GTA Trilogy: Definitive Edition coming to iPhone via Netflix just in time for Christmas



Games don’t come more popular than the Grand Theft Auto series — and Netflix has just snapped up three of them for its blossoming gaming service, just in time for the holidays, bringing them to iPhone.

Grand Theft Auto: The Trilogy — The Definitive Edition, will be available to Netflix subscribers from December 14 on iOS and Android devices, via the Netflix mobile app, as well as through Apple App Store and Google Play listings.

The package pulls together the first three iconic 3D Grand Theft Auto games — GTA III, Vice City, and San Andreas — in new mobile ports of the remastered versions of the games that relaunched in November 2021.

Though the ports themselves were widely derided  (I wasn’t a big fan upon release), the core of those games remain stone-cold classics, creating the blueprint for all open-world games that followed in their wake.

Netflix has slowly been building up its games service as a no-extra-fee value add to its TV and movie streaming service. Though reports suggest few of its subscribers are taking it up on the offer of free games, household names like GTA will likely fuel a surge in interest — provided the ports are good, that is. With GTA’s cinematic leanings, a Netflix partnership is a solid one.

Netflix takes on Apple Arcade

The Netflix gaming library is a small one, but an incredibly well-curated one. As well as the incoming GTA games, this year it’s adding top-tier titles like Football Manager 2024, Hades, Kentucky Route Zero, Death’s Door, Immortality, and more to its roster. It’s a quality over quantity approach, and for no added cost over a regular Netflix subscription, superb value.

It positions itself head to head now with Apple’s own Apple Arcade subscription service, putting a massive library of titles in the hands of iPhone, Mac, iPad, and Apple TV gamers. But Apple’s approach seems to differ from Netflix’s, instead focussing on what many would consider casual (albeit addictive) mobile games. Puzzlers, gem matchers, word games, and the like.

Apple’s high-end gaming approach instead seems to be to court AAA developers to its mobile and Mac platforms in a holistic way, as it pushes the gaming appeal of its devices further. The recently released mobile port of Capcom’s Resident Evil: Village impressed, and is to be followed up before the end of the year with Resident Evil 4 Remake, while Hideo Kojima’s Death Stranding and Ubisoft’s Assassin’s Creed Mirage are set to land on iPhone 15 Pro next year.

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Games don’t come more popular than the Grand Theft Auto series — and Netflix has just snapped up three of them for its blossoming gaming service, just in time for the holidays, bringing them to iPhone.

Grand Theft Auto: The Trilogy — The Definitive Edition, will be available to Netflix subscribers from December 14 on iOS and Android devices, via the Netflix mobile app, as well as through Apple App Store and Google Play listings.

The package pulls together the first three iconic 3D Grand Theft Auto games — GTA III, Vice City, and San Andreas — in new mobile ports of the remastered versions of the games that relaunched in November 2021.

Though the ports themselves were widely derided  (I wasn’t a big fan upon release), the core of those games remain stone-cold classics, creating the blueprint for all open-world games that followed in their wake.

Netflix has slowly been building up its games service as a no-extra-fee value add to its TV and movie streaming service. Though reports suggest few of its subscribers are taking it up on the offer of free games, household names like GTA will likely fuel a surge in interest — provided the ports are good, that is. With GTA’s cinematic leanings, a Netflix partnership is a solid one.

Netflix takes on Apple Arcade

The Netflix gaming library is a small one, but an incredibly well-curated one. As well as the incoming GTA games, this year it’s adding top-tier titles like Football Manager 2024, Hades, Kentucky Route Zero, Death’s Door, Immortality, and more to its roster. It’s a quality over quantity approach, and for no added cost over a regular Netflix subscription, superb value.

It positions itself head to head now with Apple’s own Apple Arcade subscription service, putting a massive library of titles in the hands of iPhone, Mac, iPad, and Apple TV gamers. But Apple’s approach seems to differ from Netflix’s, instead focussing on what many would consider casual (albeit addictive) mobile games. Puzzlers, gem matchers, word games, and the like.

Apple’s high-end gaming approach instead seems to be to court AAA developers to its mobile and Mac platforms in a holistic way, as it pushes the gaming appeal of its devices further. The recently released mobile port of Capcom’s Resident Evil: Village impressed, and is to be followed up before the end of the year with Resident Evil 4 Remake, while Hideo Kojima’s Death Stranding and Ubisoft’s Assassin’s Creed Mirage are set to land on iPhone 15 Pro next year.

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