in lights.”
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11. GTA London 1969/1961 (Original Release: PC & PS1, 1999)
While technically these are mission packs for GTA 1, they added a ton of new content—including a brand new city to explore. GTA London 1969 was released on PC and PS1. GTA London 1961, a prequel, was released only on PC. Together, they are basically a new entry in the franchise.
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GTA London is kinda strange. It’s the only time GTA has been set in the 60’s and unlike every other game in the franchise, GTA London is set in a real city. This is also the first and only game to be set outside the US. Ironically the developer and creator of Grand Theft Auto, UK located Rockstar North, didn’t develop the only UK based GTA. Rockstar Toronto developed London 1969 and 1961.
SAD FACT: The Crisp Brothers, who were villains in the game, were both secretly voiced by famous British novelist and art critic John Berger. Sadly, he recently passed away.
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10. Grand Theft Auto 2 (Original Release: PC & PS1, 1999)
From the characters the visuals, GTA 2 is zanier than GTA 1. Infamously, you could run over Hare Krishna members in GTA 1, but in GTA 2, they are an in-game faction warring with the Russian Mafia. That’s the difference between 1 and 2. Despite the silliness, GTA 2 is a better version of GTA 1, with improved graphics, sounds, and controls.
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FUN FACT: This was also the first and last time GTA would appear on a Sega console.
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9. GTA: Liberty City Stories (Original Release: 2005, PSP)
The first 3D era game to appear on this list. I really enjoyed Liberty City Stories, but it had the unfortunate timing of being released after the mega-popular San Andreas. Almost every fan I know seemed disappointed by how bare bones and old Liberty City Stories felt. You couldn’t swim, you couldn’t crouch, you couldn’t fly helicopters or jetpacks or anything like that. It was a bummer.
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Still, LCS had some things going for it, like the addition of vehicles from San Andreas and Vice City into Liberty City. LCS also improved the aiming and shooting, lifting its combat controls from GTA San Andreas. But one reason this game is so low on my list is I don’t really like Tony Cipriani, the main protagonist. Cipriani is annoying, and his story is weak.
FUN FACT: Tony Cipriani first appeared in GTA III as a characters who gave you missions. You might remember him as the dude who always seemed to be feuding with his loud, angry mother.
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8. Grand Theft Auto III (Original Release: 2001, PS2)
GTA III’s charm is undeniable: I started playing recently with the intention of just grabbing a few minutes of footage, and ended up playing for nearly three hours instead.
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The story of GTA III feels focused and moves quickly. The game is also filled with memorable missions and characters, like Tony Cipriani and his loud mother, as well as Catalina, who famously shoots Claude in the face at the very start of the game. Missions can be a bit simple compared to later GTA games, but they’re still fun to play. Remember the mission that tasks you with stealing a high ranking Mafia member’s car, arming it with a bomb and then parking it back where he is currently eating lunch? Exciting stuff!
Also excellent: using cheats to fly the tank. Man.
FUN FACT:GTA III’s radio has references to Carcer City, the setting of Manhunt. Additionally, different cars from GTA III pop up in Manhunt, including the Blista Compact. And a bathroom in Manhunt is actually ripped directly out of GTA III.
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7. GTA Chinatown Wars (Original Release: 2009, Nintendo DS)
Chinatown Wars returns the GTA series to its top-down roots, except this time, it’s in Liberty City.
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Chinatown Wars includes an addicting drug dealing system. Sometimes deals go smoothly, while other times, you get attacked or ambushed by the police. Dealing drugs is one of my favorite things to do in Chinatown Wars; Rockstar fleshed the entire thing out really well. Driving across town to sell a bunch of weed in an area where it goes for a high price is very satisfying, for example, and it helps that all the UI for the system feels professional and serious.
FUN FACT: GTA Chinatown Wars is the only single-player GTA game starring an Asian American.
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6. Grand Theft Auto Vice City (Original Release: 2002, PS2)
The first time I played Vice City, a friend lent me his copy. He had to leave after a few hours, but I, desperate to keep playing, kept my PS2 on while taking the disc out. I was hopeful that the PS2 would let me keep playing, but that’s not how it works. Still, that moment is emblematic of how much I love this game.
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Bright pink neon, blue suits, bright yellow sports cars, and tons of cocaine: Vice City is the 80’s incarnate. Vice City also has one of the best soundtracks of the entire franchise, which is saying something.
While I love Vice City, actually playing it again is a good reminder of how far the series has come. Vice City can feel clunky and unresponsive, especially when it comes to combat. Fighting multiple enemies can be a nightmare, because the lock-on system isn’t reliable. Still, the city, music and atmosphere help keep Vice City from aging too poorly.
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FUN FACT:GTA Vice City has billboards that reference Miami..so does Miami actually exist in the GTA Universe?
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5. GTA Vice City Stories (Original Release: 2006, PSP)
Grand Theft Auto: Vice City Stories is Vice City, but with better controls and more things to do. GTA VCS also added a ton San Andreas-style features, such as swimming, gang wars, multiple outfits to wear, among other things. After years of watching Tommy drown, being able to swim around Vice City is a welcome change.
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The gang wars and empire-building mechanics in Vice City Stories are a highlight. Growing your business and defending it to earn money is a ton of fun, though I wouldn’t be surprised if most people missed out on the experience because it was only initially available on PSP (and later ported to PS2)
FUN FACT: Most celebrities who appear in GTA tend to play a character—. Samuel L. Jackson, for example, was in GTA San Andreas, but as corrupt officer Tenpenny. In Vice City Stories, Phil Collins appears..as Phil Collins. Hell, he actually performs in Vice City. It’s a bit strange and of course, because it is GTA, someone wants to kill the famous musician.
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4. Grand Theft Auto San Andreas (Original Release: PS2, 2004)
Vice City is great, but San Andreas is better, especially when it comes to the combat, visuals, and number of vehicles. San Andreas is a bigger game in nearly every way: you can fly jets, plan a heist, visit Las Venturas and gamble, buy property, take part in gang wars, drive a train, climb stuff, ride a bicycle, play basketball..the list goes on and on.
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FUN FACT: OnPC, you can still mess around withGTASAMP, a multiplayer mod that has been around for a decade now. Wanna play San Andreas with other fans? Great news, this mod is still populated and active to this day.
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3. Grand Theft Auto IV (Original Release: 2008, PS3 and Xbox 360)
GTA IV divides fans. Some loved GTA IV’s serious tone, while others miss the wilder side of GTA. For me, it easily makes my top three.
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In GTA IV, combat finally feels modern: you can use the left and right triggers to aim and shoot, a change that makes combat feel natural. I also love the way the city looms over you as you look up. Plus, flying a helicopter in the night as New York Groove plays on the radio is still awesome.
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I also really enjoyed the driving in GTA IV, as it felt heavy and smooth, unlike the previous games. The result is that when you get good at driving in GTA IV, it actually feels like you learned a skill. Back when I played in multiplayer servers, I remember getting really pumped whenever I out-drived other players, especially if I managed to avoid an accident or ambush.
GTA IV also featured the first major attempt at a GTA online multiplayer mode. Modes like Cops N’ Crooks, are still fun to play, and I enjoy that you can turn off parts of the game, like police or friendly fire. Having that sort of granular control made me feel like I was creating my own rules, my own special stories. Even the more recent GTA Online doesn’t feel that intimate.
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FUN FACT: My favorite easter egg in GTA IV are hippo-shaped trash bins, which you might recall fromManhunt. So then: where does Manhunt fit into the GTA multiverse?
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2. Grand Theft Auto Episodes From Liberty City (Original Release: 2009, Xbox 360)
The DLC for GTA IV is better than the original release. Each DLC gives you a new perspective on Liberty City: Lost and The Damned is gritty and dirty, Ballad of Gay Tony is fun and glamorous.
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Lost and The Damned added a new biker-centric campaign, which was a huge departure from the original GTA IV campaign. GTA IV was all about an immigrant coming to America and trying to make it. The Lost and The Damned is all about hanging with your biker gang, fighting rivals and cruising around Liberty City in choppers. I’m not a huge biker guy, which is why I consider Lost and The Damned the lesser DLC compared to Ballad of Gay Tony (but they are both still good.)
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Once TBOGT was released I don’t think I ever played standard GTA IV online multiplayer again. Gay Tony added so many things that became must-haves, like parachutes, sticky bombs, tanks, golf, dancing minigames, mission scoring and large military-grade weapons. Ballad of Gay Tony also lightened the mood and had more fun than GTA IV. Nevermind the music: Ballad of Gay Tony took the already fantastic GTA IV soundtrack and stuffed it full of neon, fun and partying.
