Gear Club - True Racing vs Mafia III
Gear Club - True Racing
Gear Club - True Racing brings the ultimate racing experience in realistically detailed environments and the fastest most exotic cars in the world.The game features stunning visuals and intricate detailing that makes the gameplay all the more fun. You get to collect a variety of the fastest cars and tweak their performances in your personal Performance Shop. Gear Club - True Racing brings the most competitive events and challenges in which you get to race against your friends and foes in a huge variety of beautifully detailed race tracks. With realistic game physics, the players get to experience the true adrenaline rush on their smartphones.
If you are a fan of racing simulation games, Gear Club - True Racing is the perfect pick for you. With its stunning details and a huge variety of competitive races, you will never get bored.
Mafia III
Mafia III is the long-awaited second sequel to the popular mafia-themed action-shooter game, Mafia. Set in the 1968 after the Vietnam War, the game casts you into the role of Lincoln Clay, a Vietnam veteran who had his entire surrogate family, the black mob, wiped out by the Italian Mafia. Vowing revenge for your family, you'll need to build a new mafia from the ground up and bring the fight to the Italian mob. It is either you or them and there is no in-between.Similar to the previous, the game has the same brilliant gun fights, hand-to-hand melee combat as well as heart-pounding car chases with cops and rival mobs alike. You can even choose how you approach a mission the way you like due to the open world nature of the virtual city you'll be roaming around in. Of course, being the leader of a mafia, you will also need to make some hard decisions when deciding who to promote and who to let go as "a necessary casualty". One thing for sure, you'll do whatever it takes to avenge your brothers.
Despite some bugs and glitches, Mafia III is still a great sequel that fans of the series will most certainly enjoy. It still retains its deep gritty feel and the plot, although somewhat cliche (see: Saints Row), is good enough to keep the game going.