Classic GTA titlesOld-school GTA experiencesTimeless GTA classics
Classic GTA titlesOld-school GTA experiencesTimeless GTA classics
I bought three and San Andrea because they were discounted yesterday, and the reviews were good. But when I didn’t refresh the Steam cart, I paid full price today—about twenty-four dollars, so I overspent around ten bucks. I’m mainly using keyboard and mouse; I move around with up and down arrows, but I need another hand for direction. Driving is tough with LRUpDwn arrows, yet I can’t control the mouse vision well. Is this game better suited for a console controller?
I've used 3 on the original Xbox and it functions equally well on PC. San Andrea has mainly played with the controller. By the way, I might have another copy available; Humble Bundle recently included them in a bundle. It seems to be a regular occurrence.
The mouse should turn the camera for you in the game, if it isnt then you probably are experiencing a bug. You can fix it by spamming esc to go in and out of the menu but I would use a windowed mode d3d9.dll you can get it on this page: https://www.speedrun.com/gtasa/thread/ar4sg There is also a downgrade tool which you may be interested in. https://www.speedrun.com/gtasa/resources Btw movement is WASD the arrow keys while they do move walking CJ they have different controls in vehicles (most notably airplanes). WASD to move F to interact mouse to move camera right click to manual aim and left click to shoot thats about it. Oh and tab to answer calls but the game constantly reminds you of that.
I almost made the purchase too, but I’m unsure of the price. I’ve been playing 3 and enjoy PC gaming. GTAV works on PlayStation, though many kids avoid it due to its violent content. I discovered that using WASD or arrow keys is possible, but I’ll need two hands—keyboard for one, mouse for the other—to move smoothly. It will take some time to get comfortable. How long does it usually take to finish these games?
No, that's not the point. The focus is on understanding the situation and making informed decisions, not on testing safety risks.