Niko's mistake wasn't killing Faustin. His mistake was to trust Dmitri. But regardless of Dmitri’s intentions, killing Faustin made sense in Niko’s situation. We find out through working for Faustin and talking to his wife that he is a very violent, impulsive and paranoid person. Working for a person like Faustin won’t work in the long-run. For example he shot Andrei in the head because he didn’t like the way Andrei looked at him. Not only does Faustin order violent hits on rival organizations that are way too excessive. But he is also seen murdering his own people for no reason. Faustin might like Niko at the time, but that could completely change at any moment. Niko didn’t have any choice but to kill Faustin. And Niko must work for Faustin, since he killed Vlad. So the question we need to ask ourselves is, was killing Vlad really necessary? It makes more sense to say that killing Vlad was a mistake. Because by killing Vlad, Niko created a domino-effect that would end up forcing him to kill Faustin.
That's a really smart way to find an even better dilemma where the main character made a bad decision! We are really impressed by your way of deduction 🙂
Niko also had to kill Faustin to avoid being hunted down by Kenny Petrovic, who’s Son he previously killed under Faustin’s order. Conveniently, this gave Dimitri a perfect reason to turn on Niko too with Bulgarin. A part of Dimitri’s treacherous nature.
That was his mistake. Niko should've never trusted Dimitri. Well, Niko is not the only one to be blamed. We all got fooled by Dimitri. We didn't expect Dimitri to betray Niko and us like that.
@@sadmankhan9630 As I was saying, I don't believe that's entirely true. The reason Niko killed Faustin was not because Dmitri told him to. He didn't do it because he trusted Dmitri. He killed Faustin because it made sense in his situation. It was a type of "him or me" situation for Niko. He knew that Faustin was out of control and working for him wouldn’t end well. Also according to Dmitri, Petrovic threatened to kill Niko if he didn't kill Faustin. Even if that would be a lie, it still made sense for Niko to act the way he did. If Niko didn't kill Faustin, Petrovic would definitely want him dead and eventually Faustin would likely want him dead as well. Also if Niko didn't kill Faustin, Dmitri would have someone else do it. It wasn't a mistake, because he didn’t really have any choice. Even if Niko knew that Dmitri was a traitor, killing Faustin was inevitable. If Faustin found out that even Dmitri betrayed him, how long would it take until he makes the conclusion that Niko was in on it or would betray him as well?
CJ's cooperation with C.R.A.S.H. towards the end of the game knowing that Sweet is under Toreno's protection was even worse than the Big Smoke betrayal.
Amanda was the one responsible for the events of GTA V. If she didn't cheat on Michael, none of the events would've happened. Although the real mistake was Michael using his line from the prologue in the Vangelico heist because it attracted Trevor, just like how Dave predicted it would
Amanda was not at all responsible. Think about it this way: why was she cheating on Michael? Because he was putting his family in danger with his criminal life and also neglecting Amanda by preferring to sit by the pool or watching Vinewood movies.
@@reihanharfi635 No... Lance is an idiot so we expect him to do stupid shit. 🤣 On the other hand, Victor did a lot of bad decisions with a good motive or so he thought. Of course, I'm referring to the plot of VCS.
@reihanharfi635 Lance and their mom caused the trouble. Vic was being an idiot for being loyal to his family. Which itself is a noble thing, but it would have been smarter for Vic to ditch them and let them handle their own problems. Though it would have probably meant that both Lance and their mom would be killed or arrested. Which would probably have been hard for him to live with.
I think one of the biggest mistake is Johnny Klebitz getting back with Ashley, at the end of TLAD he cuts ties with her, but at the beginning of GTA V we see that they are back together and also using drugs which led to his death by Trevor
Another awesome example right there! It's really depressing seeing Johnny becoming such a weakling after hat happened in GTA The Lost and Damned 😦 He survived a lot but in the very end, he reached the bottom 😕
@@gaminginvestigators I think Johnny's biggest mistake is recklessness. First, he believed Billy about drugs whether it was stealing them from AoD or selling them to the triads. He didn't do anything that could help the Lost to prevent such actions. Second, Johnny's betrayal in the diamond deal which led to Jim Fitzgerald death and dissolution of Alderney chapter of the Lost
@@ЯнДаниленко-ь9мdon’t forget it’s the same as Vic Vance saying he don’t anything to do with drugs at the end of Vice city stories just to get back into that life immediately and die 2 years later at the start of Vice city
Michael bringing down Madrazo's property wasn't that stupid, what was stupid in fact is he saying his MO during the heist, there was literally no reason for him to do that
I never really got it How did Tommy managed to work for both Haitians and Cubans (we do missions for both auntie Poulet and Umberto robina) without raising any suspicion?
@@AgentDanielCross Mission #1: No Cubans are present in the entire mission. Mission #2: Tommy is not visible because he is in a van, using remote controlled vehicles to kill the Cubans. Mission #3: Tommy is standing on a rooftop far away from the action, and the Cubans are too busy focusing on the Haitians to look around.
I think Micheal destroying the house in V was believable because he was venting years of pent up anger in that moment. I think that Micheal and Trevor have a little bit of each other in themselves and that was a "What would Trevor do?" moment!
Another terrible mistake was Toni trusting Vincenzo for a last time in the mission The Portland Chainaw Masquerade. Vincenzo calls Toni and speaks in a VERY sarcastic voice, tells him to meet him in a secluded ship at the docks...Toni trusts him. It's an ambush: Vincenzo and his henchmen were waiting for him not for business, but to murder him.
That's a very good example, bro! Bearing in mind that Vincenzo was a two-faced bastard to Toni from the very beginning, it was completely pointless to react to this. I mean, unless Toni Cipriani actually wanted to do this because he was willing to kill Vincenzo there. 😃
I'm surprised nobody talks about Johnny's decision to steal the $2m during the diamond deal He was promised half of it ($1m) for all of his work in TLaD, which is a very nice payout. Instead he decided to be greedy and took the entire pot, which of course led to Jim getting killed and things falling apart after the end of TLaD.
McRearys instead. You'd expect: Niko to make up an excuse to drive to the McRearys, or at least do his best to disguise his true intentions. Instead: Niko tells Gracie in her face that he is kidnapping her as soon as she questions his "test drive" taking so long. As a result: Gracie pulls out all the stops to crash the car in an attempt to escape, complicating the kidnapping. Niko struggles to keep control of the car for a while before he finally knocks out Gracie.
@@gaminginvestigators She demonstrated that she was attracted to him. He could've leaned into that and lured her to a motel somewhere away from the Ancelottis and discretely tell Packie where they are.
I think the stupidest moment happened in the mission 'Search and Delete' GTA IV. Niko went to Rivas and told him 'I got a message from Brucie for you' which alerted the guy and a hard car chase happened. It would be much more logical to simply kill Rivas there and then without say anything. Also in San Andreas mission 'High Noon'. Why CJ didn't killed Tenpenny and Pulaski immediately? They met in a remote place nobody saw them.
These are some great examples, man! Especially the one with the mission "Search and Delete", this one sounds so ridiculous now that you mentioned it 😂 As for the second mission, the way we see it, CJ had an enormous amount of occasions to kill both Tenpenny and Pulaski 🤦♂️ It's really disappointing, especially when CJ is already working for Mike Toreno (but still... he didn't have the guarantee that Toreno will keep his word :/).
@@gaminginvestigators Also Tenpenny and Pulaski blackmail CJ about officer Pendelburry's death. Meanwhile CJ killed dozens of policeman in some missions(f.e 'reuniting the families')...I didn't even count freeroams, because that's not canon.
You forgot Claude also when he killed Yakuza crime boss Kenji Kasen, After that her sister thought it’s someone hired his sister Asuka Kasen thought. Also Salvatore Leone when he tried to kill claude by the car and there’s more
CJ was blinded by his friendship with Big Smoke. The stupid part of the game was CJ working for CRASH even when blackmailed and the same goes for Niko Bellic working for Francis McReary and Frank ClinTon, Michael DeSanta, and Trevor Phillips working for Steve Haynes and Devon Westin.
@@miguelpasamano4995 lol I said the wrong thing…he worked with crash to find the death of his mom and make the player find out how Brian really got killed and I already know how Brian died
@@idcgetoffmypage as if CRASH ever intended to let him know who killed his mom or we ever found out how Brian really died? CRASH's word and Sweet's guilt tripping on the matter don't mean shit around here
In the start of San Andreas cj is told "the grove is all fucked up". he just thought things changed like he was told so I think that helped cloud his judgement. He wanted to make up for Brian for so long and that was his chance.
I feel like rockstar lacks a lot when it comes to the romance department, I don't know it feels always cheap. Amanda the way she treated Micahel given he wasn't perfect either but by that time Michael was really trying to change things or, the way Mary capitalizes on Arthur's feelings for her to have him do things that he probably wouldn't do for anybody else. They were forgiven way too easily that's just my opinion though.
Well the first mistake was just made right by devs, Michel was angry at his life before and now he finds out his wife is cheating so that anger bursts out and hi goes not by his mind but by his emotions.
Sometimes when playing Grand Theft Auto IV you need to liberate a good mother from a bad marriage, to which I had no problem with all I ask from Rockstar Games at that point was to keep her alive.
Well, Tom Goldberg, the lawyer we were supposed to murder used the name "Nikolai" while referring to Niko so that's probably safe enough to say he is actually Nikolai 😅
@@gaminginvestigators I see now. Also, rockstar messed up and could have made Niko a little bit better (the words he speaks during the game in Serbian are not well said)
Years before the game even began, Trevor does his first score. You'd Expect: Trevor to rob a place he never was in. Instead: Trevor decides to rob someone he knew. As a Result: The person recognized Trevor and Trevor did six months. He got out after four. Several years before the game's storyline, Michael is in a gang consisting of him, Trevor Phillips, and their friend Brad. Because of concerns for his family, Michael decides that he wants out of being a criminal. You'd Expect: That he would talk about this with his partners, and try to part with them on good terms, so that they'll leave him alone. Instead: He goes behind both their backs and plans to have them either killed or arrested, while faking his death at the same time. As a Result: Trevor survives, and when he finds out that Michael ditched him, he's furious about it for most of the game. Michael comes home one day to find Amanda sleeping with her tennis coach, Kyle Chavis. He and Franklin chase the coach in Michael's gardener's truck and eventually find him standing on the balcony of a hillside mansion. Michael decides to get his revenge by tying a cable to the house's support beam and tear down the mansion.
True, these are also really good examples to talk about 😉 While we kinda understand Trevor's approach here (he is crazy after all), Michael's intentions were not properly thought-out and it shows that he was a real backstabber.
Good example is also in GTA III when Claude killed Kenji, Asuka's brother just because Donald Love told him to do it. Neither Kenji or Asuka did any wrong to Claude and I think it was pure luck that Asuka didn't find out that it was actually Claude that killed her brother. Claude didn't think about that one at all and in the end it didn't really bring him closer to finding Catalina.
Almost nobody that played GTA SA the first time expected Big Smoke to betray you, even if CRASH was showing up at his place, because they were doing the same to CJ, so i dont see CJs mistake here helping one of his presumed best friends. Niko did not have a choice about killing Faustin. Dimitri made him think if he killed Faustin he would not be put on the Ancelotti hit list. You just blindly explored some actions without thinking too much about it.
Ummm, sorry but when exactly did Tenpenny show up at CJ's or rather Johnson's House? 🤔 We can't recall any situation involving CRASH being at Johnson's house :/ Moving on, we know perfectly well that it might be hard to notice that Big Smoke is a traitor, we were also younger and when we tried this game for the first time, we didn't suspect anything 😉 However, this doesn't mean that CJ couldn't see it. We mentioned many sus moments that are clearly suggesting that something is wrong here and that's all 😄 And what do the Ancelottis have to do with Mikhail Faustin? 😃 This doesn't make any sense :/ We will decide not to comment on the last sentence you wrote based on how you know the storyline of those games 😅
@@gaminginvestigators They were not really showing up to CJ's house, but everybody knew CJ was involved with them. After the mission Tagging up the Turf, CJ tells Sweet "CRASH took all my paper" and also when they show up at Ryder's and Big Smoke's house, Smoke and Ryder were aware that CJ knew who CRASH were, meaning all CJ's friends knew he was involved with them somehow, and CJ had the same thought that they were harrassing his friends. And about Niko, forgive me but i don't know why i wrote Ancelotti when i meant to write Petrovic. Niko was ordered by Faustin to kill the son (Lenny) of the leader (Kenny) because he thought he was a rat, and later also blew up their garage with an explosive truck. Kenny wanted war for this and Mikhail and Niko dead, but Dimitri convinced them that Niko was a hired gun and as long as he were the one to kill Faustin, he would be spared. You even included it in the video yourselves 5:18 and somehow forgot about it staying with your opinion that Niko wasn't forced to kill him but rather a bad decision. What other choice was there?