Fun Fact:GTA Episodes From Liberty City added two new episodes of Republican Space Rangers, a cartoon you can watch on the in-game TVs. The main character of the series is voiced by Lloyd Floyd, who has done more voice work for Rockstar than any other voice actor. He also was the voice of the pigeon in this commercial.
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1. Grand Theft Auto V/ GTA Online (Original Release: 2013, Xbox 360 & PS3)
Full stop, GTA V is the best GTA game ever made.
GTA V is easily the best-looking and best-playing game in the entire franchise, and a large part of that has to do with Rockstar’s attention to detail. You can knock over traffic cones, watch animals in the woods, read labels on cereal boxes. Hell, you can watch TV or even surf a totally fictional in-game internet. It’s wild.
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GTA V is also a joy to play, and in a single session you can alternate between the chaos of blowing up a train or robbing a bank to the beauty of parachuting over the desert at night. It’s wonderful.
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Then you have GTA Online. Yes some of the pricing is ridiculous, and the grinding to get the newest and coolest toys can take forever. But GTA Online is still a playground that I’ve lost hundreds of hours in. Driving around the mountains, doing missions, racing cars, starting large firefights with the police—these are all things you’ve done in GTA before, but being able to do it all with friends revitalizes the experience.
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The best part is, every few weeks or so, there’s a new vehicle or mode to play around with. GTA Online is constantly changing, and these updates—which are often free—add entirely new gameplay systems. Three years after the release of GTA Online and I’m still playing the game nearly every week; it still feels fresh.
Fun fact: While GTA fans have spent years looking for UFOs, ghosts and Bigfoot across multiple games, most of those searches haven’t turned up much. Rockstar seems to have noticed this was a trend, because they included all three of those things in GTA V. That inclusion helpswhy the legend of Mt. Chiliad was so powerful in motivating people to look for a fabled jetpack.
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Putting nostalgia aside, as someone who has put an embarrassing number of hours into all GTA games, GTA V is the pinnacle of the series.
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Zach Zwiezen is a a writer living in Kansas City, Missouri. He has written for Gamecritics, Killscreen and Entertainment Fuse.
(Redirected from Sonny Forelli)
A number of recurring characters appear during various missions or cut scenes in the video gameGrand Theft Auto: Vice City, set in 1986. Prominent characters are listed here.
- 1Tommy Vercetti
- 2Major characters
- 3Supporting characters
- 4Minor characters
Tommy Vercetti[edit]
Introduced in: Introduction, airport cutscene
Thomas 'Tommy' Vercetti is the main protagonist and playable character of Grand Theft Auto: Vice City.
Backstory[edit]
Born Italian-American, he was raised in a small family as an only child, with his father owning a printing shop. When he was a teenager, he befriended Sonny Forelli, who has been early involved in his family's activities, and he started working for his associates, earning his trust and position in the Forelli family.
In Liberty City in 1971, he was sent by Sonny to kill a key mobster in the Harwood District, who was trying to destroy Forelli's early rackets. When he arrived, eleven men ambushed him. Tommy was forced to kill all of them, and he ended up in prison for multiple charges for murder. He was placed on death row, but due to the Forelli's influence, he only served fifteen years. He also earned the title 'The Harwood Butcher'.
Release from prison[edit]
Fresh out of prison in 1986, Tommy is keen to start work again for the Forelli Family, and is immediately dispatched by Sonny Forelli to Vice City to participate in a drug deal, (due to Sonny's fear that Tommy's presence in Liberty City will cause him problems in his business as he is still too widely known there). Sonny also tells him to expand business in the south and to stay there for a while finding opportunities for a good business.
Tommy arrives at the deal as a supervisor between the Forelli and Vance Crime Family. Just then, a group of masked assailants open fire on them, killing Victor Vance, their leader, who was the main character in Grand Theft Auto: Vice City Stories, and also Forelli's men, resulting in Tommy losing both the money and the drugs, from which he narrowly escapes with Rosenberg. With the promise to Sonny to retrieve both, he then sets out to find and kill the party responsible. Tommy, while associated with Lance Vance, Victor's brother, he begins to work for Vice City's most powerful drug baron Ricardo Diaz (who is later revealed to be responsible for the ambushed deal).
Business adventures[edit]
After Tommy and Lance lead an assault on Diaz's estate and kill him, Tommy begins to disobey Sonny's orders and enjoys the empire he claimed from Diaz, without paying any tribute to the Forelli family, enraging Sonny, who constantly demands a larger cut of the profits from Tommy, and Lance, who wants more respect from Tommy and also more control in the organization. He and the Forelli Family's conflict reach boiling point when Tommy kills Forelli henchmen sent to seize his business revenue, and Sonny personally visits him in Vice City. Due to Lance's betrayal, he is forced into a large shootout with the Forelli mobsters, in which he kills Sonny, Lance, and the hit squad, finally securing his empire in the city, with Ken Rosenberg as his main partner.
Tommy, at the end of the game, is shown to have become an extremely powerful figure in Vice City's criminal underworld. He has established a powerful criminal empire, and he is shown to own a huge mansion, many businesses as fronts, and also has a dominating role in established drug trades in Vice City, while still retaining his well-known nickname, and his defeat of the Forelli family leader is the beginning of the Forellis decline in Liberty City. Also, with the cooperation from Big Mitch Baker's Bikers and Los Cabrones, they are shown to be Vercetti's mutual business partners. Tommy, at the end of the game, is the kingpin of Vice City.
Tommy Vercetti is voiced by Ray Liotta.
Preceded by Claude Grand Theft Auto III | Protagonist of Grand Theft Auto Grand Theft Auto: Vice City | Succeeded by Carl 'CJ' Johnson Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas |
Major characters[edit]
Sonny Forelli[edit]
Introduced in: Introduction, meeting cut scene
Killed in 'Keep your Friends Close..'
Sonny Forelli is the Don of the Forelli family of the Liberty City Mafia in 1986. He is also the brother of Marco, Franco, and Mike and cousin of Giorgio. Unlike in 2001, in which the family is in the shadow of its former self, The Forelli family is the richest and most powerful Mafia family in Liberty City in 1986. Sonny came to power young, and ordered several important mob killings around the time of Tommy Vercetti's imprisonment that resulted in the great success of the Forelli family. At the time of Grand Theft Auto: Vice City, Sonny is believed to have major influences in racketeering, gambling, unions, corruption, and prostitution, with growing interest in the narcotics trade.Tommy Vercetti grew up with Sonny and they were friends. Sonny granted Tommy a position in the organization where he was loyal to the family above all else. But, fifteen years before the start of Grand Theft Auto: Vice City, Tommy was sent by Sonny to the Harwood District to assassinate a key mobster. Tommy was apparently ambushed, and ended up killing eleven rival mobsters in a massacre earning him the title of the 'Harwood Butcher'.
By the time the game starts, Sonny Forelli is concerned about the other families, the Leones (a relatively new family also set up in Liberty City), which is starting to take over drug business from Forellis. Concerned that this would weaken the Forelli's power in Liberty, Sonny is thinking of expanding his business down South, and seriously considering of cutting drug business in Vice City, by his words '24-karat gold these days' (leading drug trade city of the country). At the same time, Tommy Vercetti is back in town, just out from prison. Because Tommy kept quiet when he did his time, Sonny feels obliged to give him a job; however, Sonny believes Tommy is still too well known as the 'Harwood Butcher' and he feels this will prove harmful to his businesses in Liberty City. He therefore sends Tommy to Vice City as a formal Forelli family representative to set up a drug outpost for the Forellis.
When it is learned that Tommy Vercetti emerges without the millions of dollars or the drugs he was sent to buy as a result of an ambush during a drug deal, Sonny is enraged and promises to kill Tommy if he does not get both the money and the merchandise back.
As Tommy Vercetti grows powerful and builds his extensive empire, Sonny calls in periodically to pressure Tommy into giving him his cut. Once it is clear that Tommy has gone solo, he sends enforcers to Vice City to rough up Tommy's men and tax his multiple businesses. When Tommy slaughters all of them, Forelli approaches one of Tommy's partners, Lance Vance, and the two conspire against Tommy.
Tommy is expecting Sonny and his men when they arrive at Tommy's mansion's doors, ready with suitcases full of counterfeit money to pay the Forelli family off once and for all. Before Lance Vance tells Sonny the real money is in Tommy's office safe and Sonny reveals that Tommy's imprisonment was actually organized by himself, Tommy realizes the time for diplomacy is over. A huge gunfight ensues, and Tommy slaughters countless Forelli family members, and the traitor Lance, ending with a showdown between Sonny and himself in the mansion's entrance hall. Tommy finally gets revenge for his 15-year imprisonment by personally killing Sonny in the gun battle.
