The Godfather- The Game ⟶
The map of 1940s New York is split into five distinct crime families and dozens of storefronts—from flower shops and bakeries to gun stores and illegal gambling dens. To take over a rival’s turf, you don’t just shoot everyone. You walk into a shop, grab the owner by the collar, and smash his head against the counter until he pays you protection.
In the history of licensed video games, the ratio of failures to successes is staggering. For every GoldenEye 007 , there are a dozen disastrous movie tie-ins rushed to shelves. So, when Electronic Arts announced in 2004 that it was adapting arguably the greatest film ever made—Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather —fans held their breath. Skepticism was high. Could a medium built on action and chaos truly capture the slow-burn tension of a Shakespearean mafia tragedy? The Godfather- The Game
The Godfather: The Game is the rare licensed product that understands its homework. It knows that The Godfather isn’t about the bullets—it’s about the power behind the bullets. It’s a game that lets you make an offer no one can refuse, even if the graphics are a little dated. Go to the mattresses. You’ll enjoy your stay in Little Italy. The map of 1940s New York is split