GTA Online

For seven years now, GTA Online has been with us and one of the most awaited changes was for Rockstar to add a new area on the map of Los Santos. Finally, it was accomplished in the latest Reaching Cayo Perico update, which proposes a Caribbean island with its own set of missions as a new territory to explore. So why did the creator feel it was the right time for this to be done?

When he asked Tarek Hamad (Rockstar North) about this topic, he told  that it was the logical step: "It was difficult to do content in terms of resources and development challenges, but the question that motivated us to do it is that we had a lot of content and stories to tell." We thought that the next step in the process we had pursued up until now was to design a new area. By this, he simply means that a lot of changes have been published, but none of that nature and at this size.


It has been a difficult content to do in terms of resources and development challenges Tarek Hamad From Rockstar, in fact, they consider Hitting Cayo Perico as the biggest update in the history of GTA Online: “It has its own population and vehicles, and the way of infiltrating you is more open than what we had seen in previous coups. “In particular, you can choose to be more direct or more stealthy, and even find secrets that make things easier for you. Apparently, everything points to a content with many hours, although about this the developers could not answer us: “It is difficult to determine how long you need to see all the content, since every time you enter the island, the objectives change and generally nothing is in the same place “.


In addition to being extremely replayable, this content also has the specificity of being able to be played in groups of four players or in individual groups (for the first time in a GTA Online heist). At this point, Hamad told  they did so because it was demanded by the people. Nevertheless, do not expect previous shots to have this option: "I'm not really sure that it is possible to play previous shots individually, for simple technical reasons."