In the final mission, “The Exchange”, Claude arrives to the Columbian Cartel mansion to deliver the ransom money to Catalina with a cartel member standing behind Claude with a gun to his head. After Catalina takes the money, she tells Claude that she isn’t to be trusted and instructs her goons to kill him (who is at point blank range and unarmed.) You’d Expect: The mook to immediately shoot Claude. Instead: The mook takes an absurd amount of time to shoot Claude who then sucker-punches and kills him. on the other hand you would wonder why claude gives that money at all and catalina can't be trusted speaks volumes I think? and for our 2nd main character. Tommy Vercetti is a low level mook sent to Vice City in order to negotiate a major drug deal with a cartel. As expected, a rival cartel ambushes the deal, resulting in both the drugs and the money being stolen in the chaos. This makes Sonny Forelli - Tommy's boss - extremely angry, and he spends the rest of the game getting angrier and angrier at the main character for not being able to get the money back. During this time, Tommy starts to make connections of his own and starts to make his own little empire in Vice City, coming into contact with a substantial chunk of change and enough drugs to make the original deal look like chump change. You'd Expect: That Tommy would at one point tell his boss that he'll fully pay him back for everything lost in the initial ambush, since even a quarter of the way through the game, he has enough money to do this, and then offer a rendezvous to give the money. Even if he didn't have all the money, he could at the very least persuade one of his many powerful friends to help him out in this situation just to get the mob boss off his back and maybe even have some of the mob boss' assets to help him out once things cool down. Instead: Tommy seems very nonchalant during all of this. Every time Sonny demands money, Tommy either says nothing to help his situation, or just says he'll "figure out a way" to pay him back. He literally does absolutely nothing to help out the situation. As A Result: Near the end of the game, Sonny sends hitmen to extract the money from Tommy's friends, and after those are dispatched, the boss openly declares war on Tommy. This results in the final mission where most of Tommy's friends (actually, just Lance) abandon him, leaving him to fight off the entire force by himself. let's face it he's a goddamn 1 man army that's why he survived the first ambush and they totally deserve it his boss was a jerk in the beginning before they game. Sonny isn't helping himself, either. He's basically launching a drug deal with the Vance Gang without the consent of the other Liberty City mafia families. He is primarily motivated by self-serving financial gain, while simultaneously aiming for the hope that the situation will resolve itself in a "better to ask forgiveness than seek permission" manner when the anti-drug heads of the mob see the profits he is raking in. Who do you think he would send in to handle this sensitive operation? You'd Expect: Him to send in one of his trusted friends or allies, someone who he knows he can trust to get the job done and remain loyal, mitigating circumstances or not. Instead: He sends in Tommy Vercetti, a man whom he personally tried to assassinate. He not only survived that, but killed his assassins, proving that he is a man who is very difficult to kill. In addition to that, he received no help from the Mob while in prison and gained no love for them in the meanwhile. When the inevitable happens and Tommy ends up backstabbing Sonny, Sonny sends down the men seen with him in the intro to destroy a growing criminal enterprise (by which point he finally decides to do so, Tommy has gained enough influence to own half the city). Unsurprisingly, they fail. Even when he has the luck of having one of Tommy's top lieutenants turn traitor, he still can't beat Tommy, and pays for the mistake of giving the task to him with his life. Speaking of idiot, Lance also has plenty of moments of this as well. Take "Death Row" for example. You'd expect: Lance to listen to Tommy when the latter tells him he will handle Diaz. Instead: Lance, being the impulsive moron he is, decides to jump the gun and take out Diaz on his own without foreseeing the consequences he's facing. As a result: Lance is captured by Diaz's guards and kidnapped in the junkyard, foiling Tommy's meticulous planning and forcing Tommy to risk saving Lance's The mission "Bar Brawl" has a local bar refusing to pay protection. You'd expect: Lance to get up off his ass and actually help Tommy take care of the job. Instead: He continues sitting on his ass drinking and not even budging a single inch away from his chair. As a result: Tommy rightfully chastises him for his indolence and decides to handle the job himself. This leads to.... .....the subsequent phone call at the end of the mission. You'd expect: Lance to simply own up to his screw-ups and promising to do better in the future. Instead: He calls Tommy to complain about how he treats him, completely ignoring the fact that it was him being lazy and impulsive that caused Tommy to berate him. While Tommy did give Lance a Backhanded Apology during that moment, did Lance really deserve a genuine one for his own screw-ups? And it gets worse: Because Lance didn't like getting shouted at and was upset at being Tommy's second in-command while being delusional enough to believe he deserved more, he betrays Tommy out of spite and even gleefully attempted to kill Tommy as well. Lance was practically asking to get gunned down. and now my favorite main character cj i can understand that cj doesn't suspect his 2 childhood friends but he could have expected the last mission before crash even though it was clear that big smoke mission wasn't. GSF helps and of course He moves out of Grove Street to buy a house in Idlewood (Ballas turf, no less) with some money he claims came from his aunt. It's most likely drug money, and the move showcases his lack of loyalty. There's also the car chase shootout. Granted it's played for comedy, but he doesn't lift a finger to help the others as they're fighting a rival gang. It's very possible that Smoke ordered so much food to lengthen the window of time that the Grove Family was out of the hood, as the Ballas car was going to attack the hood. Hernandez reports Tenpenny and Pulaski's wrong doings off-screen. The next thing you see is the former hitting him with a shovel for it. You'd Expect: Since Tenpenny and Pulaski had no intention of letting either CJ or Hernandez get out alive, they would just shoot them, and bury the completely dead bodies themselves. Instead: Tenpenny leaves Pulaski to do the job, who takes more joy in forcing CJ to dig his own grave than ensuring Henandez would be out cold long enough for CJ to dig the grave, letting Hernandez take him by surprise, and allowing CJ to go after him as well. so cj only survived that mission for 2 reasons 1 reason is Tenpenny chose not to shoot him when he had the chance and 2nd Hernandez woke up on time 1 minute later and he would have been there done for. and now for tony In the mission "The Made Man", you have to drive Mickey and another character who's expecting to become a "Made Man" at a ceremony in Harwood. However, it turns out you're bringing that person there to be killed by Mickey for being untrustworthy enough. Afterwards, you have to bring Mickey home. You'd Expect: To use the car crusher (which you park right next to for the "ceremony") to destroy the car along with any evidence of the man being murdered, and then commandeer another vehicle (like the Trashmaster which tends to spawn next to said car crusher) to drive Mickey home without arousing any suspicion of criminal activity. Instead: You have to drive Mickey home in the car with the dead body still inside it, even though this could draw unwanted attention from the police (who will chase after you if they catch you driving around in the car), and then later dump the car in the river where anyone with access to a boat could potentially find it and the man's dead body. And since the car in question is a Leone Sentinel, this would directly link the man's murder to the Leones. and now for the sane main character vic. And his bro. Near the end of the first half of the storyline, Lance informs Vic of the big shipment. You'd expect: Lance to actually read the information of the shipment clearly to be sure who really owns the coke he wants to steal from the owner. Instead: He automatically assumes that Martinez is the one who owns the coke, and he and Vic steal the coke stored in two trucks by the dock by driving the vehicles containing the shipment to the other side of the island. In addition, you'd also expect: Vic, being the older, more responsible brother, to ask if Lance was sure if Martinez was the one who owned the coke. Instead: He practically thinks about Revenge Before Reason and rapidly agrees with Lance to perform the theft. As a result: Vic later discovers that the coke belongs to the Mendez brothers, who will kill anyone involved in the deal, including Martinez, putting the Vance brothers into deeper crap. You'd also expect: Since the Vance brothers need to pay off the Mendez brothers' debts, Lance would actually make sure the coke is stash safely inside his apartment and not take a single sample of it by any means. Instead: Lance decides to use up all the coke himself, and even put Louise on it as well. BONUS POINTS: When Lance is finally confronted by Vic about this, he decides to give away the coke, practically risking the brothers' lives to a couple of drug lords. There's another good reason for the gamers to despise Lance with a burning passion.
That's quite a huge list of other possible bad choices! 😮 We will try to comment on each of these situations 😅 When it comes to "The Exchange" mission, you pointed out that one of the Colombians was too slow to shoot Claude. And well, we don't really know whether it was as slow as the cutscene shows. Bear in mind that a pretty similar trick is being used in several movies or video games. And the reason behind using slow motion is usually to make someone aware of the main character's quick reaction to a particular danger. And that's at least how we feel about this moment in the game. 😉 Moving on to Tommy Vercetti, we presume that you are talking about Sonny making a bad decision by sending Tommy to Vice City and staying rather passive when Vercetti was having a debt to settle with the Forellis. That's entirely true, Sonny was too confident about what was going on and that's why he lost in the end. I think we show it perfectly in one of the episodes regarding Sonny. Speaking of Lance Vance and his stupid decision, that is to take Ricardo Diaz all by himself, we will definitely say that Tommy shouldn't have rescued Lance in "Death Row". Why do we think so? Because Lance was quite useless all along. He wasn't really that helpful while dealing with Ricardo Diaz (he gave Tommy M4, but we are pretty sure that he would be able to withstand without this weapon). We are not even going to mention how bad he was while the empire was established since you already said few words about this 🙂 When it comes to Big Smoke, ummm, we know that there are some people who think that Smoke's famous order was going to buy some time for the Ballas to make a hit on Grove Street. We were thinking the same at first, but then we realized that this whole order isn't just about Big Smoke. He was ordering food for all people in the car, not just himself.
The next thing concerns the "High Noon" mission. And you are totally correct here, Tenpenny made a wrong choice by letting Pulaski take care of things. Again, being too confident led to unexpected results. In terms of the mission "Made Man" in GTA Liberty City Stories, that is another great example of how some side characters are a bit braindead. Instead of taking care of the corpse by throwing the car into the crusher, the duo decides to drive across town, risking that the police might suspect something. The same applies to the situation that you brought up in GTA Vice City Stories. Lance Vance being Lance Vance, to put it mildly. And of course, Victor was really keen on getting some revenge on Sergeant Martinez and that's what blinded his thinking. To sum up, you have made some great points about side characters' bad decisions, and huge chapeau bas to you, bro! 🙂
I'll have a number nine, a number nine large, a number six with extra sauce, a number seven, two number forty-fives, one wit' cheese, and a large soda.
Niko had no choice in betraying Faustin, Petrovich would have put a price on his head too for killing his son if he didn't, Dimitri was clear on that, Niko had to be the one to kill Faustin in order to be spared by Petrovich. If he stayed loyal to Faustin Petrovich would have probably went after Faustin's entire organization and Niko too and eventually Niko would have been in a similar situation as he was with Dimitri if not worse.
You do have a valid point regarding Petrovic, we gotta admit that. However, did he really not have any choice? He was only a tool of the given command, Faustin was the one that asked Niko to do this. Moreover, how can we be sure that Dimitri wasn't lying about this? We don't have a guarantee that Petrovic made a such deal with Dimitri really 🤔
@@gaminginvestigators There is indeed a chance, it was a lie. But seeing as Petrovic did not come after Niko after Faustin’s death, it might not be either. Beyond the gameplay itself, Niko alone is factually powerless against a whole crime organization/gang. This was evidenced by him being on the run from Bulgarin. Hence, whether or not it was a lie, in his shoes, there wasn’t another choice of out fear of retribution from Petrovic.
Niko wasn't exactly powerful or had connections during working with Faustin so he had no choice. If it was end game Niko who has connections to Mafia like Pegorino, Mcreary, Gravelli and also when he got hired by Ul Paper IAA then he wouldn't worry about Petrovich
Pulling the house down was a homage to the same action taken by Riggs in Lethal Weapon 2 after the South African ambassador and his goons killed a woman Riggs had just spent the night with and tried to kill him and was responsible for the death of his wife years before. They also had Leo who was the groups money launderer which turned informant to the LAPD and was kidnapped and was the unwilling subject to some advanced interrogation techniques in a home on stilts just like the house in GTA 5. Riggs uses a winch on the front of his truck to pull on the supports.
Vic Vance need a video of his own in this category. He knew Lance is doing stupid things but everytime, he agrees with Lance. Loyal to family is a noble thing but he is a bit stupid to not avoid doing the stupid things
I think one of the most stupid decisions of a GTA protagonist was when Niko killed lawyer Tom Goldberg, he literally applied for the job interview to get close to him using his actual name and when he arrived at the interview he buzzed the intercom and again used his actual name...
