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A Game Designed To Address Real World

With the whole world on lockdown, all visits to historical wonders, cultural sites, and exciting cities are pretty much on hold for the moment – or are they? While you might not be able to actually do much physical traveling during quarantine, there is a way that you can discover some of the world's most remarkable culture from the comfort of your couch. How? By exploring real-world locations in video games! So limber up your thumbs and equip that drink-holder hat – corona lockdown is about to get pwned!

Videogames have always been a good source of escapism from the real world. But in times when all everyone wants to do is go outside and explore the real world, they offer an unlikely source of solace now too. Recent years have seen giant leaps of immersion and graphical detail in the medium. So much so, that these days you can get a legitimate fix of wanderlust from the gorgeously rendered real-world locations in today's video games.

It's a pretty cool way to prime yourself for the inevitable travel and sightseeing binge that we'll all be on when restrictions are lifted. In the meantime, here are some of the best video games with real-world locations and cultural wonders that you can explore right now

Explore Antiquity in Assassin's Creed

Right off the bat, it's probably worth acknowledging that there's one game series that stands out in terms of digitally rendering the look and feel of the ancient world, and giving the player entire cities to run around and explore.Assassin's Creedis not without its flaws, but when it comes to exploring ancient cultural treasures, few do it better.

Assassin's Creed features many real-world locations through the epic video game series.
Assassin's Creed is one of the best game series to explore real-world locations
Credit: Ubisoft

This epic time-hopping saga sees you step into the boots of a nimble, ninja-like assassin, who likes to parkour over rooftops and dispatch foes with a nifty little wrist blade. Other hobbies include jumping from the top of world-famous monuments into conveniently placed haystacks with an impressive degree of accuracy and undeniable suave.

Assassin jumps from the top of a tower into a haystack.
Credit: Ubisoft

Florence in the machine

The real star of theAssassin's Creed games are not the swashbuckling heroes or convoluted time-traveling plot lines, but the immersive, meticulously detailed historical locations that you can run, leap, and shank your way around with happy abandon.

An assassin perches on a rooftop in the real-world location of Florence.
Credit: Ubisoft

Want to climb to the top of il Duomo in Florence, or wander into the Tuscan countryside, and row a gondola through Venetian canals? Assassin's Creed 2can make that all happen. Set in a stunningly realized version of Renaissance-era Italy, this is the game for anyone who's ever dreamed of befriending Leonardo da Vinci, fist-fighting an evil pope, and being a patron of the arts back in the Renaissance.

Assassin draws his sword and makes three minstrels in the real-world location of Venice drop their mandolins.
Credit: Ubisoft

Daje Roma!

Picking up at the exact (confusing-as-hell) point thatAssassin's Creed 2 leaves off,Assassin's Creed Brotherhood takes the adventure to the Eternal City. Meaning you can now free-run around the Roman Forum, parachute through the open roof of the Pantheon, and scuttle up the outside of the Colosseum, and it's as fun as it sounds.

Character approaches the  Colosseum in the real-world video game location of Rome, in Assassin's Creed Brotherhood.
Parkour your way though real-world locations like you never could irl
Credit: Ubisoft

As with Florence and Venice before it, the level of detail in each and every monument in Rome is astonishingly realized, and visiting these cultural sites will be even more spectacular after you've performed death-defying leaps and acts of valor in and around them.

Another real-world location in video games is found in Assassin's Creed Syndicate, which is set in London.
Credit: Ubisoft

TheAssassin's Creed series has since traveled all over the world, taking you to Constantinople, the feverish streets of Paris during the French revolution, and the smoggy bustle of Victorian London. It's also been to Ancient Egypt, and more recently Ancient Greece, in the critically acclaimedAssassin's Creed Odyssey, where you can hop around the Acropolis – back when it was a lot less crumbly.

The latest Assassin's Creed Video game has the the real-world location of ancient Greece.
Credit: Ubisoft

The best part is you can pick up a lot of these games on the cheap these days, and like the many monuments and ancient cultural sites depicted within them, they stand up just as well today. Sorry, Acropolis.

Hunt for Cultural Treasures in Uncharted

Another globetrotting game series that lets you explore the ancient world isUncharted. These games favor a more linear-level design over the expansive, open worlds ofAssassin's Creed. They're also set in the present day, so you'll be exploring real-world locations as they look now, rather than how they looked back in their glory days.

Uncharted is set in the real-world location of the Amazon Rainforest.
Credit: Naughty Dog

Most of the firstUncharted game is set in the Amazon rainforest, which, it turns out, is littered with ancient temples and ruins, who knew? The game series travels all over the world, from the mountains of Tibet and the deserts of Syria, to the dense jungles of Borneo. There's even an entire mission set in a faithful recreation of Istanbul's Topkapı Palace Museum, with plenty of puzzles to solve and waves of hapless henchmen to mow down along the way.

This mission in Uncharted 2 is based on the world location of the Topkapi Palace Museum.
Credit: Naughty Dog

Not designing a sprawling open-world game meant that the developers at Naughty Dog (ofCrash Bandicootfame) were able to focus on putting even more detail into the huge temples, ancient ruins, deserts, mountains, and jungles ofUncharted –and it shows. These are some of the best-looking console games out there, with gorgeous set pieces that are as cinematic as any summer blockbuster movie.

Nathan Drake shows his fresh moves.
Credit: Naughty Dog

Feel Old by Playing Tomb Raider

If jumping around ancient temple ruins and Raiding Tombs sounds awfully familiar, that's because Lara Croft has been doing it since 1996. But the gun-toting face of Lucozade has come a long way since the blocky days of her original outing, which (brace yourself) is now older thanSpace Invaders was when the first Tomb Raider game was released.

