Grand Theft Auto: Liberty City Stories brings the series back to where it all started, Liberty City. Set sometime before
GTA 3, the game puts you in the role of Toni Cipriani, who showed up as a character in
GTA 3. The game begins with Toni finding himself in the unenviable position of lapdog for the Leone family as reward for pulling the Leone's asses out of the fire. Of course, Toni is not welcomed back to the flock with open arms and he's forced to endure all kinds of menial tasks while slowly working his way back up to the top.
Liberty City Stories doesn't stray too far from the traditional GTA gameplay formula. Again, this is the full GTA experience, complete with side jobs like selling cars and taxi fares, rage missions, hidden objects and even a few mini-games. Or, if structured gameplay isn't your thing, you can spend hours just roaming the city and seeing how much trouble you can cause. The game's scope is actually somewhere between GTA 3 and Vice City, so there's actually a little more to do in Liberty City Stories. You'll once again find yourself rolling through the streets taking jobs from the wretched hive of scum and villainy that help to make Liberty City such a nice place to live. You'll take jobs from members of several crime families, a few small-time thugs and even your mother, whose relationship with her son makes for some of the more humorous moments in the game given Toni's never-ending quest to gain her affection.
Mission lengths are much shorter than the ones found in other GTA games, making it one of the only significant changes to the overall formula. Shorter missions mean that you can squeeze in more game time in the shorter gaming sessions portable systems usually present. It also helps you to get in more game time on the PSP's battery since the game tends to drain it pretty quickly.
One of the few chinks in the overall experience is that it isn't exactly that portable friendly. Yes, missions are shorter, but everything else stays the same. A big issue is the lack of save points. At the beginning of the game, the only save point is Toni's apartment, which takes some driving to get to if you're on the opposite side of the city. Naturally, more save points will open as the game progresses, but it's just a little too much to go find the save point if you have to leave quickly. A "quick-save" option really would have helped in this instance since the PSP's Sleep Mode still drains battery life.
One element nearly every GTA fan has wanted was multiplayer and Liberty City Stories finally gives it to them. Multiplayer matches take place in Ad Hoc mode and include Deathmatches, races and other assorted games for up to six people. I wasn't able to spend time in these modes, so I can't personally vouch for how well they are done, however according to second-hand information, they turned out reasonably well.