The Introduction, Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas's prelude film, implied that the death of Sonny Forelli struck a severe blow to the Forelli family and resulted in the incursion of the Sindacco family into Liberty City from Las Venturas. Don Salvatore Leone has referenced Sonny's name when responding in anger to the underboss of the Sindacco family, Johnny Sindacco.
Sonny Forelli was voiced by Tom Sizemore.
Preceded by Catalina Grand Theft Auto III | Main antagonist of Grand Theft Auto Grand Theft Auto: Vice City | Succeeded by Frank Tenpenny Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas |
Ken Rosenberg[edit]
Introduced in: Introduction, airport cut scene
Ken Rosenberg is a shady neurotic lawyer who is closely affiliated with Tommy Vercetti and loosely connected to the Forelli family, often serving as comic relief. Ken meets Tommy at Escobar International Airport and remains his loyal ally throughout the game. He secures Tommy's release from prison whenever he is arrested, and his voice on a phone is sometimes briefly heard in these situations ('Tommy Vercetti is an innocent man!' and 'Officer, you really think my client was capable of that?' and 'Of course he looks like the suspect that doesn't make him guilty you look like an idiot but that doesn't mean you are one ' and 'Oh officer Tommy Vercetti wasn't even in Vice City on the day of question!' and even 'Tommy Vercetti doesn’t even own a gun! how could he do that how could he? now let him go.') Tommy can also be heard requesting that the police call his lawyer, and gives Ken's name.
He has been reported to have problems with controlled substances and egomania. He is also suspected of cheating on his law school exams and having employed heavies on numerous occasions to intimidate and corrupt juries; Giorgio Forelli, the cousin of Sonny Forelli and a member of the Forelli Family, is a 'blue chip' client of Ken's. Ken's inability to firmly take control of situations meant he would also be the subject of jokes on occasions. One example of this is during the planning stages of a large-scale bank heist, where Tommy jokingly stated that Ken can 'wash the money for the rest of the team and keep the drinks on ice' when Ken wanted to participate in the heist. Ken even mocks himself, saying 'I couldn’t intimidate a child — and believe me, I’ve tried!'
Ken has a very poor success rate at trial and is referred as a 'bonkers ambulance chaser' who could 'defend an innocent man all the way to death row' (as stated by Kent Paul, who later befriends Ken). After the game's last mission, Ken, being one of the only men to remain loyal to Tommy, is made Tommy's new business partner. In 1992, however, Ken was sent to a rehabilitation clinic in Bone County after his excessive drug usage. After getting out of rehabilitation, Ken attempted to contact Tommy. However, he was turned away by one of Tommy's associates as it's assumed Tommy has abandoned him, seeing Ken as more of a liability than help.
Ken later meets Carl Johnson, who hires him as an accountant for his successful music venture, and later Ken then transfers his loyalty to him.
Ken's character is based on the lawyer David Kleinfeld (played by Sean Penn) in the movie Carlito's Way—both characters look very much like each other, share a Jewish name, the same frizzy hair and gaudy suits, and both are rendered increasingly paranoid and incoherent by their cocaine addictions. The work offices of both lawyers are also almost identical.
Ken is mentioned in Vice City Stories during a news report on the radio after the mission 'Nice Package.' He also works as a legal consultant for one of the cities' radio stations.
It is stated after the reporter talking about the gun fights that he quotes the second amendment and should face charges.
Ken Rosenberg is voiced by William Fichtner.
Lance Vance[edit]
Introduced in: 'in the deal cutscene'
Killed in 'Keep your Friends Close..'
Lance Vance is a sociopathic Dominican drug dealer who becomes Tommy Vercetti's associate throughout the game. Lance worked in the narcotics trade with his brother, Victor, and made up half of the Vance Crime Family, with Victor as the leader. In the game's opening cut scene, Lance flies Victor to a cocaine deal with Tommy Vercetti, but before the exchange can happen, Victor and the two men accompanying Tommy, Harry and Lee, are killed in an ambush. Lance, still in the helicopter, flies away unscathed, while Tommy jumps into a car with Ken Rosenberg at the wheel and narrowly escapes with his life, but not the money or drugs, which resulted in Lance seeking out the help Tommy in order to find their money.
Lance meets Tommy face-to-face shortly after Tommy beats a small-time hitman named Leo Teal, who helped organize the ambush, to death. Tommy and Lance agree to help each other get revenge on whoever wrecked the cocaine deal. Lance helps Tommy on several assignments such as saving Ricardo Diaz from an ambush by the Haitian Gang in mission Guardian Angels and killing a thief who was stealing money from Ricardo. Lance attempts to kill Ricardo after discovering he organized the ambush but is captured and tortured by Ricardo in a junk yard until he is saved by Tommy.
Tommy and Lance plan an ambush on Ricardo and after sneaking into his mansion they make their way to Ricardo's office and gun him down. They take over his empire creating the future main gang of Vice City, The Vercetti Gang. However, over time as Tommy becomes extremely rich and powerful, Lance begins to resent Tommy's greater share of the substantial profits. He believes that Tommy is treating him like a child and a common grunt. Eventually, Sonny Forelli approaches Lance and Lance begins to conspire against Tommy. Lance later betrays Tommy in the final confrontation between Sonny and Tommy, changing sides and citing business as a reason for betraying Tommy. Enraged, Tommy slaughters all of Sonny Forelli's men, and kills Lance on the rooftop helipad of the mansion.
Lance on the surface appears cool and collected, but he is very impulsive, and his quest for vengeance against Ricardo Diaz lands Tommy in a great deal of trouble regularly. He's also very sensitive about his name, and will protest every time somebody makes fun of it. Lance Vance is also well known on the Vice City club scene and the Underworld for the infamous 'Lance Vance Dance', and has been seen owning and driving a distinctive white Infernus.
Thanks to some sketches, it is thought that Rockstar Games originally considered Eddie Murphy to define Lance's appearance, and possibly even voicing him in Grand Theft Auto: Vice City.[1] Lance Vance was voiced by Miami Vice star Philip Michael Thomas, as another one of Vice City's many references to Miami Vice. Also, both Lance and Thomas's character in Miami Vice, Ricardo 'Rico' Tubbs, share the same quest of exacting revenge for the murders of their brothers at the hands of drug dealers.
Supporting characters[edit]
Ricardo Diaz[edit]
Introduced in: 'The Party'
Killed in: 'Rub Out'
Ricardo Diaz is the leader of the biggest drug cartel in Vice City. He is extremely dangerous and volatile individual behind the ambush of the Forelli family's drug deal. He is also the leader of his own gang, and the initial drug lord of Vice City. Fearing the Liberty City Mafia is looking to gain a foothold in Vice City's expanding drug trade and also having Vance Crime Family taking over his drug business, Ricardo takes initiative and arranges the killing of multiple buyers and suppliers, which includes Tommy Vercetti and his crew, as well as the supplier Victor Vance.
Over time, Ricardo becomes less tolerant of competition, singling out aspiring dealers for assassination, no matter how small-time. Tommy and Ricardo meet during the mission where Tommy and Lance Vance save Ricardo from an ambush by the Haitian Gang, while he was meeting with the Cubans to sell them drugs, where Tommy proceeds to run several errands for Ricardo like wiping out a thief stealing money from Diaz, and stealing the fastest boat in Vice City. However, Tommy is soon informed by Colonel Cortez that Ricardo organised the ambush that ruined his drug deal.
Upon hearing this, Lance Vance attempts to kill Ricardo but is captured and tortured in a junkyard. Tommy then saves Lance but blows his cover as one of Ricardo's helpers. Fearing that Ricardo is now after them, Tommy and Lance load themselves up with a lot of guns and raid Ricardo's mansion, after all of Ricardo's men are killed, Tommy manages to shoot Ricardo in the stomach during a brief shootout in Ricardo's office. Both Tommy and Lance then proceed to shoot a wounded Ricardo Diaz in the face, killing him.
Ricardo bribed the INS for a green card in 1978, after entering the country illegally from Colombia. His contacts there believe he is a major player in the illegal drug industry and anti-government activity. Ricardo took up residence in Vice City and operated as a drug smuggler before wiping out the competition, emerging as the premier Vice City drug baron in 1984. He is also a friend of Colonel Cortez.
Ricardo is a popular philanthropist who gives money to foundations across Vice City and Central and South America, but all are believed to be fronts. He is short in stature and is thought to suffer from a Napoleon complex. His medical records show he has over-active glands and sweats more than is socially acceptable. He is a noted gun collector and is almost always armed; and he has a private militia and is heavily guarded at all times. He has been involved in a long-running battle for control of the drug business in Vice City and has bribed most police officers and officials within the town.