This seems like a very good idea! That is because Niko could potentially avoid the backlash from Dimitri Rascalov when Faustin would decide to get rid of him. However, though, we are afraid that this wouldn't be enough to take care of Ray Bulgarin who was coming to Liberty City. But still, staying loyal could be a fine solution to make sure that Dimitri won't be a problem in the future. 🤔
Floyd is house-sitting for his girlfriend Debra when all of a sudden, out of the blue, his cousin Wade shows up with Trevor, who wastes no time in kicking the door in, making himself at home, ordering Floyd around as if he owns the place, and threatening bodily harm on him. You'd Expect: That Floyd would do something about the uninvited maniac who's trespassing and squatting in his home. Like call the police at his next and safest opportunity (like in a hotel room he checks into to hide from Trevor). Instead: He does nothing. Trevor continues to abuse him, makes a mess of the apartment, and even forces Floyd to help him rob his place of employment. Floyd eventually snaps after seeing Debra get upset at the whole situation and he pulls a knife on Trevor, but Trevor kills him and her off screen, and all we know about the specifics is that there's a ton of blood on the windows and on Trevor afterwards. do you think it's crazy that i stop feeling sorry for floyd? Ending B. Franklin chases the Final Boss Michael up a ladder to the top of a tower. Obviously, Franklin has to put his gun away so he can grip the ladder with both hands while climbing. You'd Expect: For Franklin to immediately pull out his gun after reaching the top before continuing. Instead: He moves forward unarmed, and is predictably caught defenseless by the Final Boss and left completely at his mercy. You'd Then Expect: For the Final Boss to put aside any lingering sentiments of friendship and shoot him immediately. Instead: The Final Boss takes a moment to rant at Franklin, allowing him to outflank him, disarm him, and throw him off the tower to his death. That's why I'm glad that end c canon is all confirmed in gta online.
That's also a good way to show a possible bad decision made by a side character 😉 However, we don't know the entire story of this conflict between Floyd and Debra, but we have a weird feeling that the man might be actually having some mental problems. We are not sure whether it comes from a trauma in the past, but we are pretty sure that The Professional managed to analyze this thread extensively 🙂
7:38 Hubson: *Shows Wrong Side of the Tracks* In addition, some missions are very enjoyable for us. Yeah, tell that to the people who lost count on how many times they got yelled at by Big Smoke in that mission.
And at the same time, Niko Bellic had really no guarantee that Petrovic won't be looking for him anymore 😁 That's one of the reasons we feel that betraying Faustin was a bit pointless 😃
What is the name of the song used at the beginning of the video, for GTA 5 it's amanda's fault but hey if he hadn't had these errors there would have been no adventure
Niko killing the innocent charitable lawyer who was offering jobs and was a genuinely good person for Francis, and killing the poor old fragile prisoner luring him making him trust him for Derrick are unforgivable. Niko at the end did anything for money, and McCreary were a scumbag family, if he were a saint as some people try to make him out to be, he would never associate with them, after killing Faustin which was a stupid mistake he could have started fresh clean work for good money, like helping Manny uncover crimes. But he chose to stick with crime even tho he claimed he regretted being a former human trafficker. Real hypocrisy, Darko asking him how much he charges to kill told it all. Even if you spare Darko you kill countless others as Niko, some even the innocents!
Unfortunately, killing innocent people is an integral part of every GTA game :/ We as players are acting a bit like Mike Toreno said about his agency. We are trying to kill bad guys, but sometimes we have to let good people die. And well, we are trying to be a good guy in the bad guys' game and sadly, most of the time it doesn't work. Still, we believe that the majority of the GTA protagonists were actually doing more "good" in the end. It was taken by violence, but the main characters are simply good at it, and that's their way to "save their world" 🙂
@@gaminginvestigators True GTA is a game based on crime, thats why the title Grand Theft Auto exists in the first place. We play as criminals here not as cops.
Yeah. The moment where Darko asks Niko in answer from killing good friend for $1000 “How much do you charge to kill someone?” describes Niko perfectly. He did a lot of bad things, he killed a lot of people for money, not only gangsters, scumbags or other criminals but good people like a lawyer Tom Goldberg, or the moment with kidnapping Gracie Ancelotti, yes, the daughter of the Mafia Boss, yes, the not so pleasant, but spoiled and annoying girl, but not a violent criminal and murdering psychopath, I mean it’s a normal reaction. She was kidnapped and tortured for what? For these cursed diamonds and father’s business in which she doesn’t to get involved. He dealt with many people who were much worse than her and was cold blooded, but with Gracie he showed to her all hatred and contempt not only with hitting her, but with slapping her. He really looked at her with such a huge anger, that he was ready not only to kill, but to tear apart and dismember her just because for being born as a daughter of a Mafia Boss. It’s not surprise that he didn’t get a stinking cent after exchanging Gracie for these diamonds, it’s a karma. It clearly shows Niko’s hypocrisy: he blames everyone and the whole world in injustice, everyone are so awful while he falls down every time. No matter what he wants, he goes with the way of violence and murders and in the end he loses one of his really closed one. It’s a karma.
@@Spartak2811 when the old prisoner Derrick asked to kill was begging to spare him but Niko still didn't I nearly cried, was young in 2008. Derrick was a wasted drunken junkie that did no good and Niko should never have worked for him.
CJ is a hothead, no mafia experience like Tommy, no high-level heist experience like Michael and Trevor (that's where Franklin got lucky) or anything else. All he did trough his life was either be a gangbanger, or a low life crook (in LC). All he ever knew about was street loyalty and the strength of the gang. Smoke meddling with CRASH was't that suspicious for CJ because he knew they were a pain ind the ass. They also arrived in Ryders home in the catalyst mission, so it wasn't easy to suspect Smoke. CJ only managed to open his eyes when he left Los Santos, realised the truth, and with the help of Kendl see that the world is bigger than the hood (unlike Sweet). The part where I saw CJs actions irrational were the OG Loc missions mostly. The rest was either for the gang, or for his business empire that grew constantly after moving to San Fierro.
@@gaminginvestigators honestly, I won't put a large blame on CJ for not telling Sweet of Smoke's actions because Sweet often scolded and treated him bad. Big Smoke and Kendl are the only persons who warmly welcomed him, and Smoke is the one who often comforted and cheered him up. Would Sweet even believe CJ if he tells him that something is wrong with Smoke? Afaik, he often berated CJ about their mom and Brian's deaths and often scolded him for being a "busta" until the late part of the LS story arc.
What do you mean by "avenging Roman"? 😅 We assume that you are talking about the situation where Niko doesn't betray Mikhail Faustin. Well, we have a wild guess that Dimitri Rascalov would be pretty much screwed, but we are not certain about Faustin helping Niko with Bulgarin though. We would rather say Faustin would wash his hands from this mess and not try to become the Bulgarin's enemy. 🤔
Why did CJ help Tenpenny after he met Toreno? He had no reason to do it, since Toreno promised CJ, that he will proctect Sweet in prison, so he had no reason to help Tenpenny to delete more evidence for him.
Well, the problem is that CJ didn't have the guarantee that Toreno will keep his word 🙂 That's primarily why he had to obey Tenpenny even though he was working for Mike Toreno already. :/
Later on, Michael is taking part in a jewelry store robbery. You'd Expect: Him not to do or say anything to give away his identity during the job, if he doesn't want any attention from the cops/underworld as a result of it. Instead: He gives his catchphrase to a cop trying to get them to move their illegally parked bikes. As A Result: Trevor, watching that very cop recount Michael using the catchphrase and recognizing Michael's use of the same phrase during the fateful robbery in North Yankton nine years ago, realizes Michael is still alive. Trevor then barges his way back into Michael's life, bringing with him a great deal of trouble. The FIB, or at least Dave Norton, also finds out about Michael's involvement in the robbery almost immediately and use this as leverage to rope Michael into doing dirty work for them. Devin Weston employs Franklin, Trevor and Lamar to steal five cars for him. The men put in a lot of time and effort to acquire them. You'd Expect: Devin, a billionaire who can easily buy his way out of anything, to just pay them for services rendered. Instead: Devin "places their money in a investment fund" and refuses to pay them. As A Result: This destroys his relationship with Trevor and Franklin. He also tries to disrupt Michael's movie Meltdown, which leads to Michael turning against him. Devin Weston is understandably pissed that Michael's latest exploits had gotten his assistant, Molly, a terminal case of plane turbine and deprived him of a lot of money. He calls Michael and the former offers an apology, and in response, Devin sends his private army to Michael's home to kill his family and gloats about it right in his face, prompting Michael to go Papa Wolf on them all. You'd Expect: For Devin to realize just who he had managed to piss off and evacuate the country ASAP. Instead: He sticks around, enters Franklin's home and tells the man to go kill Michael for him, despite screwing him over in the past. As A Result: Devin's life hinges entirely on whether a dumpy 50-something white collar crook can successfully intimidate a 20-something One-Man Army who has reason to be angry at him personally. In ending C, Michael and Franklin kill Devin instead. Honestly, this guy was Too Dumb to Live embodied.
toni cipriani imo became the worst protagonist when he just completely ignored his best friend JD's murder. He didnt take any revenge nor did he try to stop the murder which happened right infront of his eyes. Not only that but he even helped the murderer escape.
JD wasn't his friend. Besides JD was killed because he was a rat. He worked first for the Leone family and later for an other family only to work for the Leone family again. Salvatore was right to order JDs death.
@@sennescholten7278 you know, even if I hate Salvatore he did the right thing ordering to kill JD. Being not only a pervert and a pedophile for whom you should not feel sorry, a manager of the brothel where this old man had a “special fun” with his young girls behind Maria’s back, JD snitched the Sindacco Family, selling their secrets to the Leone Family. And the Leone Family just used him as a mole and an informant person. After winning the Red Light District in the war with the Sindacco Family JD was no longer needed. No matter with whom you are and what purpose you’re seeking, but traitors are hated by everyone, even by those whom they served. It’s easy as 2 and 2. JD’s assassination was inspired by the murder of Paulie Gatto from The Godfather, a soldier of the Corleone Family who betrayed his Boss and the Family selling the secrets to Virgil “The Turk” Solozzo.
Umm, we wouldn't take it as a mistake really. Toni Cipriani knew about the rules inside the mafia. Rats are not useful to any criminal organization. At the very least, they might be hired as associates, but they will never be family members because of the huge risk that the man will rat someone out again. :/
Regarding CJ and Big Smoke, I'd agree that CRASH constantly being at his house was suspicious and about how BS's missions not benefitting the gang were red flags but I'd say it's reasonable for CJ to not suspect BS due to them being friends (with hindsight, and a few other bits of foreshadowing in the form of BS's proverbs, it's easy to say trusting him was a mistake though). While they either lack consequences for CJ or ultimately benefit him I'd say breaking into Area 69 and stealing the green goo from the train and stealing Mad Dogg's rhyme book and murdering his manager were dumber decisions on CJ's part due to the risks involved.
It was out of pure rage for micheal since he caught his wife cheating on him with her tennis coach and the tennis coach decided to run to madrazos house instead of his own
About Niko, despite Faustin being terrible on his wife and such but he sees Niko a trustworthy person since in the beginning. But it still doesn't make any sense that why did Niko agreed to kill Mikhail to favor Rascalov only turns out that he only used him to take over Faustin's business, plus Niko moved LC to have a new different life when he was in Europe he could have just reject Rascalov's favor like "It's your problem between you and Faustin, I'm here for the money" and warned Faustin that Rascalov wants him to get rid of him.
We are not ruling out the possibility of making videos regarding the 2D universe in the future. However, it might be hard to create an interesting video similar to the ones we already made right now because of the lack of any bigger lore in these particular installments. :/
I wouldn't say killing Faustin was a mistake as at that point of time, it was totally need and Dmitri's words, despite knowing him to be a snake later on with advice even from Faustin, makes sense. Faustin, prior to being killed, had angered Petrovic who was at that point of time, the biggest Bratva (Russian Mafia/"Brotherhood") boss and Faustin went to war with him. With soo much carnage on Niko's hands being called to be dealt upon Petrovic by Faustin, it's only a matter of time that Petrovic would come for Niko's head also. Plus with Faustin being so emotionally unstable, more chaos will ensue and would definitely derail the entire Faustin operation and even cause a major war in Hove Beach which isn't good for business for either side. Also, Faustin ordered the assassination of Lenny Petrovic's son, Kenny thus it makes even more sense on why Petrovic wanted Faustin dead. For Niko at that time, Dmitri seems to be a more stable man and knows what's going on with everything, even being the vocal one who wants to broker peace between the Faustin Bratva and Petrovic's Bratva. With Faustin being as deranged as he is, it makes working with him a danger and you'll never know when he'll flip out and cause an unnecessary war or even attempt to kill you just for the smallest infraction. Dmitri told Niko that Petrovic would let Niko off for killing his son if he in turn took out Faustin who was the one that even ordered the multiple hits on Petrovic's business and for killing his son. That makes absolute sense as Niko definitely wanted his life and as a hired gun, he was clearly following his employer's orders and did what he did but the main fault still lies with Faustin so if killing Faustin can maintain the status quo with all Bratvas in Hove Beach plus getting off the hook from Petrovic? Even I would have done it let alone NIko. Plus, again, you have to remember that Niko at that point of time didn't know Dmitri would betray him and neither do we. All we know is what he said makes sense as he has been the one who always pushes for co-existence with the other Bratvas and having a loose cannon Faustin as a boss spells danger for the entire organization thus keeping Dmitri against Faustin was a better choice, even in Niko's mind.
