GTA V PC Version Is Now Playable On Mobile Devices Via Emulation

The PC version of Rockstar Games’ open world action adventure game, GTA V, is now fully playable on mobile devices through emulation.

As seen in the video below, the PC version of GTA V is now playable on mobile devices on the Mobox emulator. The game is shown targeting a frame rate of 30 fps, with drops into the mid 20s, on a Snapdragon 870 mobile platform.

The system requirements mentioned in the video description can be seen below.

Previously, it was reported that Rockstar Games had worked on a DLC for GTA V that was similar in scope to Red Dead Redemption’s Undead Nightmare. A leak from 3 years ago had revealed mention of unannounced DLC that was in pre-production. The first of these GTA V expansions involved an alien war, while the second included story based content, and the third involved a zombie apocalypse similar to Red Dead Redemption’s Undead Nightmare DLC.

However, due to the massive success of GTA Online, the single-player DLC content was seemingly pushed into the online component. This is essentially why the Doomsday heist, which answered certain questions from GTA V’s story, ended up being a part of the online mode. The leaked information also revealed that Bully 2 and Agent were both shelved in 2011. This was later confirmed by the recent GTA V source code leak.

Grand Theft Auto V serves as the seventh main installment in the Grand Theft Auto series, succeeding Grand Theft Auto IV from 2008. The game is set in the fictional state of San Andreas, modeled after Southern California, and revolves around the single-player story featuring three protagonists: retired bank robber Michael De Santa, street gangster Franklin Clinton, and drug dealer/gunrunner Trevor Philips. Together, they undertake heists while facing pressure from a corrupt government agency and formidable criminals. The game initially launched in September 2013 for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, followed by releases in November 2014 for the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One, April 2015 for Windows, and March 2022 for the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S.

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