Ricardo's foul tempered and hot headed nature is evidenced in game, damaging or destroying items either by hand or with whatever weapon is available, such as shooting his unplugged VCR when he thought that the device was malfunctioning, shooting pigeons when he found bird feces on his car, or knocking over and repeatedly stamping on a television set after watching a horse on which he has bet lose a race.
Ricardo lived in a huge mansion in the affluent neighborhood of Starfish Island. Dubbed as the Diaz Estate, the interior of the home closely resembles that of fictional drug lord Tony Montana from the 1983 film Scarface. His clothing is also an exact copy of what Tony Montana wore in Scarface's famous chainsaw torture scene. However, the estate was seized by Tommy Vercetti after his death. Ricardo Diaz's first name is also similar to that of Ricardo 'Rico' Tubbs, a major Miami Vice character. Ricardo also appears to have once had a brother. In Grand Theft Auto: Vice City Stories, Lance Vance apologies to Ricardo for his brother (Victor Vance) going 'alpha male' on him. Ricardo says he understands, his brother did the same, so he killed him.
Ricardo Diaz was voiced by Luis Guzmán.
Colonel Juan García Cortez[edit]
Introduced in: 'The Party'
Colonel Juan García Cortez is a retired colonel from an unspecified Central American nation and is an acquaintance of Ken Rosenberg. He helped set up the failed exchange that brought Tommy Vercetti to Vice City, but was not involved in the ambush that resulted in the deal's failure. Tommy meets Colonel Cortez in person at an informal party on the Colonel's extravagant yacht.
Tommy continuously asks the Colonel when he is getting reimbursed for the money Tommy lost at the setup, but he tells Tommy that he is 'not in Liberty anymore', and encourages him to take charge, which Tommy does, although the Colonel has set up his own 'methods of inquiry' into finding out who ambushed Tommy's deal. He more or less strings Tommy along, using Tommy's debt with the mob to make him work for him. Nevertheless, Juan is not unappreciative and behaves as such, paying Tommy for his work and thinking of him as a friend. While investigating, Juan discovers that his lieutenant, Gonzalez, is a mole and leaked the information about Tommy's deal to someone. He later suspects that Ricardo Diaz was behind the ambush, a lead that Tommy follows and discovers to be true.
In addition to hosting parties, the Colonel also ties together many areas of criminal activity, including narcotics, firearms, weapons, and stealing military secrets. In the mission Mall Shootout, Cortez sends Tommy to retrieve some chips containing top secret weapons information stolen from the French government by a courier. Tommy finds the courier, but the meeting is ambushed by GIGN, leading the Courier to escape and for Tommy to chase and kill him to retrieve the chips. When the French begin to pursue Colonel Cortez for their stolen 'missile technology' chips, he asks Tommy for help one more time to flee Vice City for safer harbor with his yacht. Recognizing that the Colonel is honorable, Tommy obliges and fends off the French authorities alongside the Colonel's crew and the Colonel himself. Once the boat is free of pursuers, the Colonel graciously gives Tommy a luxurious speedboat as a parting gift, and asks him to look after his daughter Mercedes. The two men part on pleasant terms.
Colonel Cortez phones again following the game's final mission to wish Tommy well, and to ask about his daughter, whom he heard (to his great concern) was studying law. Tommy tells him that he is mistaken, much to the Colonel's immense relief, but does not mention that she is instead starring in a pornographic film Tommy himself is financing.
Colonel Cortez hosts A-list parties on his yacht for celebrities and fellow crime figures. He also enjoys dining on endangered species, which he considers a hallmark of fine living. He has managed to survive up to thirty coups in his native country, has been sentenced to death nine times (but he has always survived and received a promotion), and has diplomatic immunity. Juan has also expressed his dislike for the French (including the French secret service), claiming that they used to rob poor nations for centuries, but are now accusing him of stealing. The Colonel is also a widower.
Colonel Juan Cortez is a well-hearted man, who is always calm and tries to make the situations easily. He is a good friend to Tommy and always tries to help him. He never panics or gets angry, he is only slightly disturbed when the French service is trying to retrieve the chips from him.
Colonel Juan Cortez was voiced by Robert Davi.
Kent Paul[edit]
Introduced in: 'The Party'
Kent Paul (born 1965) is a Cockney 21-year-old English youth who works in the music business but claims to be a criminal mastermind. He also goes by 'KP', 'Paulo' and 'Kent'. He tapped the local biker gang to provide security for the band he represents, but had a falling-out with Big Mitch Baker and was stripped and thrown out of their bar.
Paul is a notorious kiss-up to all of Vice City's elite, and as such is very good 'with rumors.' He has information on most of the major crime figures in the city, and seems to have contacts in certain SWAT divisions. Tommy has, as such, used him several times for crucial information. He is also, however, a pathological liar and a suspected alcoholic. Kent serves as a manager to the metal band Love Fist and is usually found at the Malibu Club, Vice City's largest nightclub.
In a drunken phone call to Tommy at the end of the game, Paul insinuates he is seen as a disgrace back in England. Paul claimed to have moved to the United States in 1984 at the age of 19, which would suggest he was born in 1965. He also appeared in Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas.
Kent Paul was voiced by Danny Dyer.
Avery Carrington[edit]
Introduced in: 'The Party'
Avery Carrington (killed in 1998) is a successful Texan property magnate, real estate mogul and extreme capitalist. He enjoys quoting his father ('...my daddy used to say, never look a gift horse in the mouth and by golly, he never did!') and using old-western euphemisms. He is willing to do anything to manipulate property prices and land value, including arson, rioting, bribery, intimidation, and murder. He always wears a cowboy hat and rides in a black limousine.
Carrington is believed to be behind many lucrative development plans and responsible for violent slum-clearances. However, he is careful to be out of town on business when any violence arises. He is a frequent guest at Colonel Cortez' parties; and he is also Ken Rosenberg's biggest client, which is how he comes into acquaintance with Tommy Vercetti. Tommy performs tasks for Avery and as a reward, Carrington helps Tommy purchase his first business, which led to his colossal business/criminal empire. Carrington has an apprentice, Donald Love, who is a major character in Grand Theft Auto III and in Grand Theft Auto: Liberty City Stories as a corrupt business tycoon. Carrington taking Love under his wing and teaching him about real estate explains Love's ruthlessness in later games. It is also from Avery that Donald is believed to have learned a quote that has been repeated in almost the same manner in Grand Theft Auto 3.
'Now, nothing brings down real estate prices quicker than a good old-fashioned gang war, 'cept maybe a disaster, like a biblical plague or something, but, that may be going too far in this case.' -Avery Carrington
In Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, Carrington is also featured as a billboard resembling Vegas Vic in Las Venturas. Carrington makes an appearances in Grand Theft Auto: Liberty City Stories where his former apprentice Donald Love, who is fleeing the country, tasks Toni Cipriani with killing him, which he is successful at. Toni then delivers his body to Donald where it's implied that Donald, a confirmed cannibal, eats Carrington's body.
Avery Carrington was voiced by Burt Reynolds.
Umberto Robina[edit]
Introduced in: 'Stunt boat challenge'
Umberto Robina is the leader of Los Cabrones who has been involved in a long-term Vice City turf war with the Haitian Gang. He is an extremely macho man who wants to wage full-scale war with the Haitian Gang. However, he has never been personally implicated in a crime and his bravery has been questioned within Cuban circles. He becomes good friends with Tommy Vercetti and treats him as an equal. His quote on it: 'Tommy, to us, you Cuban'.
Umberto's long time rivalry with the Haitians ends in mission Trojan Voodoo where he and Tommy sketch out a plan to destroy the Haitians' drug factory. Tommy, Umberto and some Cubans steal a Haitian Voodoo and with it they enter the factory. There they kill every Haitian and set bombs up, after leaving the place the factory blows up, putting the Haitians out of business. He also placed a Cholo Gang out of business in 1984, where he also blew their factory up.
Umberto Robina was voiced by Danny Trejo.
Auntie Poulet[edit]
Introduced in: After finishing 'Stunt Boat Challenge'(post-mission Phone Call), 'Juju Scramble'(in Person)
Auntie Poulet is an elderly Haitian matriarch, leader of the Haitian Gang (which she also uses as her own protection). She gives Tommy Vercetti mind-altering voodoo potions to get him to cooperate in the missions she wants him to undertake. This includes acting against the Cuban Gang, with whom he has friendly relations. However, when the potion's effects wear off, Tommy shows no memory of what he has done for the Haitian Gang. Ultimately, she cuts her ties with him and wishes that he not return to Little Haiti, but when Tommy does do so, he receives a final phone call from Auntie Poulet ('Why you [Tommy] coming here for? Me tell you we don't want to see you around here no more.') and makes Tommy a permanent enemy of the Haitian gang. Following Poulet's final mission, Tommy destroys the Haitian Gang's base of operations and large drug plant, killing many members in the process and severing all ties with Poulet and her gang.