Niko wasn't exactly powerful or had connections during working with Faustin so he had no choice. If it was end game Niko who has connections to Mafia like Pegorino, Mcreary, Gravelli and also when he got hired by Ul Paper IAA then he wouldn't worry about Petrovich since Petrovich would also know who Niko is and knows what he's capable of that he's like a trained professional mercenary/hitman
@@gaminginvestigators Pretty sure, he never loved Catalina. He was with her for money and he dated her for money. I’m sure if someone offered him more money, he would betrayed her.
I'm pretty sure it's just Niko, not Nikolai. Interestingly, his last name is pronounced and spelt wrong for where he is from (Serbia): Bellic should be Belić ("bell-itch").
I wish we had an Option of Choosing to Kill Faustin or Kill Dimitri Kill Faustin Story will play out as Normal Kill Dimitri he will not Harrass you throughout the Storyline Ending would be Deal but Mikhail Faustin working with Jimmy Pegorino deal would end up in Chaos due to a Pricing Dispute so Niko,Phil and a Russian Mobster will have to fight their way out they succeed and celebrate becoming rich New Antagonist would be The Ancelottis attacking the Wedding as Retaliation for Kidnapping Grace as Final Mission but Roman and Kate Survive
Player: "Why do we have to do this idiotic, ill-advised, avoidable task that will definitely make everything worse?" Game: "We came up with a cool set-piece, and it's necessary to continue our story!" It's definitely a pet-peeve of mine, and forcing the player to enact such mistakes is just salt on the wound. The fact that, arbitrarily, you can't just kill Kyle in Marriage Counseling *_purely_* so that Michael can Lethal Weapon 2 Natalia's house and make the plot happen is very annoying, but it's not my most hated GTA 5 mission, and it's not the most egregious case of it I've seen. There are games, though, where I've abandoned the whole game because it makes the player do stupid things and make everything worse. A certain Final Fantasy spinoff whose name I don't remember springs to mind, but one example more immediately relevant would be the opening missions of Vice City Stories. Sure, Vic is desperate, and Martinez applies some peer pressure, but... I *_hate_* how Vice City Stories opens. When going back to play the game for the first time since I was very young, I gave up on the game after the third mission. The game forces you to repeatedly fuck up irreconcilably and follows it up with a hearty "Congratulations, you fucked up!" It's just such a gut-punch, and that's not enjoyable-- at least to me.
Michael just proved to you guys don't be simps lmao Dude's wife cheated on him and he chased the guy that started the whole shi for the whole game, if he's wife was loyal she wouldn't have cheated in first place not the dude's fault, 50/50
GTA: TBoGT is noncanon for the same reasons GTA: TLatD is noncanon because they both contradict GTA 4 because GTA 4 revealed the Brocklyn-Manhattan Bridge, the TriBorough Bridge, the Alexander HamilTon Bridge, the George WashingTon Bridge, the Lincoln Tunnel, and the Holland Tunnel were closed because of terrorist false flags which left Niko, Johnny, and PlayBoy X stuck on the southeast sides of the Brocklyn-Manhattan Bridge, the TriBorough Bridge, the Alexander HamilTon Bridge, the George WashingTon Bridge, the Lincoln Tunnel, and the Holland Tunnel until the botched drug deal with the undercover narc and still stuck on the southeast sides of the George WashingTon Bridge, the Lincoln Tunnel, and the Holland Tunnel under Niko, Packie, and Derrick pulled the heist at the bank which makes much of GTA: TLatD impossible and the sequence of the timeline of GTA 4 and GTA: TLatD in conjunction makes the start of the timeline of GTA: TBoGT impossible and what happened to the gems at the exchange over Gracie Ancelotti in GTA 4 makes the end of GTA: TBoGT impossible.
@@xbobjob69x64 I mean the slightest irreconcilable contradiction makes the dlc noncanon just like it makes GTA: AdVance, GTA: LCS, and GTA: VCS noncanon
Tommy's decision to betray Sonny without having concrete proof of his betrayal is also a good mention - it endangered everyone Tommy cared for. Once you're a mobster and you don't even pay the boss any tribute, you're bound to recieve reprisal. Tommy isn't a fool, he's intelligent, and he should have known that. Also, Tommy clearly knew he was supposed to pay tribute and when he gave Sonny money, it was fake bills. Sonny would have caught onto that, possibly without Lance's betrayal, and Tommy's businesses would have been attacked with greater force. Niko killing Vlad may have been justified, but Faustin was angry over this because Vlad made him money, and had no qualms about using Roman as leverage, and even shot him. The trouble of killing Vlad wasn't worth it. Niko clearly had no idea how the mafia works. Niko began respecting Faustin because he feared him due to his unpredictable nature. If Faustin didn't care, Andrei wouldn't have intimdated Roman with an AK-47 and knocked Niko out. That may have been done on Dimitri's orders, but Mikhail seemed interested in knowing Niko's identity. Also, Johnny betraying Ray - Maybe that was somewhat understandable given the situation the club was after Brian's betrayal, but Johnny knew Ray's bosses had connections in Alderney, and in the end, Jim Fitzgerald, his best friend, was murdered. Trevor carelessly kidnapping Patricia - Trevor knows how cartels work, he mentions his association with Oscar who is a Cartel member, and knew how dangerous Martin is, but kidnapped his wife on an impulsive whim, endangering Michael, himself and possibly Ron and Franklin.
Hello, Just! Yeah, trying to screw Sonny over was definitely a high risk. Tommy was pretty lucky that Forellis were too patient about him getting the money and the drugs back. Moreover, we also think that Niko's decision to kill Vladimir Glebov wasn't really that bad. After all, the man was only a medium pawn on the chessboard. And while it is true that the murder became the first turning point in the storyline of the game, we were trying to concentrate on some major issues that the protagonists were dealing with because of their lack of seeing the bigger picture and possible consequences. The same thing can be said about The Lost gang betraying Ray Boccino. Hell, we would even say that it could end even more tragically if Ray decided to inform Jimmy Pegorino about this. Johnny Klebitz was literally playing with fire here... 🤦♂️ As for Trevor's weird-ass actions such as the one you mentioned, we all know that Trevor is a complete psycho and doesn't seem to control himself at times, going into a spontaneous streak of bad choices. So considering his mental state and despite the fact that Trevor is quite intelligent, we have a feeling that he would do this nonetheless sadly. :/
@@gaminginvestigators Speaking of consequence, Niko killing Vlad had major consequences in the long run - Niko became involved in Dimitri and Faustin’s friendship, got threatened, Roman was probably under greater stress than when he was in debt to Vlad and on top of that, Mikhail shot him. Vlad was a piece of trash, sure, but nonetheless he made the Faustin crime family money, and it resulted in reprisal. Niko was lucky that Mikhail disliked Vlad, but nonetheless this course of action had consequences. Sure Faustin was unpredictable, but I think to an extent, he wanted to punish Niko and intimidate him by hurting Roman. Even though I like Mikhail, the only line between him and Dimitri is that Mikhail is honest but extremely rash. Niko was clearly affected by this encounter, and began showing criminals much more respect as a result. I genuinely believe Niko was intimidated by Mikhail. Niko himself admits that he got Roman into this mess during “Roman’s sorrow”. Sure Roman started burrowing money from Vlad in the first place but Niko is the one who killed him. Was he justified? Perhaps. Was it worth it? Considering the shit the Bellic cousins went through, perhaps not.
here are some for other protagonists: claude: trusting king courtney even though it was obvious that he was allied with cataline tommy: going to aunt paulie's house even though it was obvious that she was an haitian mike: having sex with asuka even though he knew she was sadist tony: acting like he has no free will thruout the game victor: deciding to steal martinez's merchandise as a revenge even though it was obvious that martinez was too powerful for vic to handle the consequences johnny kleibitz: the way he tried to deal with trevor huang: (couldn't find any for him yet) franklin: destroying the mansion was his stupidity too trevor: trusting michael after all the time
Niko's mistake wasn't killing Faustin. His mistake was to trust Dmitri. But regardless of Dmitri’s intentions, killing Faustin made sense in Niko’s situation. We find out through working for Faustin and talking to his wife that he is a very violent, impulsive and paranoid person. Working for a person like Faustin won’t work in the long-run. For example he shot Andrei in the head because he didn’t like the way Andrei looked at him. Not only does Faustin order violent hits on rival organizations that are way too excessive. But he is also seen murdering his own people for no reason. Faustin might like Niko at the time, but that could completely change at any moment. Niko didn’t have any choice but to kill Faustin. And Niko must work for Faustin, since he killed Vlad. So the question we need to ask ourselves is, was killing Vlad really necessary? It makes more sense to say that killing Vlad was a mistake. Because by killing Vlad, Niko created a domino-effect that would end up forcing him to kill Faustin.
That's a really smart way to find an even better dilemma where the main character made a bad decision! We are really impressed by your way of deduction 🙂
Niko also had to kill Faustin to avoid being hunted down by Kenny Petrovic, who’s Son he previously killed under Faustin’s order.
Conveniently, this gave Dimitri a perfect reason to turn on Niko too with Bulgarin.
A part of Dimitri’s treacherous nature.
Honestly the best thing Niko could have done was skip town with roman
That was his mistake. Niko should've never trusted Dimitri. Well, Niko is not the only one to be blamed. We all got fooled by Dimitri. We didn't expect Dimitri to betray Niko and us like that.
@@sadmankhan9630 As I was saying, I don't believe that's entirely true. The reason Niko killed Faustin was not because Dmitri told him to. He didn't do it because he trusted Dmitri. He killed Faustin because it made sense in his situation. It was a type of "him or me" situation for Niko.
He knew that Faustin was out of control and working for him wouldn’t end well. Also according to Dmitri, Petrovic threatened to kill Niko if he didn't kill Faustin. Even if that would be a lie, it still made sense for Niko to act the way he did.
If Niko didn't kill Faustin, Petrovic would definitely want him dead and eventually Faustin would likely want him dead as well. Also if Niko didn't kill Faustin, Dmitri would have someone else do it.
It wasn't a mistake, because he didn’t really have any choice. Even if Niko knew that Dmitri was a traitor, killing Faustin was inevitable. If Faustin found out that even Dmitri betrayed him, how long would it take until he makes the conclusion that Niko was in on it or would betray him as well?
The diamond story is pretty wild, at the shootout the museum arguably costed 10x more in damages than what the diamonds were actually worth haha
CJ's cooperation with C.R.A.S.H. towards the end of the game knowing that Sweet is under Toreno's protection was even worse than the Big Smoke betrayal.
Crash would have sweet put in a Ballas section in prison and CJ falsely charged with officer Pendelbury’s murder if he didn’t
@@Flippa6601then tenpenny and Pulaski would come home to their wife and kids dead
@@roxasbaker They have no family
@@Flippa6601 Toreno has more authority though.
Amanda was the one responsible for the events of GTA V. If she didn't cheat on Michael, none of the events would've happened. Although the real mistake was Michael using his line from the prologue in the Vangelico heist because it attracted Trevor, just like how Dave predicted it would
Michael said "Trevor's dead. He's gotta be." when Dave mentioned Trevor.
@@MRohanAhmed627 He assumed Trevor was dead but Dave knew otherwise due to the letters at Bolingbroke to Brad
Amanda was not at all responsible. Think about it this way: why was she cheating on Michael? Because he was putting his family in danger with his criminal life and also neglecting Amanda by preferring to sit by the pool or watching Vinewood movies.
Straight facts right there 👌
@@TKnHappyNess yea, that's what I meant.
Victor Vance did a whole series of dumb decisions that could have been avoided. He deserves his own episode 🤣
I think you mean Lance Vance?
@@reihanharfi635 No... Lance is an idiot so we expect him to do stupid shit. 🤣
On the other hand, Victor did a lot of bad decisions with a good motive or so he thought. Of course, I'm referring to the plot of VCS.
@reihanharfi635 Lance and their mom caused the trouble. Vic was being an idiot for being loyal to his family. Which itself is a noble thing, but it would have been smarter for Vic to ditch them and let them handle their own problems. Though it would have probably meant that both Lance and their mom would be killed or arrested. Which would probably have been hard for him to live with.
