Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 2004 game Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas features the Jefferson Towers (also named as Sculpture Park) in the city of Los Santos, based on the Watts Towers. The 2005 street racing game LA Rush features the Watts Towers. The 2008 street racing game Midnight Club: Los Angeles features the Watts Towers.
Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas is a 2004 action-adventure game developed by Rockstar North and published by Rockstar Games.It is the fifth main game in the Grand Theft Auto series, following 2002's Grand Theft Auto: Vice City, and the seventh entry overall.
The following lists articles related to the computer and video game Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas. Pages in category "Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total.
The city was also mentioned in Grand Theft Auto: Vice City and Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, and was the setting of a mission in the latter. A third version of Liberty City was featured in Grand Theft Auto IV , its expansion packs The Lost and Damned and The Ballad of Gay Tony (all three set in 2008), and the handheld game Grand Theft Auto ...
The motels and their imitators have been parodied many times. Rockstar's 2004 Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas game contains a Tee Pee Motel. In the 2006 Pixar film Cars, one of the characters Sally Carrera runs a "newly refurbished" neon-lit motel that is clearly inspired by Wigwam Village #6.
- Runners-up: Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, Half-Life 2, and Vampire: The Masquerade - Bloodlines Flashing back to 1964, "Metal Gear Solid 3" centers around Big Boss, then known as "Naked Snake."
Grand Theft Auto is an action-adventure video game developed by DMA Design and published by BMG Interactive. It is the first title of the Grand Theft Auto series and was released in November 1997 for MS-DOS and Windows, in December 1997 for the PlayStation and in October 1999 for the Game Boy Color. The game's narrative follows a criminal who ...
Mount Diablo is a mountain of the Diablo Range, in Contra Costa County of the eastern San Francisco Bay Area in Northern California. It is south of Clayton and northeast of Danville. It is an isolated upthrust peak of 3,849 feet (1,173 meters), visible from most of the San Francisco Bay Area.