Auntie Poulet was voiced by Youree Cleomili Harris, better known as infamous 'psychic hotline' spokeswoman Miss Cleo.
Love Fist[edit]
Introduced in: 'The Party' (Jezz Torrent only), 'Love Juice' (Dick and Percy), 'Psycho Killer (Willy). However, Jezz Torrent may be heard in an interview on the K-Chat radio station before the mission, and two Love Fist songs may be heard on the V-Rock radio station.
Love Fist is a Scottish heavy metal band in Vice City, managed by Kent Paul. The band's members are Jezz Torrent, Willy, Dick and Percy; Willy, Dick and Percy are all slang terms for penis, while Jezz Torrent, when said in a Scottish accent, is heard as 'Jizz Torrent', a slang term for a very substantial amount of semen. Many times lines of dialogue refer to the entire band as being bisexual. Percy's main influence is Duran Duran, while the band is heavily influenced by Mötley Crüe. During the game, Tommy Vercetti helps them in various ways. He provides them with drugs and prostitutes, acts as a bodyguard and arranges security for the show. At one point, he must keep their rigged limo at a high rate of speed while the drummer disarms the engine bomb.
A number of songs by Love Fist are named in the game, notably during a radio interview of Jezz Torrent on K-Chat and in a commercial of Love Fist's Steel Heart Stone Cold Prostate tour on V-Rock. The songs mentioned include 'Fist Till Morning', 'Dangerous Bastard', 'Fist Fury', 'The Four Scottish Horsemen of the Apocalypse', 'Take it on the Chin'angero, 'Zinc Deficiency', 'Four Boys against Your Face', 'Satan’s Pillows', 'Beast Fist', 'Chin Stainer', 'Liver Buster' and 'Dangerous Man - Dead Family'. Love Fist's albums mentioned throughout the game include: Dogs on Heat, Fat Chicks: All Day, All Night, The Number of the Breast and Devil’s Own Band, the titles of which spoof albums released by 1980s glam and heavy metal bands such as Mötley Crüe and Iron Maiden.
Of all the songs mentioned, only 'Dangerous Bastard' and 'Fist Fury' can be heard on V-Rock, although a portion of 'Fist Till Morning' can be heard during the Love Fist commercial. Their other song 'Going for Choke' was mentioned in the third season of One Tree Hill. In 2013, Rockstar released the four track Love Fist EP on iTunes.[2]
Their songs were written by Allan Walker, Paul Mackie, Trevor McDonald, Dr. Boogie and Craig Conner, and performed by musicians Andy Thomson, Mark Farquhar, Neil Mchaffie, Trevor McDonald and Paul Mackie.
The character of Jezz Torrent makes a minor cameo appearance in Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, where he claims to have joined the cult Epsilon Program. According to his testimony and the Epsilon website, the cult helped him get off smack. Pictures of Love Fist also appeared as posters and billboards in both San Andreas and Liberty City Stories and Love Fist is also mentioned in San Andreas on the radio station K-DST when DJ Tommy 'The Nightmare' Smith says that 'I can't believe I get to play music for a living, even if it is other people's; and whatever happened to Love Fist?' They are also mentioned on the Radio X radio station when Sage talks briefly about a 'growing rap crisis'. She starts off by saying 'First it was Love Fist..'
Love Fist are still performing during the era of Grand Theft Auto IV, as an electronic sign outside a café in The Triangle displays the words 'Superstar Café starring the mighty Love Fist'.Official screenshots of Grand Theft Auto V released in August 2013 shows the character Trevor wearing a Love Fist vest. Also, in Grand Theft Auto V, Trevor knocks out Willy in the Vinewood bar Tequila-la in order to retrieve his golden tooth for a British couple seeking celebrity mementos. On the Los Santos talent show Fame or Shame, a contestant performs a solo effort by Jezz Torrent entitled 'This Is A Power Ballad.'
Love Fist was voiced by Kevin McKidd (Jezz Torrent), Mark Hanlon (Willy), Peter McKay (Dick) and Russell Foreman (Percy).
Steve Scott[edit]
Introduced in: 'The Party'
Steve Scott is an aging, degenerate porn film director, with bisexual tendencies, at Interglobal Films. He is obsessed with directing 'artistic' pornography involving giant sharks and space aliens (parodies of the Steven Spielberg films Jaws and Close Encounters of the Third Kind, respectively). When Tommy Vercetti meets Scott, his career is in shambles, as his ideas for adult films have become so bizarre that no one wants to give him funding. Tommy purchases Scott's company and revitalizes his career, turning Scott into one of his pawns in a takeover of Vice City's porn underground.
Steve Scott was voiced by Dennis Hopper.
'Big' Mitch Baker[edit]
Introduced in: 'Alloy Wheels of Steel,' although he may be heard as a caller on the V-Rock radio station beforehand
'Big' Mitch Baker is a Vietnam war veteran and motorcycle enthusiast. He earned the Purple Heart award for killing a village full of Vietcong. His extreme bitterness at treatment of veterans has led to violent clashes with authority. He has been jailed on 13 occasions. His character has been described in Rockstar Games's official website as a lawless degenerate sociopath. Big Mitch Baker's hobbies include bar sports, fighting, Pinball, Pool, eating live animals, Hard Rock music, wrestling, racing motorcycles, urinating in public places and scaring police.
Big Mitch Baker is believed to have been implicated in several civil disturbances. He runs the local gang of the Vice City Bikers and is believed to be implicated in narcotics distribution. He has extreme loyalty within his gang, the Bikers. His initiation rituals for the Biker Gang preclude getting a man on inside. Big Mitch Baker is known to loathe soft rock, communists and wigs.
After proving his worth to Big Mitch Baker, Tommy Vercetti earns the respect of the biker gang. The biker gang then, alongside the Cubans, works alongside the Vercetti Gang as one of their main business partners and remain loyal to Tommy after he becomes the kingpin of Vice City.
Throughout the game, Mitch makes numerous angry phone calls to local radio stations, complaining that they play too much hair bands and not enough hard rock.
Mitch Baker was voiced by Lee Majors.
Earnest Kelly[edit]
Introduced in: 'Spilling the Beans'
Earnest 'Old Man' Kelly is the old manager of the Print Works bordering Little Havana and Little Haiti, which is purchased by Tommy Vercetti. Having worked at the Print Works for a long time, Earnest has always printed counterfeit money, but always in a small scale and bad quality. With the help of Tommy, Earnest acquires high quality printing plates to produce better counterfeit money in a larger scale, eventually generating millions of dollars for the Vercetti Family. Tommy's own father managed a similar printing press when Vercetti was younger, which is the reason Tommy shows extreme concern and anger when Earnest is injured by Forelli family enforcers who have come to take 'their cut of the deal.' Some time after the final mission, Tommy receives a phone call from Earnest, who is recovering well from his injuries.
Old Man Kelly was voiced by George DiCenzo.
Phil Cassidy[edit]
Introduced in: 'The Shootist'
Phil Cassidy is a firearms expert and dealer who first appeared in GTA III, where he claimed to have lost an arm in Nicaragua. In contrast to his appearance in GTA III, the younger Phil is more energetic, but drinks to the point of drunkenness during one mission (qualities which become more common during his appearance in Vice City Stories). He also appears with both arms intact and participates in Tommy's 'Job,' a heist at a local bank. In Tommy's final mission for him, Phil loses an arm when his 'boomshine', a homemade and hazardous explosive/alcoholic beverage, explodes directly in front of him. After the explosion, Tommy drives Phil to the hospital while suffering from the intoxicating effects of the boomshine. On the way to the hospital, Phil has Vietnam flashbacks and post-traumatic stress disorder. After that point, he continues to sell Tommy rare and powerful weapons.
Although Phil claims to serve in various divisions of the Army, Army records show that Phil was repeatedly rejected for service because of drunkenness and an unsuitable temperament for combat. Phil is also a gun enthusiast, with memberships in various Second Amendment organizations and Vice City gun clubs.
In GTA III, Phil is shown without a left arm, whereas in Vice City, the cut scene of the boomshine accident depicted him losing his right arm. After Tommy delivers him to safety, Phil is seen without a left arm while his right arm remains intact.
Phil Cassidy was voiced by Gary Busey.