Lara Croft jumping from a ledge in one of the many real-world locations featured in Tomb Raider video games.
Ever wanted to see real-world locations in exactly 15 pixels?
Credit: Eidos/Square Enix

It's a cool throwback to see her scramble around the grainy, pixelated versions of Angkor Wat or St. Paul's Cathedral that the PS1 could just about render. But, for a proper dose of scenic sightseeing to offset those lockdown blues, her latest work is where you want to invest your time.

Lara Croft draws her bow and arrow.
"Mention Uncharted one more time, I double-dare you."

Credit: Square Enix

Now, you might be thinking that given the decades worth ofTomb Raider games, the newest installment would see a geriatric Lara Croft shuffle around on a walking frame. But the world will have to wait forTomb Raider: Rise of the Hip Replacement, as the latest crop of games go back in time to tell Lara's origin story. So she remains the spry, dead-eyed survivalist we know and love.

From frenzied firefights in the harsh wilderness of Siberia to taking an invigorating dunk in the warm, turquoise waters of a Mexican Cenote, Lara's wild years as chronicled inRise of the Tomb RaiderandShadow of the Tomb Raider are a blast to play through – until you can take a swim in those Cenotes yourself.

Swing around New York City in Spider-Man

There are only so many tombs you can raid and so much wilderness you can hobble across while being shot at before you start to miss the comforts of city living. Also, how many times you can fall to your demise before you wish you had some kind of… wall-crawling, web-slinging superpowers? Well, if your spidey sense is tingling for a Big Apple city break in a red-and-blue spandex jumpsuit, we have some very good news for you.

Spider-man swings through the real-world location of Manhattan.
Credit:  Insomniac Games/Sony Interactive Entertainment
Spider-man does a backflip off a building.
Credit: Insomniac Games/Sony Interactive Entertainment

If you gave Assassin's Creed performance-enhancing drugs and a skin-tight leotard, you'd get 2018'sSpider-Man. This game lets you swing around a meticulously detailed map of Manhattan as everyone's favorite friendly-neighborhood hero. Like in the comics and movies, you'll engage in all manner of acrobatic combat with bad guys and supervillains. You'll zip around a huge, open sandbox with your webs, while fighting crime 10 goons at a time, unlocking new abilities and gadgets, plus spidey suits along the way.

Spider-man apprehends some criminals from a moving car.
Credit: Insomniac Games/Sony Interactive Entertainment

You can really take parkour to new levels inSpider-Man, as you cartwheel through stairwells and the construction works of Manhattan's highrises. Gracefully pirouette as you change directions to pursue a gang of terrified criminals from above. With great power comes great responsibility to lasso a fire hydrant out of the ground in mid-air, swing it around your head, and slap it across the cranium of a fleeing thug. Who says video games aren't art?

Spider-man dishes out a tender right hook to the face of a helpless goon.
Credit: Insomniac Games/Sony Interactive Entertainment

Every skyscraper and building in the city is run-uppable andjump-offable, and this game is the best way to gaze across the New York skyline from the top of world-famous landmarks like the Empire State Building, or One World Observatory until they're open for business again.

Grand Theft Awesome

Grand Theft Auto V is set in Los Santos, a fictional version of the real-world location of Los Angeles.
Credit: Rockstar Games

Speaking of crime, it'd be a crime not to mention some of the best games with real-world locations out there: crime games! Without condoning or going into some of the more sinister activities you can get up to in many of these games, they are among some of the most detailed and impressive renderings of real-world locations in video games. And you don'thave to live a life of crime in these games, you can also play the tourist, drive around minding your own business, and simply soak in the sights.

Stunt bike is hit by fighter jet in mid-air.
Real-world locations without a real-world amount of damage taken
Credit: Rockstar Games

Of course, the godfather of these sandbox-style hijack-em-ups is the Grand theft Auto (GTA) series. The latest in this controversial series sees you roam around a fictional version of LA, and is extremely fun to explore – even in upstanding-citizen mode. The names of landmarks and neighborhoods might be slightly different from their real-world counterparts, but Rockstar Games did an incredible job of capturing the soul of Los Angeles in this gigantic alternative version of the city.

The skyline of Los Santos, as seen in GTA V, based on the real-world city of L.A.
Credit: Rockstar Games

GTA has become so popular that it has spawned a litany of copycat games that let you run, gun, and drive around open-world cities, with many of them being based on real-life locations. It's a formula that works and has pretty much become a subgenre of gaming in its own right. Even pigeons are getting in on the action.

A pigeon hijacks a car and drives away.
Credit: Rockstar Games

Want to explore the zany neon streets of Tokyo? Pick yourself up a copy of Yakuza 0. Hoping to cruise down Lake Shore Drive in a faithful recreation of the Windy City? Roam around Chicago inWatch Dogs. New Orleans gets the open-world game treatment in Mafia 3while Sleeping Dogs takes you into the criminal underworld of Hong Kong. The list goes on and on.


Exploring real-world locations (and fictionalized versions of them) in video games isn't the only way to get a high score of cultural enrichment during the lockdown. You can also take a virtual museum tour, take part in awesome social media initiatives, or check out the best travel documentaries around.

A Game Designed To Address Real World

Source: https://www.tiqets.com/blog/video-games-with-real-world-locations/

Posted by: mccormacktookents.blogspot.com

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