![]() ![]() Now, 17 years after the original Hot Coffee code made such a stir (pardon the pun), data miners have discovered the code’s back in Grand Theft Auto: The Trilogy – The Definitive Edition-though apparently unplayable. ![]() Rockstar’s parent company, Take-Two, doled out $20 million in fines in 2009. Eventually Rockstar removed the code, but the damage-at least legal damage-had been done. While gamers couldn’t play it at first, subsequent mods gave them access, and many wasted no time in triggering it. In other words, gamers liked GTA: The Trilogy – The Definitive Edition as much as Plugged In liked The Wolf of Wall Street.īut hidden in all that glitchy code is code of another kind: the code for Hot Coffee.įor those who’ve not heard of Hot Coffee, it’s the name of a hidden, sexually-explicit minigame originally found in 2004’s Grand Theft Auto IV. On Metacritic, which ranks games on a 1-10 scale, “fans” of GTA have given this version a rating of 0.5. GTA: The Trilogy has been raked over the coals for being glitchy and in some cases borderline unplayable. At 60 bucks a pop, Rockstar may be committing a form of grand larceny itself.īut perhaps more problematic is what the game gives, not what Rockstar gets. And fans suggest that the franchise’s name-at least the first two words of it-are pretty fitting. Game publisher Rockstar recently rolled out Grand Theft Auto: The Trilogy – The Definitive Edition. ![]()
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