- See also: GTA III rendition, GTA: Liberty City Stories rendition and GTA: Vice City Stories rendition
Mercedes Cortez[edit]
Introduced in: 'The Party'
Mercedes Cortez is Colonel Cortez's wayward daughter. She is initially set up as a possible love interest for Tommy Vercetti, but this plot line is never fully explored. Tommy is first introduced to her during a party aboard the Colonel's yacht. Afterwards, she asks Tommy to give her a ride to the Pole Position Club, Vice City's largest strip club which Tommy ends up owning. On another occasion, she has sex with the band Love Fist. She is referenced in the Love Fist song Dangerous Bastard in the stanza 'Action, camera, lipstick, lights. I fit in Mercedes tight. No one knows I play guitar, wearing her red bra.' She becomes involved in the porn film industry, co-starring with Candy Suxxx in a film directed by Steve Scott and produced by Vercetti and his movie studio.
Hidden and unused phone conversation between Tommy and Mercedes revealed that there were originally intentions by the game developer to include a deeper relationship between the two characters. Audio files of Mercedes' phone calls usually have to deal with the fact that she wants to 'spend some time alone with Tommy' when she is mad, happy or bored. One particular phone conversation is thought to be triggered after the killing of Ricardo Diaz, in which Mercedes praises Tommy for being a real man for killing Ricardo, while Tommy attempts to cover the incident by saying that Diaz died in a fire in his mansion.
Mercedes Cortez was voiced by Fairuza Balk.
Rico[edit]
Introduced in: 'Stunt Boat Challenge'
Can be killed in: 'Trojan Voodoo'
Rico is a member of the Cuban Gang who assists Tommy Vercetti in his quest to wipe out the Haitian Gang. Like Umberto Robina, he constantly talks about men with 'cojones', at first taunting Tommy and then praising him, as Tommy successfully completes a mandatory boating challenge as an initiation to the Cuban Gang. He was part of the Cuban Gang enforcers who invaded the Haitian Drugs Factory and stole a large amount of their cocaine. In another mission, he drives Tommy on his boat to ambush a drug transaction. He is seemingly killed during the transaction sabotage when a concealed Haitian Gang member blew up the boat that he was driving. It later turns out that Rico had survived the explosion as he was seen with the Cuban motorcade that invaded the Haitian compound to destroy the Haitian Drug Factory. The text in the mission says 'Go meet Rico and the other Cubans'. However, how Rico survived is not explained. Rico can die in the end of the mission 'Trojan Voodoo', if Tommy does not wait for him and Pepe to come along with him to escape the Haitian Drugs Factory via a staircase that leads to another building's roof.
Alberto Robina[edit]
Introduced in: 'Stunt Boat Challenge'
Alberto Robina is the father of Umberto Robina, who is seen at Café Robina in Little Havana. He makes appearances in several cut-scenes, his only four lines are ('Si, men?'; 'He called you dumb, son'; 'No problemo, Tommy' and 'Umberto, my son what happened?' and greeting Vercetti as he visits) and he works at Café Robina. He, like his son, is personally on good terms with Tommy Vercetti and regards him as Cuban. Umberto is protective of his father and mostly stays at the shop to look after him.
Gonzalez[edit]
Introduced in: 'The Party'
Killed in: 'Treacherous Swine'
Gonzalez works for Colonel Juan García Cortez in various capacities. He has diplomatic immunity which is a part of Cultural Affairs division of San Dominícan consulate, where Cortez in Cultural Attaché. Gonzalez's visa is believed to be issued as a Health and Fitness Commission. Gonzalez's character is described as greedy because he is known to take bribes. He has been seen leaving property of Diaz without Cortez which could be a possible weakness in Cortez's operation.
In the game, he first appears at Cortez's party where he is seen talking to Steve Scott and Pastor Richards as Mercedes introduces Tommy Vercetti to the party guests. Soon after, Cortez finds out about Gonzalez's relationship with Ricardo Diaz and realizes that he told Diaz about the drug deal he had arranged between the Forelli Family and the Vance Crime Family. This resulted in both the death of Gonzalez's old ally, Victor Vance, and the drugs being stolen. Cortez informs Tommy of this discovery and allows him to kill Gonzalez, which he does by chasing him out of his penthouse and killing him with a chainsaw.
Gonzalez was voiced by Jorge Pupo.
Hilary King[edit]
Introduced in: 'The Driver'
Killed in: 'The Job'
Hilary King is a talented, neurotic, and highly dependent driver who is involved in two missions with Vercetti. He is afraid of venturing on the deadly missions but will do as his team requires regardless. In 'The Driver' Tommy beats Hilary in a race across a part of the city. In 'The Job', he participates in a large scale bank robbery and is scheduled to meet the rest of the crew in a getaway taxi. However, he arrives late, and when he finally appears, he is instantly slain by SWAT gunfire.
While Hilary is thought by the police to be raised in a stable family, Hilary has serious childhood abandonment issues due to his mother's neglect, and is a compulsive eater. He is loosely similar to Stevie, one of the bank robbers featured in the film Dog Day Afternoon, who is also afraid of a bank robbery.
Hilary was voiced by Charles Tucker.
Cam Jones[edit]
Introduced in: 'No Escape?'
Can be killed in: 'The Job'
Cam Jones is a kleptomaniac safecracker Tommy frees from jail to recruit for his bank robbery team. He is an expert at what he does, but is suggested by the police to have dubious expertise. Prior to his first appearance in the game, Cam was arrested by the police when he was caught running down the street with a safe he could not open. He was broken out to help Tommy as a bombsetter and a safecracker. He is awaiting trial for attempted robbery, when he is rescued by Tommy Vercetti and asked to help pull off 'the job.'
Cam's fate is left at the hands of the player, allowing him to either die or survive. If Cam dies, the game indicates that both Tommy and Phil would receive a bigger share of the money from the heist (Phil: 'Too bad Cam didn't make it though.' Tommy: 'But then again, more for us.' Phil: 'You got that right!') (although the amount of money the player receives after the mission does not actually change if Cam Jones dies during the bank robbery). Cam tends to be a silent philosopher. When the player smashes his cab twice or more and damages it in the mission 'The Job'. Cam says, 'You think everything will last until the end, good memories, pizzas. Everything will pass or end and you must accept that.'
Cam Jones is voiced by Greg Sims.
Mike[edit]
Introduced in: 'The Party'
Mike (Dubbed Mike the Goon in the manual) is a member of Vercetti's Gang (formerly Diaz's Gang). He can be seen in 'The Party' accompanying Ricardo Diaz in the Colonel Cortez's party. He later seen working in Bar Brawl and Cop Land. Mike can be killed in Bar Brawl, however, he will return in Cop Land. In the mission Cop Land, Lance Vance is yelling at him for messing up an explosive attack on the Tarbrush Café in the North Point Mall. Vercetti formulates a plan B, which involves Mike stealing a squad car (which can be found behind the lockup) while he and Lance ambushed two officers for their uniforms, so that they can use them as a disguise. Mike is not seen again, but accompanies Lance Vance as off-screen backup in Hit The Courier.
Mike the Goon was voiced by Robert Cihra.
Pastor Richards[edit]
Introduced in: 'The Party'
Pastor Richards is a maniac firebrand preacher, obsessed with money. Rockstar Games have stated that he has written several awful books which are all completely fabricated and most given away. Pastor Richards is obsessed with degenerates and has been campaigning to build a large statue in his own image. He has been attempting to bribe officials at NASA for Rocket technology. He is believed to be embezzling money from the fund for a private mansion in Hawaii. He also hates rock and roll musicians (especially Love Fist) and believes them to be the spawn of the devil.
In the game, his sole appearance in person is in a cutscene on board Cortez's yacht as one of his party guests, and is seen talking to Steve Scott and Gonzalez. For the rest of the game, he is only heard on the radio stations, specifically VCPR's debate program 'Pressing Issues' in which he repeatedly tries to advertise to people to give him money for his statue as 'salvation'.
Pastor Richards is a possible polygamist. He hates people who help others and he is a fervent Anti-Communist. He is obsessed with nuclear winter. His characteristics are described as a hateful human being but menace to society uncertain at present.
He was voiced by David Green.
BJ Smith[edit]
Introduced in: 'The Party', although he may be heard on KCHAT or commercials before the mission
BJ Smith is the former tight-end of the Vice City Mambas professional American football team, haunted by problems off the field. He is a frequent guest at Juan Cortez' parties, and has had a little trouble adjusting to life off of the gridiron. He created the exercise video 'BJ's Fit for Football' and used to own BJ's Used Autos (which police suspect is a front for selling stolen cars; the showroom was later bought by Tommy Vercetti and renamed as Sunshine Autos), and is preparing for a comeback into football. BJ's approach in life is said to be heavy handed, citing football as an inspiration to his claims of resolving many of life's challenges with aggression and violence. BJ is also in debt with loan sharks and is doing anything for money.