We would be delighted if you could present some of these bad-decision moments to us! 😄
@@gaminginvestigators Vic's biggest mistake was believing in Lance, even after knowing him for being a guaranteed train wreck.
I think one of the biggest mistake is Johnny Klebitz getting back with Ashley, at the end of TLAD he cuts ties with her, but at the beginning of GTA V we see that they are back together and also using drugs which led to his death by Trevor
Another awesome example right there! It's really depressing seeing Johnny becoming such a weakling after hat happened in GTA The Lost and Damned 😦 He survived a lot but in the very end, he reached the bottom 😕
@@gaminginvestigators I think Johnny's biggest mistake is recklessness. First, he believed Billy about drugs whether it was stealing them from AoD or selling them to the triads. He didn't do anything that could help the Lost to prevent such actions. Second, Johnny's betrayal in the diamond deal which led to Jim Fitzgerald death and dissolution of Alderney chapter of the Lost
Well all protagonists were idiots because of women.
@@ЯнДаниленко-ь9мdon’t forget it’s the same as Vic Vance saying he don’t anything to do with drugs at the end of Vice city stories just to get back into that life immediately and die 2 years later at the start of Vice city
Michael bringing down Madrazo's property wasn't that stupid, what was stupid in fact is he saying his MO during the heist, there was literally no reason for him to do that
I never really got it
How did Tommy managed to work for both Haitians and Cubans (we do missions for both auntie Poulet and Umberto robina) without raising any suspicion?
Auntie Poulet brainwashed Tommy with drugs tbf
It's is not tommys fault he got that smell of auntie jujus
Most of those missions happpens to be done far from eyesight of the Cubans
@@AgentDanielCross
Mission #1: No Cubans are present in the entire mission.
Mission #2: Tommy is not visible because he is in a van, using remote controlled vehicles to kill the Cubans.
Mission #3: Tommy is standing on a rooftop far away from the action, and the Cubans are too busy focusing on the Haitians to look around.
@@Bauglir100 And for mission 3 you fail if they see you!
I think Micheal destroying the house in V was believable because he was venting years of pent up anger in that moment. I think that Micheal and Trevor have a little bit of each other in themselves and that was a "What would Trevor do?" moment!
Another terrible mistake was Toni trusting Vincenzo for a last time in the mission The Portland Chainaw Masquerade. Vincenzo calls Toni and speaks in a VERY sarcastic voice, tells him to meet him in a secluded ship at the docks...Toni trusts him. It's an ambush: Vincenzo and his henchmen were waiting for him not for business, but to murder him.
That's a very good example, bro! Bearing in mind that Vincenzo was a two-faced bastard to Toni from the very beginning, it was completely pointless to react to this. I mean, unless Toni Cipriani actually wanted to do this because he was willing to kill Vincenzo there. 😃
I'm surprised nobody talks about Johnny's decision to steal the $2m during the diamond deal
He was promised half of it ($1m) for all of his work in TLaD, which is a very nice payout. Instead he decided to be greedy and took the entire pot, which of course led to Jim getting killed and things falling apart after the end of TLaD.
McRearys instead.
You'd expect: Niko to make up an excuse to drive to the McRearys, or at least do his best to disguise his true intentions.
Instead: Niko tells Gracie in her face that he is kidnapping her as soon as she questions his "test drive" taking so long.
As a result: Gracie pulls out all the stops to crash the car in an attempt to escape, complicating the kidnapping. Niko struggles to keep control of the car for a while before he finally knocks out Gracie.
The question arises whether he would be able to make many excuses until she would realize that something is wrong. 😅
@@gaminginvestigators She demonstrated that she was attracted to him. He could've leaned into that and lured her to a motel somewhere away from the Ancelottis and discretely tell Packie where they are.
I think the stupidest moment happened in the mission 'Search and Delete' GTA IV. Niko went to Rivas and told him 'I got a message from Brucie for you' which alerted the guy and a hard car chase happened. It would be much more logical to simply kill Rivas there and then without say anything.
Also in San Andreas mission 'High Noon'. Why CJ didn't killed Tenpenny and Pulaski immediately? They met in a remote place nobody saw them.
These are some great examples, man! Especially the one with the mission "Search and Delete", this one sounds so ridiculous now that you mentioned it 😂 As for the second mission, the way we see it, CJ had an enormous amount of occasions to kill both Tenpenny and Pulaski 🤦♂️ It's really disappointing, especially when CJ is already working for Mike Toreno (but still... he didn't have the guarantee that Toreno will keep his word :/).
@@gaminginvestigators Also Tenpenny and Pulaski blackmail CJ about officer Pendelburry's death. Meanwhile CJ killed dozens of policeman in some missions(f.e 'reuniting the families')...I didn't even count freeroams, because that's not canon.
You forgot Claude also when he killed Yakuza crime boss Kenji Kasen, After that her sister thought it’s someone hired his sister Asuka Kasen thought. Also Salvatore Leone when he tried to kill claude by the car and there’s more
These are some great examples, man! Perhaps we will make a similar video on side characters making mistakes too, who knows 😉
Helping Big Smoke and OG Loc is surely a big mistake for CJ
Trusting Lance is for Tommy
CJ was blinded by his friendship with Big Smoke. The stupid part of the game was CJ working for CRASH even when blackmailed and the same goes for Niko Bellic working for Francis McReary and Frank ClinTon, Michael DeSanta, and Trevor Phillips working for Steve Haynes and Devon Westin.
a common mistake RockStar has been making in storywriting eversince 2004. I hope RockStar breaks free of this mistake in GTA 6.
He had to work with crash to get his brother and found the mom killer
He had to work for Toreno to get Sweet out of jail
@@miguelpasamano4995 lol I said the wrong thing…he worked with crash to find the death of his mom and make the player find out how Brian really got killed and I already know how Brian died
@@idcgetoffmypage as if CRASH ever intended to let him know who killed his mom or we ever found out how Brian really died? CRASH's word and Sweet's guilt tripping on the matter don't mean shit around here
When I’m in control over the main character every decision is a bad one.
real
Well since your name is Kate it doesn't surprise me.
In the start of San Andreas cj is told "the grove is all fucked up". he just thought things changed like he was told so I think that helped cloud his judgement. He wanted to make up for Brian for so long and that was his chance.
A 0 IQ moments video but for Yakuza series would be 4 hours long.
_”I’m an idiot. I move.”_ -Niko Bellic
Imagine if Vic Vance would work with Tommy Vercetti, it would run like clockwork
But then again, every GTA protagonist has a pair of brains
Vic Vance and Tommy Vercetti would be like Vito Scaletta and Joe Barbaro from Mafia 2.
Claude made a mistake for being the Leone’s errand boy. Could’ve costed his life
I feel like rockstar lacks a lot when it comes to the romance department, I don't know it feels always cheap.
Amanda the way she treated Micahel given he wasn't perfect either but by that time Michael was really trying to change things or, the way Mary capitalizes on Arthur's feelings for her to have him do things that he probably wouldn't do for anybody else. They were forgiven way too easily that's just my opinion though.
Well the first mistake was just made right by devs, Michel was angry at his life before and now he finds out his wife is cheating so that anger bursts out and hi goes not by his mind but by his emotions.
Sometimes when playing Grand Theft Auto IV you need to liberate a good mother from a bad marriage, to which I had no problem with all I ask from Rockstar Games at that point was to keep her alive.
5:55 why nikolai ? in Serbia Niko is short for Nikola not Nikolai .Nikolai is Russian or Ukrainian
All the wikis say Nikolai.
@@bowkatiewow interesting, in Serbia we use Niko for Nikola, and I never heard the name Nikolai here
Well, Tom Goldberg, the lawyer we were supposed to murder used the name "Nikolai" while referring to Niko so that's probably safe enough to say he is actually Nikolai 😅
@@gaminginvestigators I see now. Also, rockstar messed up and could have made Niko a little bit better (the words he speaks during the game in Serbian are not well said)
Years before the game even began, Trevor does his first score.
You'd Expect: Trevor to rob a place he never was in.
Instead: Trevor decides to rob someone he knew.
As a Result: The person recognized Trevor and Trevor did six months. He got out after four.
Several years before the game's storyline, Michael is in a gang consisting of him, Trevor Phillips, and their friend Brad. Because of concerns for his family, Michael decides that he wants out of being a criminal.
You'd Expect: That he would talk about this with his partners, and try to part with them on good terms, so that they'll leave him alone.
Instead: He goes behind both their backs and plans to have them either killed or arrested, while faking his death at the same time.
As a Result: Trevor survives, and when he finds out that Michael ditched him, he's furious about it for most of the game.
Michael comes home one day to find Amanda sleeping with her tennis coach, Kyle Chavis. He and Franklin chase the coach in Michael's gardener's truck and eventually find him standing on the balcony of a hillside mansion. Michael decides to get his revenge by tying a cable to the house's support beam and tear down the mansion.
True, these are also really good examples to talk about 😉 While we kinda understand Trevor's approach here (he is crazy after all), Michael's intentions were not properly thought-out and it shows that he was a real backstabber.
Or better yet if Micheal was angry he should've just wait till night when tennis coach comes out and jump on him with help of Franklin
I think in the mission On The Wrong Side Of The Tracks, I think Big Smoke was missing those gangstas from San Fierro on purpose.
Why do you think so though? 🤔
Nope, player’s weapon skill is low in the initial stages of the game and probably it was the same for Smoke as well
Good example is also in GTA III when Claude killed Kenji, Asuka's brother just because Donald Love told him to do it. Neither Kenji or Asuka did any wrong to Claude and I think it was pure luck that Asuka didn't find out that it was actually Claude that killed her brother. Claude didn't think about that one at all and in the end it didn't really bring him closer to finding Catalina.
I love that game but those missions felt like chores more than missions 😂
Being a Gta protagonist makes it a 0 iq moment(Mostly).
Almost nobody that played GTA SA the first time expected Big Smoke to betray you, even if CRASH was showing up at his place, because they were doing the same to CJ, so i dont see CJs mistake here helping one of his presumed best friends.
Niko did not have a choice about killing Faustin. Dimitri made him think if he killed Faustin he would not be put on the Ancelotti hit list.
You just blindly explored some actions without thinking too much about it.
Ummm, sorry but when exactly did Tenpenny show up at CJ's or rather Johnson's House? 🤔 We can't recall any situation involving CRASH being at Johnson's house :/ Moving on, we know perfectly well that it might be hard to notice that Big Smoke is a traitor, we were also younger and when we tried this game for the first time, we didn't suspect anything 😉 However, this doesn't mean that CJ couldn't see it. We mentioned many sus moments that are clearly suggesting that something is wrong here and that's all 😄
And what do the Ancelottis have to do with Mikhail Faustin? 😃 This doesn't make any sense :/ We will decide not to comment on the last sentence you wrote based on how you know the storyline of those games 😅
@@gaminginvestigators
They were not really showing up to CJ's house, but everybody knew CJ was involved with them. After the mission Tagging up the Turf, CJ tells Sweet "CRASH took all my paper" and also when they show up at Ryder's and Big Smoke's house, Smoke and Ryder were aware that CJ knew who CRASH were, meaning all CJ's friends knew he was involved with them somehow, and CJ had the same thought that they were harrassing his friends.
And about Niko, forgive me but i don't know why i wrote Ancelotti when i meant to write Petrovic. Niko was ordered by Faustin to kill the son (Lenny) of the leader (Kenny) because he thought he was a rat, and later also blew up their garage with an explosive truck. Kenny wanted war for this and Mikhail and Niko dead, but Dimitri convinced them that Niko was a hired gun and as long as he were the one to kill Faustin, he would be spared. You even included it in the video yourselves 5:18 and somehow forgot about it staying with your opinion that Niko wasn't forced to kill him but rather a bad decision. What other choice was there?
In the final mission, “The Exchange”, Claude arrives to the Columbian Cartel mansion to deliver the ransom money to Catalina with a cartel member standing behind Claude with a gun to his head. After Catalina takes the money, she tells Claude that she isn’t to be trusted and instructs her goons to kill him (who is at point blank range and unarmed.)
You’d Expect: The mook to immediately shoot Claude.
Instead: The mook takes an absurd amount of time to shoot Claude who then sucker-punches and kills him.
on the other hand you would wonder why claude gives that money at all and catalina can't be trusted speaks volumes I think? and for our 2nd main character. Tommy Vercetti is a low level mook sent to Vice City in order to negotiate a major drug deal with a cartel. As expected, a rival cartel ambushes the deal, resulting in both the drugs and the money being stolen in the chaos. This makes Sonny Forelli - Tommy's boss - extremely angry, and he spends the rest of the game getting angrier and angrier at the main character for not being able to get the money back. During this time, Tommy starts to make connections of his own and starts to make his own little empire in Vice City, coming into contact with a substantial chunk of change and enough drugs to make the original deal look like chump change.
