Header Ads Widget

Responsive Advertisement

GTA 5's Michael Actor Tells Angry Fans To Trust the Process

While sharing a celebratory post about Grand Theft Auto V's eighth-year anniversary, Michael actor Ned Luke told fans who are disappointed in Rockstar Games' output to simply "trust the process." Eight years ago today, Rockstar and publisher Take-Two Interactive released GTA V on PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 consoles, approximately five years after GTA IV's April 2008 launch.

Grand Theft Auto has yet to receive a new entry to the dismay of many a fan. And hopes for single-player DLC à la GTA IV's The Ballad of Gay Tony dissipated long ago, due in large part to Rockstar's focus on support for GTA Online. Rumors, speculation, and alleged leaks haven't taken a break, though, with purported information about a sixth mainline Grand Theft Auto entry making the rounds every so often. Unsurprisingly, fans are getting antsy, itching for any crumb of news about a hopeful new chapter; even the GTA V's actors have taken notice.

Related: AI Program Makes GTA 5, Mass Effect, & More Game Characters Look Real

Michael actor Ned Luke shared a special post on Twitter to commemorate the eight-year anniversary of GTA V's original release on PS3 and Xbox 360. "Happy GTAV Day for some... not so happy for others," Luke's tweet began. The actor also shouted out his co-stars Shawn Fonteno (Franklin) and Steven Ogg (Trevor), before ending the post with a hashtag reading, "#TrustTheProcess." Seemingly, this is Luke telling GTA fans to be patient with Rockstar Games. See the full tweet linked below:

Trust the process sounds like a wise phrase in this regards. Yes, the wait seems unending, but Rockstar's quality over quantity output in the last decade or so worked wonders for the single-player content it has delivered. Red Dead Redemption 2's award-winning narrative servers as proof positive of this notion.

Some Grand Theft Auto fans appear to have recently hit their breaking point, evidenced in the poor reception of GTA V's PS5 trailer during PlayStation Showcase. The video counts among the most disliked trailers on PlayStation's official YouTube channel, with many insisting that the minimal graphical improvements means the eight-year-old title does not warrant yet another re-release.

Next: GTA 5's PS5 Trailer Is One of PlayStation's Most Disliked Videos Ever

Grand Theft Auto V is available to play now on PC, PS4, and Xbox One; it migrates to PS5 and Xbox Series X|S on an unspecified date in March 2022.

Source: Ned Luke/Twitter



from ScreenRant - Feed https://ift.tt/3CsHUgV

Post a Comment

0 Comments