BJ Smith was voiced by real-life NFL Hall of Famer Lawrence Taylor. BJ also hints at robbing a store during a KCHAT interview, although is not revealed if this is simply a figure of speech or an actual event.
Candy Suxxx[edit]
Introduced in: 'The Party'
Gta Vice City Mission List In Order
Candy Suxxx (real name Candice Shand)[3] is an in-game porn star with very large breasts. She wears a small bikini with a United States flag motif, and red high-heeled shoes. She worked as a prostitute/escort residing in a mansion in the Prawn Island area; Congressman Alex Shrub was a regular of hers. Tommy Vercetti hires her to work at the Interglobal Films pornography studio; doing this after killing her pimp. Candy is also used in a blackmail sting against Shrub, who was trying to close down pornography businesses.
One mission results in Suxxx's breasts being spotlighted against the side of one of Vice City's many skyscrapers. The breasts however, were removed for the Japanese edition of the game.
Candy Suxxx would eventually rise to fame as a pornographic actress under the employ of Tommy Vercetti, as she is featured on posters and video covers of several pornographic movies in Vice City (Bite, Closer Encounters), San Andreas (Vinewood Call Girls, This Can't Be Legal, Return of the Anaconda) and Liberty City Stories (Let Me Bounce), while billboards erected to her likeness are featured in Los Santos and Las Venturas in San Andreas. In San Andreas she can also be seen on a casino billboard in Las Venturas resembling The Mint casino billboard. Vice City Stories revealed that Candy had starred in a porno circa 1984. In GTA III, she is featured on the radio station Game Radio, claiming to be 'one of the sexy game girls'[citation needed].
Candy Suxxx was voiced by real-life porn star Jenna Jameson.
Congressman Alex Shrub[edit]
Introduced in: 'The Party' although he may be heard on the VCPR radio talk show before the mission
Blackmailed in: 'Martha's Mug Shot'
Alex Shrub is a corrupt, right wing politician who became the greatest state congressman in Florida history because, according to Maurice Chavez, 'he has great hair and says things that make you nod your head.' Shrub is a delusional congressman who knowingly tries to cover up and distract people from the fact that Vice City is going downhill under his term of government. He cares only about money and has allowed businesses to do as long as he is paid, such as the legalization of Giggle Cream, a hazardous dessert which has killed over 23 people. He is almost always protected by the FBI special forces and travels around in a beige-coloured limousine. Eventually, he is blackmailed by Vercetti and Scott after they acquire photographs of the politician engaged in crossdressing and extramarital affairs.
Congressman Alex Shrub was voiced by Chris Lucas.
Maude Hanson[edit]
Introduced in: Purchase of Cherry Popper Ice Cream cut scene
Maude 'Maude the Ice Cream Lady' Hanson is the owner of the Cherry Popper Ice Cream Factory before Tommy Vercetti purchases her business. Featured in only one cut scene, she claims that her business serves as a big front for selling 'other, non-dairy and non-legal products.' Maude also exhibits psychotic hatred towards children and uses stereotypes of children claiming that they are disgusting, spoiled and bratty. She is also believed to have once run a children's home.
Maude the Ice Cream Lady was voiced by Jane Gennaro.
Delores[edit]
Introduced in: Purchase of Kaufman Cabs cut scene
Delores is a middle-aged dispatcher at the Kaufman Cabs taxi company. Appearing in one cut scene, she introduces the company and its dealings (competing aggressively against a rival taxi company) after Tommy purchases the business. Delores may also be heard on the dispatch radio of Kaufman Cab taxis.
(It's Delores who dubs Tommy's gang as 'The Vercetti Gang', since she says that the Kaufman Cabs have been bought about 20 times by gangs and she needs to tell the employees what gang is controlling Kaufman Cabs now)
Delores was voiced by Debbie Harry.
Dwaine and Jethro[edit]
Introduced in: Purchase of Boatyard cut scene
Dwaine and Jethro were workers at the Viceport Boatyard, which is involved in building boats that may transport drugs.[4] Appearing in one cut scene, their names were never mentioned in game, but inspection of Vice City's credits in the manual and internal files reveals their first names. It is not until San Andreas, where they would reappear with larger roles, and that their names are mentioned. Dwaine's name is spelled 'Dwayne' in the game's data files and credits. It appears that they left the Boatyard after Tommy Vercetti took it over, however, they can be seen watching Tommy in the Checkpoint Charlie mission.
Dwayne was voiced by Navid Khonsari, while Jethro was voiced by John Zurhellen.
Gta Vice City Last Mission
Minor characters[edit]
Harry & Lee[edit]
Both introduced: Introduction, airport cut scene
Both killed in: Introduction, botched drug deal cutscene
Harry & Lee are two soldier members of the Forelli Family. They were both sent away to Vice City with Tommy Vercetti to watch over him while he is setting up drug deals to make sure he doesn't try to betray the Forelli's, but they are both gunned down by the men of Ricardo Diaz and seemingly killed.
Victor Vance[edit]
Introduced/Killed in: Introduction, botched drug deal cut scene
Victor Vance is the main protagonist of Vice City Stories and is the brother of Lance and Pete. At the start of the game, he and Lance try to sell the drugs Lance acquired at the end of Vice City Stories to Tommy and the Forelli's. During the deal, the men of Ricardo Diaz open fire on the dealers and Victor is gunned down and killed while Tommy and Lance escaped the docks.
Victor was voiced by Armando Riesco, but Victor was credited as 'Supplier.
Donald Love[edit]
Introduced in: 'The Party'
Donald Love, previously depicted as an influential media tycoon in Grand Theft Auto III, makes two minor appearances as an eager, young apprentice of real estate mogul, Avery Carrington, learning the tricks of the trade. The Vice City rendition of the character has little voice acting; Love remains silent throughout his appearances, and his second appearance sees him uttering only one or two minor words before being interrupted by Carrington.[5]Love also appears in Grand Theft Auto: Liberty City Stories.
- See also: GTA III rendition and GTA: Liberty City Stories rendition
Shark's Leader[edit]
Introduced in: 'The Chase'
Killed in: 'Phnom Penh '86'
The Shark's Leader apparently stole 3% of Ricardo Diaz' money, making Diaz very angry about it. Diaz sends Tommy Vercetti, who finds him. The leader begins to shoot at Tommy and later escapes with a BF Injection. Tommy follows to see where he hide Diaz' money, at a villa that is controlled by the Sharks.
Later, Diaz sends Tommy and Lance Vance to kill him at his own villa, destroying his gang and taking back the money. During a short shootout between them at the top of the villa, he is killed by Vercetti, who takes back the money to Diaz.
Leo Teal[edit]
Introduced in: Introduction, botched drug deal cut scene
Killed in: 'Back Alley Brawl'
Leo Teal works as a chef in Ocean Drive restaurant, but he is also secretly a very successful private hitman and career criminal. He regularly works for a hitman agency run by a man known only as 'Mr. Black' (as stated on the Vice City website). He accepts hit contracts from 'Mr. Black' via various payphones located around Vice City. Tommy Vercetti seeks him out for information regarding his botched deal, but the confrontation ends with Vercetti beating Teal to death and stealing his cellphone. It is then discovered (via phone conversations) that Teal was directly involved in the ambush in the beginning, and it is implied that Teal organized it at the behest of 'Mr. Black', on behalf of Ricardo Diaz. It is also discovered that Teal is involved in trying to find a buyer for the cocaine that Diaz acquired from the ambush. It is also known that Leo was working for Umberto Robina, the leader of the Cuban Gang.
Pepe[edit]
Introduced/Can be killed in: 'Trojan Voodoo'
Pepe is another member of the Cuban Gang. He assisted Tommy by helping him to blow up the Haitian drug factory. He can be killed in the mission.
Cougar & Zeppelin[edit]
Both introduced in: 'Alloy Wheels of Steel'
Cougar & Zeppelin are members of the VC Biker Gang. They are playing pool with 'Big' Mitch Baker when Tommy first arrives to the Greasy Chopper Bar. Baker tells Tommy that he must defeat Cougar, Zeppelin and another biker in a motorcycle race to earn their trust. Cougar is seen again in the 'Messing with the Man' mission where he is arm wrestling with Mitch.
Cougar was voiced by Blayne Perry.
Can riot shield stop bullets. Just don't try it against a Grinder. Enemies don't stop shooting, but you really, really do need the shields. In, Marcus may actually randomly say 'Hope you're bulletproof' when grabbing an enemy for this move. Both COG and Locust players in multiplayer may pick up downed enemies as a 'meatshield'. That minigun will rip the guy in half in seconds.