You'd Expect: That Tommy would at one point tell his boss that he'll fully pay him back for everything lost in the initial ambush, since even a quarter of the way through the game, he has enough money to do this, and then offer a rendezvous to give the money. Even if he didn't have all the money, he could at the very least persuade one of his many powerful friends to help him out in this situation just to get the mob boss off his back and maybe even have some of the mob boss' assets to help him out once things cool down.
Instead: Tommy seems very nonchalant during all of this. Every time Sonny demands money, Tommy either says nothing to help his situation, or just says he'll "figure out a way" to pay him back. He literally does absolutely nothing to help out the situation.
As A Result: Near the end of the game, Sonny sends hitmen to extract the money from Tommy's friends, and after those are dispatched, the boss openly declares war on Tommy. This results in the final mission where most of Tommy's friends (actually, just Lance) abandon him, leaving him to fight off the entire force by himself. let's face it he's a goddamn 1 man army that's why he survived the first ambush and they totally deserve it his boss was a jerk in the beginning before they game. Sonny isn't helping himself, either. He's basically launching a drug deal with the Vance Gang without the consent of the other Liberty City mafia families. He is primarily motivated by self-serving financial gain, while simultaneously aiming for the hope that the situation will resolve itself in a "better to ask forgiveness than seek permission" manner when the anti-drug heads of the mob see the profits he is raking in. Who do you think he would send in to handle this sensitive operation?
You'd Expect: Him to send in one of his trusted friends or allies, someone who he knows he can trust to get the job done and remain loyal, mitigating circumstances or not.
Instead: He sends in Tommy Vercetti, a man whom he personally tried to assassinate. He not only survived that, but killed his assassins, proving that he is a man who is very difficult to kill. In addition to that, he received no help from the Mob while in prison and gained no love for them in the meanwhile. When the inevitable happens and Tommy ends up backstabbing Sonny, Sonny sends down the men seen with him in the intro to destroy a growing criminal enterprise (by which point he finally decides to do so, Tommy has gained enough influence to own half the city). Unsurprisingly, they fail. Even when he has the luck of having one of Tommy's top lieutenants turn traitor, he still can't beat Tommy, and pays for the mistake of giving the task to him with his life. Speaking of idiot, Lance also has plenty of moments of this as well. Take "Death Row" for example.
You'd expect: Lance to listen to Tommy when the latter tells him he will handle Diaz.
Instead: Lance, being the impulsive moron he is, decides to jump the gun and take out Diaz on his own without foreseeing the consequences he's facing.
As a result: Lance is captured by Diaz's guards and kidnapped in the junkyard, foiling Tommy's meticulous planning and forcing Tommy to risk saving Lance's
The mission "Bar Brawl" has a local bar refusing to pay protection.
You'd expect: Lance to get up off his ass and actually help Tommy take care of the job.
Instead: He continues sitting on his ass drinking and not even budging a single inch away from his chair.
As a result: Tommy rightfully chastises him for his indolence and decides to handle the job himself. This leads to....
.....the subsequent phone call at the end of the mission.
You'd expect: Lance to simply own up to his screw-ups and promising to do better in the future.
Instead: He calls Tommy to complain about how he treats him, completely ignoring the fact that it was him being lazy and impulsive that caused Tommy to berate him. While Tommy did give Lance a Backhanded Apology during that moment, did Lance really deserve a genuine one for his own screw-ups?
And it gets worse: Because Lance didn't like getting shouted at and was upset at being Tommy's second in-command while being delusional enough to believe he deserved more, he betrays Tommy out of spite and even gleefully attempted to kill Tommy as well. Lance was practically asking to get gunned down. and now my favorite main character cj i can understand that cj doesn't suspect his 2 childhood friends but he could have expected the last mission before crash even though it was clear that big smoke mission wasn't. GSF helps and of course He moves out of Grove Street to buy a house in Idlewood (Ballas turf, no less) with some money he claims came from his aunt. It's most likely drug money, and the move showcases his lack of loyalty.
There's also the car chase shootout. Granted it's played for comedy, but he doesn't lift a finger to help the others as they're fighting a rival gang.
It's very possible that Smoke ordered so much food to lengthen the window of time that the Grove Family was out of the hood, as the Ballas car was going to attack the hood.
Hernandez reports Tenpenny and Pulaski's wrong doings off-screen. The next thing you see is the former hitting him with a shovel for it.
You'd Expect: Since Tenpenny and Pulaski had no intention of letting either CJ or Hernandez get out alive, they would just shoot them, and bury the completely dead bodies themselves.
Instead: Tenpenny leaves Pulaski to do the job, who takes more joy in forcing CJ to dig his own grave than ensuring Henandez would be out cold long enough for CJ to dig the grave, letting Hernandez take him by surprise, and allowing CJ to go after him as well.
so cj only survived that mission for 2 reasons 1 reason is Tenpenny chose not to shoot him when he had the chance and 2nd Hernandez woke up on time 1 minute later and he would have been there done for. and now for tony In the mission "The Made Man", you have to drive Mickey and another character who's expecting to become a "Made Man" at a ceremony in Harwood. However, it turns out you're bringing that person there to be killed by Mickey for being untrustworthy enough. Afterwards, you have to bring Mickey home.
You'd Expect: To use the car crusher (which you park right next to for the "ceremony") to destroy the car along with any evidence of the man being murdered, and then commandeer another vehicle (like the Trashmaster which tends to spawn next to said car crusher) to drive Mickey home without arousing any suspicion of criminal activity.
Instead: You have to drive Mickey home in the car with the dead body still inside it, even though this could draw unwanted attention from the police (who will chase after you if they catch you driving around in the car), and then later dump the car in the river where anyone with access to a boat could potentially find it and the man's dead body. And since the car in question is a Leone Sentinel, this would directly link the man's murder to the Leones.
and now for the sane main character vic. And his bro. Near the end of the first half of the storyline, Lance informs Vic of the big shipment.
You'd expect: Lance to actually read the information of the shipment clearly to be sure who really owns the coke he wants to steal from the owner.
Instead: He automatically assumes that Martinez is the one who owns the coke, and he and Vic steal the coke stored in two trucks by the dock by driving the vehicles containing the shipment to the other side of the island.
In addition, you'd also expect: Vic, being the older, more responsible brother, to ask if Lance was sure if Martinez was the one who owned the coke.
Instead: He practically thinks about Revenge Before Reason and rapidly agrees with Lance to perform the theft.
As a result: Vic later discovers that the coke belongs to the Mendez brothers, who will kill anyone involved in the deal, including Martinez, putting the Vance brothers into deeper crap.
You'd also expect: Since the Vance brothers need to pay off the Mendez brothers' debts, Lance would actually make sure the coke is stash safely inside his apartment and not take a single sample of it by any means.
Instead: Lance decides to use up all the coke himself, and even put Louise on it as well.
BONUS POINTS: When Lance is finally confronted by Vic about this, he decides to give away the coke, practically risking the brothers' lives to a couple of drug lords. There's another good reason for the gamers to despise Lance with a burning passion.
ok
That's quite a huge list of other possible bad choices! 😮 We will try to comment on each of these situations 😅
When it comes to "The Exchange" mission, you pointed out that one of the Colombians was too slow to shoot Claude. And well, we don't really know whether it was as slow as the cutscene shows. Bear in mind that a pretty similar trick is being used in several movies or video games. And the reason behind using slow motion is usually to make someone aware of the main character's quick reaction to a particular danger. And that's at least how we feel about this moment in the game. 😉
Moving on to Tommy Vercetti, we presume that you are talking about Sonny making a bad decision by sending Tommy to Vice City and staying rather passive when Vercetti was having a debt to settle with the Forellis. That's entirely true, Sonny was too confident about what was going on and that's why he lost in the end. I think we show it perfectly in one of the episodes regarding Sonny.
Speaking of Lance Vance and his stupid decision, that is to take Ricardo Diaz all by himself, we will definitely say that Tommy shouldn't have rescued Lance in "Death Row". Why do we think so? Because Lance was quite useless all along. He wasn't really that helpful while dealing with Ricardo Diaz (he gave Tommy M4, but we are pretty sure that he would be able to withstand without this weapon). We are not even going to mention how bad he was while the empire was established since you already said few words about this 🙂
When it comes to Big Smoke, ummm, we know that there are some people who think that Smoke's famous order was going to buy some time for the Ballas to make a hit on Grove Street. We were thinking the same at first, but then we realized that this whole order isn't just about Big Smoke. He was ordering food for all people in the car, not just himself.
The next thing concerns the "High Noon" mission. And you are totally correct here, Tenpenny made a wrong choice by letting Pulaski take care of things. Again, being too confident led to unexpected results.
In terms of the mission "Made Man" in GTA Liberty City Stories, that is another great example of how some side characters are a bit braindead. Instead of taking care of the corpse by throwing the car into the crusher, the duo decides to drive across town, risking that the police might suspect something.
The same applies to the situation that you brought up in GTA Vice City Stories. Lance Vance being Lance Vance, to put it mildly. And of course, Victor was really keen on getting some revenge on Sergeant Martinez and that's what blinded his thinking.
To sum up, you have made some great points about side characters' bad decisions, and huge chapeau bas to you, bro! 🙂
@@gaminginvestigators thanks you am just a huge fan
Probably common knowledge by now, but Big Smoke's license plate was A2TMK, or A Two-Timing Motherf***er
I'll have a number nine, a number nine large, a number six with extra sauce, a number seven, two number forty-fives, one wit' cheese, and a large soda.
Niko had no choice in betraying Faustin, Petrovich would have put a price on his head too for killing his son if he didn't, Dimitri was clear on that, Niko had to be the one to kill Faustin in order to be spared by Petrovich. If he stayed loyal to Faustin Petrovich would have probably went after Faustin's entire organization and Niko too and eventually Niko would have been in a similar situation as he was with Dimitri if not worse.
You do have a valid point regarding Petrovic, we gotta admit that. However, did he really not have any choice? He was only a tool of the given command, Faustin was the one that asked Niko to do this. Moreover, how can we be sure that Dimitri wasn't lying about this? We don't have a guarantee that Petrovic made a such deal with Dimitri really 🤔
@@gaminginvestigators
There is indeed a chance, it was a lie. But seeing as Petrovic did not come after Niko after Faustin’s death, it might not be either.
Beyond the gameplay itself, Niko alone is factually powerless against a whole crime organization/gang. This was evidenced by him being on the run from Bulgarin.
Hence, whether or not it was a lie, in his shoes, there wasn’t another choice of out fear of retribution from Petrovic.
Niko wasn't exactly powerful or had connections during working with Faustin so he had no choice. If it was end game Niko who has connections to Mafia like Pegorino, Mcreary, Gravelli and also when he got hired by Ul Paper IAA then he wouldn't worry about Petrovich
Pulling the house down was a homage to the same action taken by Riggs in Lethal Weapon 2 after the South African ambassador and his goons killed a woman Riggs had just spent the night with and tried to kill him and was responsible for the death of his wife years before. They also had Leo who was the groups money launderer which turned informant to the LAPD and was kidnapped and was the unwilling subject to some advanced interrogation techniques in a home on stilts just like the house in GTA 5. Riggs uses a winch on the front of his truck to pull on the supports.
Yeah, that's a great movie reference for sure! The Lethal Weapon series is absolutely great, by the way 😄
Vic Vance need a video of his own in this category. He knew Lance is doing stupid things but everytime, he agrees with Lance. Loyal to family is a noble thing but he is a bit stupid to not avoid doing the stupid things
I think one of the most stupid decisions of a GTA protagonist was when Niko killed lawyer Tom Goldberg, he literally applied for the job interview to get close to him using his actual name and when he arrived at the interview he buzzed the intercom and again used his actual name...
Another great video as always.
We are pleased to hear that, man!
There are plenty more negative IQ a lot of people do in real life. GTA protagonists are geniuses compared to average people.
Niko Bellic should've talked to Mikhail Faustin about what Dimitri Rascalov said Kenny Petrovic said and let Mikhail Faustin sort things out.
This seems like a very good idea! That is because Niko could potentially avoid the backlash from Dimitri Rascalov when Faustin would decide to get rid of him. However, though, we are afraid that this wouldn't be enough to take care of Ray Bulgarin who was coming to Liberty City. But still, staying loyal could be a fine solution to make sure that Dimitri won't be a problem in the future. 🤔
Ray could've been the main antagonist like he should've been instead of Dimitri
Claude has worst decision to mute himself.
