![]() ![]() In the other modes, these crew members all have to be unlocked with money earned on previous jobs, but in Urban Legends, each job has a specific set of characters to choose from. Unlike Left 4 Dead’s lean arcade-like roster, Rockay City has players picking their character from a sizable rogues’ gallery of royalty-free goons, henchmen, crooks, ne’er-do-wells, rogues, and so on. Up to four players can play cooperatively, with bots available to pick up the slack. Much like Left 4 Dead, these six “mini-campaigns” consist of several unique missions interspersed with cutscenes to tell a loose story. The mode I previewed, Urban Legends, is the happy medium of the two. Those earn you quick cash to unlock new crew members, gear, or contracts. There’s also Crime Time, which consists of quick heists that can be played alone or cooperatively. There’s Baker’s Battle, the single-player campaign where players take control of Michael Madsen’s character Travis Baker and help him become the titular crime boss of the eponymous Rockay City. The obvious comparison to make is to Payday, the co-op bank heist series, but my time with it felt more like Left 4 Dead. Crime Boss is fundamentally a first-person shooter, but it aspires to be an ‘organized crime game,’ meaning stealth, strategy, and careful preparation will likely yield more favorable results than going in guns blazing.
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