Carl Pearson[edit]
Introduced/Killed in: 'Road Kill'
Carl Pearson is a pizza deliverer from the Well Stacked Pizza restaurant in Vice Point. He must drive a Pizza Boy scooter around Vice City and supply 50 pizzas. Tommy Vercetti kills him on orders from Mr. Black, who seems to believe Tommy is Leo Teal. The cause of his murder is actually unknown.
Dick Tanner, Franco Carter, Mike Griffin, Marcus Hammond, Nick Kong, Charlie Dilson[edit]
Introduced/Killed in: 'Autocide'
Dick Tanner is a member of Patrol Invest Group. He works for DBP Security as a guard. He steals a Securicar from the bank's workers. When Tommy Vercetti comes to kill him, he tries to escape with his stolen Securicar, but is killed on order by Mr. Black. Franco Carter and Marcus Hammond are waiting in a Bobcat pickup. When Tommy comes to kill them, if Marcus is killed, Franco will come out with a shotgun and attempt to kill Tommy. If Franco is killed, Marcus will attempt to drive away.
Mike Griffin is working on a billboard in Washington Beach. He is swiftly killed by Tommy with a sniper rifle.
Nick Kong is an overweight tourist. He was relaxing on his boat when Tommy killed him, either by destroying the boat or sniping him.
Charlie Dilson was driving a PCJ-600 motorcycle in Ocean Beach when Tommy killed him.
Mr. Black[edit]
Introduced in: after 'Back Alley Brawl'
Mr. Black is an unseen character for which Leo Teal works. He usually gives Tommy certain jobs around the city by contacting him over many payphones over the Vice City area as he thinks Tommy is Leo and is unaware of Leo being beat to death by Tommy.
See also[edit]
- Grand Theft Auto: Vice City soundtrack, for radio disc jockeys and personalities.
References[edit]
- 'Official Grand Theft Auto: Vice City website'. Rockstar Games and Rockstar North (2002). Retrieved November 9, 2006.
- 'Full Grand Theft Auto: Vice City credits'. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved October 1, 2006.
- ^'GTA Vice City Beta Version and Removed Content - Hot Topic #10'. youtube.com. 31 August 2015. Retrieved 13 September 2015.
- ^'Love Fist's Original 1986 EP Is Now Available on iTunes'. Rockstar Games. 2013-11-01. Retrieved 2013-05-28.
- ^kentpaul.com (Great 80s quotes section). Retrieved on February 3, 2007.
- ^Ricardo Diaz: 'Every smuggler from here to Caracas has one dream, a faster boat. Rumor has it the boatyard has just completed such a vessel, for some Costa Rican dickhead.' (The Fastest Boat mission)
- ^Avery Carrington: 'Tommy, this is Donald Love. Donald, this here is Tommy Vercetti, the latest gunslinger to come to these parts.' / Donald Love: 'Yeh..uh..' / Avery Carrington: 'Donald, you just shut up and listen, and you might learn something.' (Opening cut scene of 'Two Bit Hit,' Grand Theft Auto: Vice City.)
External links[edit]
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_Grand_Theft_Auto:_Vice_City_characters&oldid=894454766#Sonny_Forelli'
Real Estate & Stores - Businesses
Once you complete the 'Shakedown' mission, immediately after taking over, several businesses will become available for you to buy. This will help make your organization seem legit, when clearly it is not.
The businesses are costly upfront, but they provide still more save points. In addition, once certain conditions are met, these places will begin to make you money. Often, these conditions involve completing the missions for that specific property. Once a property is making cash, stop by and touch the $ outside in order to collect what's yours. For more information on how to start making money, peruse the list of properties below.
The Boatyard: Viceport ($10,000)[edit]
The Boatyard affords you some interesting options.. including access to your own endless supply of high-speed boats. It's run by a pair of stoned-out surfer dudes, and they won't give you any problems. Once you complete the single Boatyard mission, 'Checkpoint Charlie,' the place will garner a good bit of loot.
Cherry Popper Ice Cream Factory ($20,000)[edit]
Purchase this crooked establishment--which is really a front for a drug business--and you'll be well on your way to being even sleazier. You'll have to complete the Ice Cream Factory Property Mission, but once you do that, the place will generate $2000.
The Pole Position Club: Ocean Beach ($30,000)[edit]
Upon purchasing this business, the Mr. Vercetti Outfit will become available at Collar and Cuffs. The Pole Position Club is a good first business to acquire. It's a strip club, and can start yielding instant dividends for you.
In order to make the place profitable, go to the back of the club. Enter the hallway here and go in the first door on the left. Sit for a private dance until about $500-600 of your money is ticked away. Go have a snack, this could be awhile. However, once you've spent the cash, the club will start yielding daily dividends--up to $4000 per day.
Kaufman Cabs ($40,000)[edit]
This little gem in the heart of Little Haiti will give you access to some of the more enjoyable side-missions in the game. Once you complete all of its missions, keep coming back daily to collect the $5000.
Car Showroom ($50,000)[edit]
The Showroom is good to own for a number of reasons. First, it gives you access to all of the checkpoint race missions. Second, it provides another save point. Third, it allows you to store a number of vehicles in its spacious basement garage. There's also a Spray N' Go down there, in case you need to beat the heat. In addition, if you steal cars and fill up the garage (with certain specific vehicles), you will unlock some swank new rides. All in all, it's a good bargain for the price.
Movie Studio ($60,000)[edit]
The only good thing on Prawn Island, the Studio will give you access to the Steve Scott missions, which you'll need to do to complete the story arch. It also provides a save point and plenty of nifty exploring opportunities. Check out those sets!
Printworks ($70,000)[edit]
Every crime family needs a good counterfeit money operation, and this is where yours exists. Once you do all the missions associated with it, you'll be in good shape, collecting up to $8000 a day from this place. If you need Body Armor, there's some on the roof.
The Malibu Club: Vice Point ($120,000)[edit]
You're used to coming to this place to chat with Kent Paul. Now you can own it. However, the only way it will make any money is if you complete its Property Missions. Do these and the club could be quite lucrative, indeed.. well worth the price tag. You'll also need to own this club in order to finish the main story. Read the Mission section of this guide to understand why.
Comments
So I've never actually played Vice City through and I always seem to get stuck at around this particular point..
Due to the sandbox nature of the game, I thought I'd ask for a hand here and see if we can't figure out what I'm supposed to do next, so..
What I've already done
- Completed the Vercetti Estate missions (I have the $5000 passive income)
- Completed the Cortez missions (he's left)
- Completed the Love Fist missions that I have (last one was the bomb in the limo)
- Completed the Cuban/Hatian missions (killed the Cubans from the rooftop and bombed the Hatian facility)
There's nothing else on the map and I figure I probably need to purchase some extra properties to continue. I'll explore this idea going forward..
So far I have purchased
- Pole Position
- 'Ice Cream' company
- Some safe houses dotted around
Clearly not the best way to spend my $$ and probably why I don't even have 100k yet, but nothing I can do about that now.
Does anyone have any suggestions what I can do next?
OrtundOrtund10811 gold badge22 silver badges1111 bronze badges
3 Answers
At this point there are multiple businesses which you can purchase. Each will unlock a short mission chain, minigame or activity which, when completed, earns you money per day.
Completing enough of these (which must include the printing press and The Malibu) will unlock the final missions.
Here's a list of the properties which make money:
- The boatyard- Costs $10k, produces $2k/day after completing a seriesof speedboat time trials.
- The ice cream factory- Costs $20k, produces $3k/day after earning enough money from the drug dealing minigame.
- The Pole Position club- Costs $30k, produces $4k/day after spending $300 in the back room.
- Kaufman Cabs- Costs 40k, produces 5k/day after completing the mission chain.
- Car showroom- Costs 50k, produces 6k/day after acquiring 4 lists of cars.
- Film studio- Costs 60k, produces 7k/day after completing the mission chain.
- Print works- Costs 70k, produces 8k/day after completing the mission chain and is required to unlock the final missions.
- The Malibu- Costs 120k, produces 10k/day after completing the mission chain and is also required for the final missions.
37.8k1515 gold badges113113 silver badges174174 bronze badges
guys after finishing love fist, mitch baker, cuban, haitian and the others, you should buy at least six properties and complete their missions.But you have to buy the malibu and the print works and finish their missions. Ninja games free download. Apart from that, buy and complete(my suggestion) kaufman cab, pole position club, boatyard and film studio.
derpderp
Gta vice city hey you want last mision do Kens and mainly you dont buy film studio and kaufman cab. you buy only print works, the malibu. there is third mision in malibu is very hard. you had to complete cap ťhe collector nextyou wilhear phone from ken you vercetti estate then you got last mision
RaghuRaghu
protected by Community♦Aug 17 '15 at 12:42
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