Floyd is house-sitting for his girlfriend Debra when all of a sudden, out of the blue, his cousin Wade shows up with Trevor, who wastes no time in kicking the door in, making himself at home, ordering Floyd around as if he owns the place, and threatening bodily harm on him.
You'd Expect: That Floyd would do something about the uninvited maniac who's trespassing and squatting in his home. Like call the police at his next and safest opportunity (like in a hotel room he checks into to hide from Trevor).
Instead: He does nothing. Trevor continues to abuse him, makes a mess of the apartment, and even forces Floyd to help him rob his place of employment. Floyd eventually snaps after seeing Debra get upset at the whole situation and he pulls a knife on Trevor, but Trevor kills him and her off screen, and all we know about the specifics is that there's a ton of blood on the windows and on Trevor afterwards.
do you think it's crazy that i stop feeling sorry for floyd?
Ending B. Franklin chases the Final Boss Michael up a ladder to the top of a tower. Obviously, Franklin has to put his gun away so he can grip the ladder with both hands while climbing.
You'd Expect: For Franklin to immediately pull out his gun after reaching the top before continuing.
Instead: He moves forward unarmed, and is predictably caught defenseless by the Final Boss and left completely at his mercy.
You'd Then Expect: For the Final Boss to put aside any lingering sentiments of friendship and shoot him immediately.
Instead: The Final Boss takes a moment to rant at Franklin, allowing him to outflank him, disarm him, and throw him off the tower to his death.
That's why I'm glad that end c canon is all confirmed in gta online.
That's also a good way to show a possible bad decision made by a side character 😉 However, we don't know the entire story of this conflict between Floyd and Debra, but we have a weird feeling that the man might be actually having some mental problems. We are not sure whether it comes from a trauma in the past, but we are pretty sure that The Professional managed to analyze this thread extensively 🙂
@@gaminginvestigators that's why i'm also a fan of your channel and the proffesional you guys take good comments well
I guess we're done asking for the old narrator,I guess we've accepted him personally I like the new one
7:38
Hubson: *Shows Wrong Side of the Tracks* In addition, some missions are very enjoyable for us.
Yeah, tell that to the people who lost count on how many times they got yelled at by Big Smoke in that mission.
is it realy that hard? i have never failed that one but i have nearly died of boredom because its just a long pointless mission.
Dimitri was a manipulator. Niko thought he had to. Niko was under a guise where he thought he had to.
And at the same time, Niko Bellic had really no guarantee that Petrovic won't be looking for him anymore 😁 That's one of the reasons we feel that betraying Faustin was a bit pointless 😃
What is the name of the song used at the beginning of the video, for GTA 5 it's amanda's fault but hey if he hadn't had these errors there would have been no adventure
Still don’t know why Franklin and Lamar would trust stretch if he made backdoor deals with the Ballas in prison yet the hood knew
The thumbnail 🤣😆👍.
I want to know the music name , the one in the Beginning
Niko killing the innocent charitable lawyer who was offering jobs and was a genuinely good person for Francis, and killing the poor old fragile prisoner luring him making him trust him for Derrick are unforgivable. Niko at the end did anything for money, and McCreary were a scumbag family, if he were a saint as some people try to make him out to be, he would never associate with them, after killing Faustin which was a stupid mistake he could have started fresh clean work for good money, like helping Manny uncover crimes. But he chose to stick with crime even tho he claimed he regretted being a former human trafficker. Real hypocrisy, Darko asking him how much he charges to kill told it all. Even if you spare Darko you kill countless others as Niko, some even the innocents!
Unfortunately, killing innocent people is an integral part of every GTA game :/ We as players are acting a bit like Mike Toreno said about his agency. We are trying to kill bad guys, but sometimes we have to let good people die. And well, we are trying to be a good guy in the bad guys' game and sadly, most of the time it doesn't work. Still, we believe that the majority of the GTA protagonists were actually doing more "good" in the end. It was taken by violence, but the main characters are simply good at it, and that's their way to "save their world" 🙂
@@gaminginvestigators True GTA is a game based on crime, thats why the title Grand Theft Auto exists in the first place. We play as criminals here not as cops.
Yeah. The moment where Darko asks Niko in answer from killing good friend for $1000 “How much do you charge to kill someone?” describes Niko perfectly. He did a lot of bad things, he killed a lot of people for money, not only gangsters, scumbags or other criminals but good people like a lawyer Tom Goldberg, or the moment with kidnapping Gracie Ancelotti, yes, the daughter of the Mafia Boss, yes, the not so pleasant, but spoiled and annoying girl, but not a violent criminal and murdering psychopath, I mean it’s a normal reaction. She was kidnapped and tortured for what? For these cursed diamonds and father’s business in which she doesn’t to get involved. He dealt with many people who were much worse than her and was cold blooded, but with Gracie he showed to her all hatred and contempt not only with hitting her, but with slapping her. He really looked at her with such a huge anger, that he was ready not only to kill, but to tear apart and dismember her just because for being born as a daughter of a Mafia Boss. It’s not surprise that he didn’t get a stinking cent after exchanging Gracie for these diamonds, it’s a karma.
It clearly shows Niko’s hypocrisy: he blames everyone and the whole world in injustice, everyone are so awful while he falls down every time. No matter what he wants, he goes with the way of violence and murders and in the end he loses one of his really closed one. It’s a karma.
@@Spartak2811 when the old prisoner Derrick asked to kill was begging to spare him but Niko still didn't I nearly cried, was young in 2008. Derrick was a wasted drunken junkie that did no good and Niko should never have worked for him.
And yet that's just one of the many hypocritical moments.
I guess they want to be that way to progress the story each of the game.
Also another stupid moment in TBoGT, Luis could sell himself with Henrique and Armando the Heroin or just by himself.
CJ is a hothead, no mafia experience like Tommy, no high-level heist experience like Michael and Trevor (that's where Franklin got lucky) or anything else. All he did trough his life was either be a gangbanger, or a low life crook (in LC). All he ever knew about was street loyalty and the strength of the gang. Smoke meddling with CRASH was't that suspicious for CJ because he knew they were a pain ind the ass. They also arrived in Ryders home in the catalyst mission, so it wasn't easy to suspect Smoke. CJ only managed to open his eyes when he left Los Santos, realised the truth, and with the help of Kendl see that the world is bigger than the hood (unlike Sweet).
The part where I saw CJs actions irrational were the OG Loc missions mostly. The rest was either for the gang, or for his business empire that grew constantly after moving to San Fierro.
True about OG Loc, but Loc was his friend, and somewhat connected to the game, so he probably thought that if he refused, he'll be labeled as a Busta.
So you're simply saying that CJ didn't notice those hints of Big Smoke's being a potential traitor because of CJ's lack of experience? 🤔
@@gaminginvestigators honestly, I won't put a large blame on CJ for not telling Sweet of Smoke's actions because Sweet often scolded and treated him bad. Big Smoke and Kendl are the only persons who warmly welcomed him, and Smoke is the one who often comforted and cheered him up. Would Sweet even believe CJ if he tells him that something is wrong with Smoke? Afaik, he often berated CJ about their mom and Brian's deaths and often scolded him for being a "busta" until the late part of the LS story arc.
I wonder if faustin woudve helped niko avenge roman if he was still alive
What do you mean by "avenging Roman"? 😅 We assume that you are talking about the situation where Niko doesn't betray Mikhail Faustin. Well, we have a wild guess that Dimitri Rascalov would be pretty much screwed, but we are not certain about Faustin helping Niko with Bulgarin though. We would rather say Faustin would wash his hands from this mess and not try to become the Bulgarin's enemy. 🤔
I hope that there is a part 2
That's possible, we gotta tell you. 😄 It all depends on our schedule really and if we manage to get more such cases to discuss, so stay tuned!
Why did CJ help Tenpenny after he met Toreno? He had no reason to do it, since Toreno promised CJ, that he will proctect Sweet in prison, so he had no reason to help Tenpenny to delete more evidence for him.
If CJ didn't help Tenpenny Tenpenny would try to kill CJ and Sweet.
Well, the problem is that CJ didn't have the guarantee that Toreno will keep his word 🙂 That's primarily why he had to obey Tenpenny even though he was working for Mike Toreno already. :/
Later on, Michael is taking part in a jewelry store robbery.
You'd Expect: Him not to do or say anything to give away his identity during the job, if he doesn't want any attention from the cops/underworld as a result of it.
Instead: He gives his catchphrase to a cop trying to get them to move their illegally parked bikes.
As A Result: Trevor, watching that very cop recount Michael using the catchphrase and recognizing Michael's use of the same phrase during the fateful robbery in North Yankton nine years ago, realizes Michael is still alive. Trevor then barges his way back into Michael's life, bringing with him a great deal of trouble. The FIB, or at least Dave Norton, also finds out about Michael's involvement in the robbery almost immediately and use this as leverage to rope Michael into doing dirty work for them.
Devin Weston employs Franklin, Trevor and Lamar to steal five cars for him. The men put in a lot of time and effort to acquire them.
You'd Expect: Devin, a billionaire who can easily buy his way out of anything, to just pay them for services rendered.
Instead: Devin "places their money in a investment fund" and refuses to pay them.
As A Result: This destroys his relationship with Trevor and Franklin. He also tries to disrupt Michael's movie Meltdown, which leads to Michael turning against him.
Devin Weston is understandably pissed that Michael's latest exploits had gotten his assistant, Molly, a terminal case of plane turbine and deprived him of a lot of money. He calls Michael and the former offers an apology, and in response, Devin sends his private army to Michael's home to kill his family and gloats about it right in his face, prompting Michael to go Papa Wolf on them all.
You'd Expect: For Devin to realize just who he had managed to piss off and evacuate the country ASAP.
Instead: He sticks around, enters Franklin's home and tells the man to go kill Michael for him, despite screwing him over in the past.
As A Result: Devin's life hinges entirely on whether a dumpy 50-something white collar crook can successfully intimidate a 20-something One-Man Army who has reason to be angry at him personally. In ending C, Michael and Franklin kill Devin instead. Honestly, this guy was Too Dumb to Live embodied.
Yes, the situations that you described are another case of the characters being completely careless. We can't really add anything more to that 😁
@@gaminginvestigators you would expect the antagonist a rich prick like devin weston to be smarter don't you?
When Devin went to Franklin's house demanding that Michael be killed, I was doing that J. Jonah Jameson laugh.
You gained a new subscriber , my friend...
What's the name of the intro song in the beginning of the video
toni cipriani imo became the worst protagonist when he just completely ignored his best friend JD's murder. He didnt take any revenge nor did he try to stop the murder which happened right infront of his eyes. Not only that but he even helped the murderer escape.
JD wasn't his friend. Besides JD was killed because he was a rat. He worked first for the Leone family and later for an other family only to work for the Leone family again. Salvatore was right to order JDs death.
@@sennescholten7278 you know, even if I hate Salvatore he did the right thing ordering to kill JD. Being not only a pervert and a pedophile for whom you should not feel sorry, a manager of the brothel where this old man had a “special fun” with his young girls behind Maria’s back, JD snitched the Sindacco Family, selling their secrets to the Leone Family. And the Leone Family just used him as a mole and an informant person. After winning the Red Light District in the war with the Sindacco Family JD was no longer needed. No matter with whom you are and what purpose you’re seeking, but traitors are hated by everyone, even by those whom they served. It’s easy as 2 and 2.
JD’s assassination was inspired by the murder of Paulie Gatto from The Godfather, a soldier of the Corleone Family who betrayed his Boss and the Family selling the secrets to Virgil “The Turk” Solozzo.
Umm, we wouldn't take it as a mistake really. Toni Cipriani knew about the rules inside the mafia. Rats are not useful to any criminal organization. At the very least, they might be hired as associates, but they will never be family members because of the huge risk that the man will rat someone out again. :/
Love your videos
Thanks a lot, bro!
in the mission drive tru for sweet ryder cj and sweet try and talk about the green sabre but smoke keeps `changing the subject
Yeah, that's another example of foreshadowing Big Smoke's betrayal. Yet CJ didn't suspect anything 🤦♂️
Regarding CJ and Big Smoke, I'd agree that CRASH constantly being at his house was suspicious and about how BS's missions not benefitting the gang were red flags but I'd say it's reasonable for CJ to not suspect BS due to them being friends (with hindsight, and a few other bits of foreshadowing in the form of BS's proverbs, it's easy to say trusting him was a mistake though). While they either lack consequences for CJ or ultimately benefit him I'd say breaking into Area 69 and stealing the green goo from the train and stealing Mad Dogg's rhyme book and murdering his manager were dumber decisions on CJ's part due to the risks involved.
At the start of gta3 Claude can shot Catalina and also in missions "cutting the grass" and in "grand theft earo"
It was out of pure rage for micheal since he caught his wife cheating on him with her tennis coach and the tennis coach decided to run to madrazos house instead of his own
I just want to know in mission toreno's last flight we killed toreno then how the hell he is still alive in the later story?
