Horror Themed Sleeping Dogs DLC Gets Trailer and Screenshots
Get ready for supernatural horror eastern culture style.
Posted By Gabriel B. about 10 months, 3 weeks ago
That’s right folks, Square-Enix’s hot new IP, Sleeping Dogs, is getting a Z-Rating in Japan, meaning gamers will have to ask for the game and it will be kept under the counter. The Z rating is something publishers try to avoid, sometimes censoring their games to fit a lower rating, since it can hurt game sales. Sleeping Dogs is still going to be censored, however. For example, killing civilians will make your character receive a penalty of some sort, the race signaler has been removed (so he or she can’t be run over in racing missions), and a sex scene has been toned down. It has not been announced how these acts of censorship affected the rating.
So, what are your thoughts? Be sure to comment below and keep following Blistered Thumbs for all the latest information on this and many other games. Sleeping Dogs is due out on August 14th of this year.
Source: Joystiq
(Editor’s Note: References to the ESRB’s “AO” rating have been corrected to the Japanese “Z” rating.)
Gaming fan with no money to spare. Loves playing indie games, especially freeware.
Get ready for supernatural horror eastern culture style.
Sleeping Dogs meets Hong Kong Horror in “Nightmare in Northpoint.”
It’s the best kind of good: surprisingly good.
There is no doubt in my mind that the former Activision title is on par with, if not surpassing, the likes of Rockstar’s rogues gallery of sandbox adventures. Make no mistake, Square-Enix has a success story on hand, and will reap the benefits from Activision’s mistake to let this sleeping dog lie.
In Sleeping Dogs, you play an undercover cop trying to find the reason behind the disappearance of PC specific features in recent games. SquareEnix didn’t do it, they have all theirs in order.
Dammit Jim! I’m a cop, not a Hong Kong Triad gang member!
My excitement level for Square Enix’s upcoming open world action game/Hong Kong Cinema Sleeping Dogs
Ian talks about the title formerly known as True Crime: Hong Kong with the game’s producer.
Japan’s rating board drops the hammer on Sleeping Dogs
Now this is a good “how to” guide.
Posted By Shaun K. about 7 months ago
Get ready for supernatural horror eastern culture style.
Posted By Johnny Maloney about 9 months, 2 weeks ago
In Sleeping Dogs, you play an undercover cop trying to find the reason behind the disappearance of PC specific features in recent games. SquareEnix didn’t do it, they have all theirs in order.
Posted By Johnny Maloney about 9 months, 2 weeks ago
Dammit Jim! I’m a cop, not a Hong Kong Triad gang member!
Posted By Shaun K. about 9 months, 4 weeks ago
My excitement level for Square Enix’s upcoming open world action game/Hong Kong Cinema Sleeping Dogs
Posted By Platform32 about 10 months ago
Ian talks about the title formerly known as True Crime: Hong Kong with the game’s producer.
Posted By Robert G. about 11 months, 4 weeks ago
Now this is a good “how to” guide.
Posted By Shaun K. about 1 year ago
The latest Sleeping Dogs trailer has arrived with a closer look at the game’s combat system in action.
Posted By Robert G. about 1 year ago
Look for this Hong Kong based heroic bloodshed romp this August.
Posted By Shaun K. about 1 year, 2 months ago
Square Enix has finally released a new trailer for their upcoming third person action-adventure open world game Sleeping Dogs filled with plenty of in-game goodness.
Posted By Shaun K. about 1 year, 3 months ago
From the ashes of the old, a new IP from major game publisher Square Enix, by the name of Sleeping Dogs, has been announced and given a teaser trailer in a most unusual style.
Posted By Robert G. about 9 months, 1 week ago
It is funny how this industry works sometimes. The myriad of dropped IPs and cancelled projects the industry goes through each year is staggering, and considering only 10% of games released actually turn a profit, it is no wonder that projects are dropped on a dime. Through this all, success stories do come through, venerated by fans and critics alike for persevering such dour times to see the light of day once more.
In many ways, Sleeping Dogs is one such title. Originally an Activision IP under the True Crime label, the game was dropped by the huge conglomerate because it was “just not good enough” to compete with other titles in the open-world genre. But considering the final product put forth by Square-Enix and developer United Front, I believe I can safely say that it is a severe miscalculation by Activision, as Sleeping Dogs is perhaps one of the best in the genre to come out in years.
| PROS | Amazing presentation, strong story, great implementation of various game mechanics. |
| CONS | Poor lip synching, unnecessary “Role Playing” elements, gun combat is less polished compared to the rest. |
| WTF?! | I never knew cell phones can crack safes and hack security cameras. |
A bold claim, of course, but a justifiable one. Unlike the satirical-realism of Grand Theft Auto, the nostalgic take from L.A Noire, or the bombastic romp that is Saints Row, Sleeping Dogs is tightly rooted in reality moreso than its competitors. Of course artistic license is given to some elements, but the source material takes the world seriously, leading to an experience that Grand Theft Auto IV attempted to capture but failed to do so.
Starring as undercover cop Wei Shen, Sleeping Dogs has you infiltrate the Song On Yee, a notorious Triad gang in Hong Kong. Shen, growing up in the states, returns to take down the Triad’s from the inside out, but also has a personal stake in his mission, one that may cross the line and put him on the wrong side of the law. The story is one part The Departed and one part Hard Boiled, and creates a tone that is both glamorizing and gruesome for Shen as he struggles to stay on the right side of the law.
