

No need to rush in, just scout the perimeter until you spot an external security camera on the side of a nearby building. Where the magical smartphone truly shines, however, is during the infiltration of secure locations crawling with armed guards. There is one new and interesting thing about Aiden, however: he's got a really, really cool phone. He's haunted by, and feels responsible for, a tragedy in his past, and he's out for revenge-or is it redemption? To find those responsible for his misery, Aiden needs to uncover a shadowy conspiracy, secret organizations, organized crime, and government corruption, and will employ the help of-get this-an eccentric cast of oddball characters, some with secrets of their own. He's got a few days of beard stubble, speaks in a whispery growl, and has zero sense of humor. There's no shortage of the familiar in Ubisoft's third-person open-world action game Watch Dogs, beginning with our protagonist, Aiden Pearce.
CARS 2 THE VIDEO GAME REVIEW IGN DRIVER
While I'm sailing through the air, however, my smartphone informs me the driver of the car I've struck is Martin Huntley, age 39, who works as a telemarketer, makes $24,000 a year, and is into autoerotic asphyxiation. Nothing new-I've done this many times, in many games. I'm racing a stolen motorcycle through a sprawling cityscape, cops wailing behind me in pursuit, when I suddenly smash into a car, shoot through the air like a missile, and slam face-first into a wall.