Gta 5 story will be boring if michael never destroy the house
When I first played GTA4 I choose deal just because it was closer no knowing the consciences of either one
Do you think that you made the right decision? 😁
Of course not
About Niko, despite Faustin being terrible on his wife and such but he sees Niko a trustworthy person since in the beginning.
But it still doesn't make any sense that why did Niko agreed to kill Mikhail to favor Rascalov only turns out that he only used him to take over Faustin's business, plus Niko moved LC to have a new different life when he was in Europe he could have just reject Rascalov's favor like "It's your problem between you and Faustin, I'm here for the money" and warned Faustin that Rascalov wants him to get rid of him.
You are correct, it doesn't make any sense for Niko to turn his back on Faustin. There wasn't any legit reason for it 🙂
Faustin would've wanted proof.
What about making videos on 2d universe? I guess won't be too bad
Not enough storyline or lore to make videos about
@@mauricehamilton4025GTA 1 has lore. GTA 2 doesn't tho.
@@ArcadeMarx so what's the lore? It seems pretty straight forward to me
We are not ruling out the possibility of making videos regarding the 2D universe in the future. However, it might be hard to create an interesting video similar to the ones we already made right now because of the lack of any bigger lore in these particular installments. :/
I wouldn't say killing Faustin was a mistake as at that point of time, it was totally need and Dmitri's words, despite knowing him to be a snake later on with advice even from Faustin, makes sense.
Faustin, prior to being killed, had angered Petrovic who was at that point of time, the biggest Bratva (Russian Mafia/"Brotherhood") boss and Faustin went to war with him. With soo much carnage on Niko's hands being called to be dealt upon Petrovic by Faustin, it's only a matter of time that Petrovic would come for Niko's head also. Plus with Faustin being so emotionally unstable, more chaos will ensue and would definitely derail the entire Faustin operation and even cause a major war in Hove Beach which isn't good for business for either side.
Also, Faustin ordered the assassination of Lenny Petrovic's son, Kenny thus it makes even more sense on why Petrovic wanted Faustin dead.
For Niko at that time, Dmitri seems to be a more stable man and knows what's going on with everything, even being the vocal one who wants to broker peace between the Faustin Bratva and Petrovic's Bratva. With Faustin being as deranged as he is, it makes working with him a danger and you'll never know when he'll flip out and cause an unnecessary war or even attempt to kill you just for the smallest infraction.
Dmitri told Niko that Petrovic would let Niko off for killing his son if he in turn took out Faustin who was the one that even ordered the multiple hits on Petrovic's business and for killing his son. That makes absolute sense as Niko definitely wanted his life and as a hired gun, he was clearly following his employer's orders and did what he did but the main fault still lies with Faustin so if killing Faustin can maintain the status quo with all Bratvas in Hove Beach plus getting off the hook from Petrovic? Even I would have done it let alone NIko.
Plus, again, you have to remember that Niko at that point of time didn't know Dmitri would betray him and neither do we. All we know is what he said makes sense as he has been the one who always pushes for co-existence with the other Bratvas and having a loose cannon Faustin as a boss spells danger for the entire organization thus keeping Dmitri against Faustin was a better choice, even in Niko's mind.
Niko wasn't exactly powerful or had connections during working with Faustin so he had no choice. If it was end game Niko who has connections to Mafia like Pegorino, Mcreary, Gravelli and also when he got hired by Ul Paper IAA then he wouldn't worry about Petrovich since Petrovich would also know who Niko is and knows what he's capable of that he's like a trained professional mercenary/hitman
bro forgot about merriweather heist
Claude had Catalina as a girlfriend
Great point! We can't even imagine how bad things turned out when Claude decided to work with Catalina...
@@gaminginvestigators
Pretty sure, he never loved Catalina. He was with her for money and he dated her for money. I’m sure if someone offered him more money, he would betrayed her.
I'm pretty sure it's just Niko, not Nikolai. Interestingly, his last name is pronounced and spelt wrong for where he is from (Serbia): Bellic should be Belić ("bell-itch").
I wish we had an Option of Choosing to Kill Faustin or Kill Dimitri
Kill Faustin Story will play out as Normal
Kill Dimitri he will not Harrass you throughout the Storyline
Ending would be Deal but Mikhail Faustin working with Jimmy Pegorino deal would end up in Chaos due to a Pricing Dispute so Niko,Phil and a Russian Mobster will have to fight their way out they succeed and celebrate becoming rich
New Antagonist would be The Ancelottis attacking the Wedding as Retaliation for Kidnapping Grace as Final Mission but Roman and Kate Survive
Bro the old story narrator was good
The channel is run by two friends as said in the channel description
So maybe that's why
OK so HD protagonists are dumber than 3D protagonists. I can agree with that.
Yeah, in some cases 😁
Player: "Why do we have to do this idiotic, ill-advised, avoidable task that will definitely make everything worse?"
Game: "We came up with a cool set-piece, and it's necessary to continue our story!"
It's definitely a pet-peeve of mine, and forcing the player to enact such mistakes is just salt on the wound.
The fact that, arbitrarily, you can't just kill Kyle in Marriage Counseling *_purely_* so that Michael can Lethal Weapon 2 Natalia's house and make the plot happen is very annoying, but it's not my most hated GTA 5 mission, and it's not the most egregious case of it I've seen.
There are games, though, where I've abandoned the whole game because it makes the player do stupid things and make everything worse. A certain Final Fantasy spinoff whose name I don't remember springs to mind, but one example more immediately relevant would be the opening missions of Vice City Stories.
Sure, Vic is desperate, and Martinez applies some peer pressure, but... I *_hate_* how Vice City Stories opens. When going back to play the game for the first time since I was very young, I gave up on the game after the third mission. The game forces you to repeatedly fuck up irreconcilably and follows it up with a hearty "Congratulations, you fucked up!" It's just such a gut-punch, and that's not enjoyable-- at least to me.
Nice video 👍
Thanks a million, my man!
If Patricia is Madrazos spouse. Who’s the girl in the Vinevood hillside home?
Natalia Zverovna
Madrazzo's mistress
That voice is stock AF
Bro that some janky ass looking gta 4, looks like a mobile port
is nobody going to talk about how horrible the gta 4 clips look, especially the gameplay?
Niko wasn't even that stupid bud was more like under a lot of stress I would also be cuz I wouldn't want to be killed by a mob boss
Michael just proved to you guys don't be simps lmao Dude's wife cheated on him and he chased the guy that started the whole shi for the whole game, if he's wife was loyal she wouldn't have cheated in first place not the dude's fault, 50/50
It was his daughter not his mistress... right?
GTA: TBoGT is noncanon for the same reasons GTA: TLatD is noncanon because they both contradict GTA 4 because GTA 4 revealed the Brocklyn-Manhattan Bridge, the TriBorough Bridge, the Alexander HamilTon Bridge, the George WashingTon Bridge, the Lincoln Tunnel, and the Holland Tunnel were closed because of terrorist false flags which left Niko, Johnny, and PlayBoy X stuck on the southeast sides of the Brocklyn-Manhattan Bridge, the TriBorough Bridge, the Alexander HamilTon Bridge, the George WashingTon Bridge, the Lincoln Tunnel, and the Holland Tunnel until the botched drug deal with the undercover narc and still stuck on the southeast sides of the George WashingTon Bridge, the Lincoln Tunnel, and the Holland Tunnel under Niko, Packie, and Derrick pulled the heist at the bank which makes much of GTA: TLatD impossible and the sequence of the timeline of GTA 4 and GTA: TLatD in conjunction makes the start of the timeline of GTA: TBoGT impossible and what happened to the gems at the exchange over Gracie Ancelotti in GTA 4 makes the end of GTA: TBoGT impossible.
there’s gonna be some slight contradictions but that doesn’t make the DLCs noncanon lol
the contractions are irreconcilable which does indeed make the dlc noncanon
@@miguelpasamano4995 i mean the contradictions can just be summed up with it just being gameplay shit or developer oversight
@@xbobjob69x64 I mean the slightest irreconcilable contradiction makes the dlc noncanon just like it makes GTA: AdVance, GTA: LCS, and GTA: VCS noncanon
Tommy's decision to betray Sonny without having concrete proof of his betrayal is also a good mention - it endangered everyone Tommy cared for. Once you're a mobster and you don't even pay the boss any tribute, you're bound to recieve reprisal. Tommy isn't a fool, he's intelligent, and he should have known that. Also, Tommy clearly knew he was supposed to pay tribute and when he gave Sonny money, it was fake bills. Sonny would have caught onto that, possibly without Lance's betrayal, and Tommy's businesses would have been attacked with greater force. Niko killing Vlad may have been justified, but Faustin was angry over this because Vlad made him money, and had no qualms about using Roman as leverage, and even shot him. The trouble of killing Vlad wasn't worth it. Niko clearly had no idea how the mafia works. Niko began respecting Faustin because he feared him due to his unpredictable nature. If Faustin didn't care, Andrei wouldn't have intimdated Roman with an AK-47 and knocked Niko out. That may have been done on Dimitri's orders, but Mikhail seemed interested in knowing Niko's identity. Also, Johnny betraying Ray - Maybe that was somewhat understandable given the situation the club was after Brian's betrayal, but Johnny knew Ray's bosses had connections in Alderney, and in the end, Jim Fitzgerald, his best friend, was murdered. Trevor carelessly kidnapping Patricia - Trevor knows how cartels work, he mentions his association with Oscar who is a Cartel member, and knew how dangerous Martin is, but kidnapped his wife on an impulsive whim, endangering Michael, himself and possibly Ron and Franklin.
Hello, Just! Yeah, trying to screw Sonny over was definitely a high risk. Tommy was pretty lucky that Forellis were too patient about him getting the money and the drugs back. Moreover, we also think that Niko's decision to kill Vladimir Glebov wasn't really that bad. After all, the man was only a medium pawn on the chessboard. And while it is true that the murder became the first turning point in the storyline of the game, we were trying to concentrate on some major issues that the protagonists were dealing with because of their lack of seeing the bigger picture and possible consequences. The same thing can be said about The Lost gang betraying Ray Boccino. Hell, we would even say that it could end even more tragically if Ray decided to inform Jimmy Pegorino about this. Johnny Klebitz was literally playing with fire here... 🤦♂️ As for Trevor's weird-ass actions such as the one you mentioned, we all know that Trevor is a complete psycho and doesn't seem to control himself at times, going into a spontaneous streak of bad choices. So considering his mental state and despite the fact that Trevor is quite intelligent, we have a feeling that he would do this nonetheless sadly. :/
@@gaminginvestigators Speaking of consequence, Niko killing Vlad had major consequences in the long run - Niko became involved in Dimitri and Faustin’s friendship, got threatened, Roman was probably under greater stress than when he was in debt to Vlad and on top of that, Mikhail shot him. Vlad was a piece of trash, sure, but nonetheless he made the Faustin crime family money, and it resulted in reprisal. Niko was lucky that Mikhail disliked Vlad, but nonetheless this course of action had consequences. Sure Faustin was unpredictable, but I think to an extent, he wanted to punish Niko and intimidate him by hurting Roman. Even though I like Mikhail, the only line between him and Dimitri is that Mikhail is honest but extremely rash. Niko was clearly affected by this encounter, and began showing criminals much more respect as a result. I genuinely believe Niko was intimidated by Mikhail. Niko himself admits that he got Roman into this mess during “Roman’s sorrow”. Sure Roman started burrowing money from Vlad in the first place but Niko is the one who killed him. Was he justified? Perhaps. Was it worth it? Considering the shit the Bellic cousins went through, perhaps not.
Bro some one stole and repost this video they didn't give any credit his username is Mr Führer.
here are some for other protagonists:
claude: trusting king courtney even though it was obvious that he was allied with cataline
tommy: going to aunt paulie's house even though it was obvious that she was an haitian
mike: having sex with asuka even though he knew she was sadist
tony: acting like he has no free will thruout the game
victor: deciding to steal martinez's merchandise as a revenge even though it was obvious that martinez was too powerful for vic to handle the consequences
johnny kleibitz: the way he tried to deal with trevor
huang: (couldn't find any for him yet)
franklin: destroying the mansion was his stupidity too
trevor: trusting michael after all the time
Pretty cool list of possible bad choices, my man! Although we feel that some of them might be a bit too far-fetched to suit in this list 😅
Second one i disagree
Third one i disagree
First one i disagree
We are looking forward to hearing the story behind why you disagree 😉
Ayy sup
(I am second)
The shitty part of the tennis coach one is that after the Mission the place is just fine again 😒
whats the song at the beginning of the video?