But beneath the gritty exterior and the abundance of violence, the core themes of a heroic bloodshed story germinate to fruition. Traditional Chinese themes of honor, family, and respect are always ever present, from the somber monologues of your new criminal family, to the more subtle nuances regarding the treatment of characters based on their age and position in society. It is a clash of two worlds, the Confucian ideals of China intermixed with the modern concerns of the West, offering a layer of cultural diffusion that was only truly noticeable in Red Dead Redemption before.
Punching and kicking combos become almost second nature as you dodge and duck your way through vicious altercations.
Through gameplay, Sleeping Dogs is an amalgam of several elements rolled into a fine product. Unlike say Dragon’s Dogma, which emulated many games but failed to make the mechanics properly mesh, Sleeping Dogs does so seamlessly in some respects, making the transitions of mechanics fun. Hand to hand combat, for example, follows a similar counter/attack combo system found in Batman: Arkham City, giving Sleeping Dogs free-flowing combat that accurately follows typical Wuxia tropes. Driving follows the standards from the aforementioned GTA, but with added bits to make it more exciting, such as “action hijackings”, where you can jump onto the top of a the roof of a car during a high-speed chase. We also have a simple use of quick time events, typically trying to smooth talk your way past a guarded position or countering a bear hug by a thug.
The only real sore spot would be the shooting mechanics, which work but are imprecise. Unlike the fluid, total control of the martial arts and the combos you have through hand to hand combat, using guns is somewhat hit or miss, and highly dependent on how strong you are at hand-eye coordination over blind firing. Ironically taking cues from Stranglehold, gun combat is one of the few instances where we get an automatic “bullet time” moment, mostly when you are driving or sliding over chest high walls, making this your best bet to take down enemies before they fill you full of lead. The drawbacks is that just hiding under cover like a third person shooter will often lead to a death sentence, as ammo is limited and picking up new weapons is not an automatic action.
Pre-Ordered this game about 2 – 3 weeks ago. Pitty it isn’t out for the UK until the 17th but still a great game, I can’t wait!
Its interesting how TF2 team offered a set of items and a map to go with it. Either way this game looked amazing from the gameplay inverviews and I hope it will remind me of all those Bruce Lee kung fu movies, mixed with GTA. :3
I shall pick this one up eventually.
cannot wait to get my hands on this game
Okay, better start saving money for this…
To be fair the lip synching is off in a lot of the HK action movies I’ve seen, haha!
I already pre-purchased this on Steam so I am just waiting for it to unlock. It’ll be cool to get the DLC they offered, although I don’t play TF2. It was a good price at least and sounds like the game will live up to my hype.
As someone living in Taiwan, I am really excited to see another modern Chinese city portrayed in an open world game.
Man I want to play this game so much. Does anyone know if there will be a demo so I can see how it runs on my PC. I do own a 360 and PS3 but I tend to get multiplats for my PC.
Great review btw. I found it very easy to masturbate to.
It’s the best kind of good: surprisingly good.
Ian talks about the title formerly known as True Crime: Hong Kong with the game’s producer.
Ian talks about the title formerly known as True Crime: Hong Kong with the game’s producer.
Music Mondays revisits the band that brought us tunes from Scott Pilgrim vs. the World and Bit.Trip Runner.
This article should have been more obvious it was edited, the comments make no sense now.
If you read the Wikipedia article on the CERO you see a few examples of games given lower ratings (equivalent of Teen rating) than they got in America (if you equate Z rating with M rating) and then you see a game like Infamous which got a T in the US got a Z in Japan. So it seems that violence against civilians is a major factor here.
I have seen a japanese game were you conquer feudal japan through rape and this is what they drop the hammer on.
They sure know their priorities.
Quick,add lotsa Lolis,poop jokes and tentacles so it can be rated A-OK!
If it’s going to get a Z anyways, why bother censoring it?
I think the game should give you a penalty for killing civilians. GTA does it, in fact that’s why you go around killing people randomly. It’s not fun if I just slaughtered 100 civilians and no one cares.
It’s not Japan rating board over-reacting, it’s retailers over-reacting that a game is intended for adults so it must be hidden. If they just sold them like normal there would be no problem with these games.
If I can be hentai games off the shelf I should be able to buy this game off the shelf.
This game needs moar rape tho, everythang is butter wit raep /joke
Not sure I understand the point of this article… First of all, Japan does not have an AO rating, Japan does not use the ESRB ratings. Japan’s uses the CERO rating system, and the highest rating on that is Z, which doesn’t carry nearly as much of a stigma as the AO rating does in the US.
Many games in Japan can earn a Z rating just for violence and mild sexual content, Lollipop Chainsaw had a Z for example. Judging by the brutal violence seen in trailers for Sleeping Dogs it’s not really a surprise that it is getting a Z and getting censored, as Japan isn’t as tolerant towards violent games as the US is. In other words, I fail to see this as news really, and the facts presented in the article aren’t exactly correct.
I also just realized that this comment kind of makes me sound like a huge jerk… Meh.
And now the article has been corrected and all mentions of the AO rating have been removed, not only making my previous comment unnecessary but also making it have no context so that it doesn’t even make sense… And there does not seem to be an edit button, hmm…
Oh well. Just disregard my previous comment, I guess.