I had to restart one mission multiple times because the non-player character I was supposed to follow wouldn’t spawn (although I could hear his voice). While learning a new melee move at the dojo, the game forced me to quit the mission because it didn’t recognize that I was performing it correctly. During a mission that featured me being driven around, a vehicle blocked the road and I couldn’t proceed. Unfortunately, I encountered several bugs and other issues. Combat is rewarding, the leveling system stands out from the open-world pack, and driving feels natural (not to mention fun, considering the ram ability that every car possesses). When everything works correctly, Sleeping Dogs is fun. Shootouts only become frequent later in the game, and their generic nature made me want to charge out from behind cover and deliver a few jump kicks instead of shooting bullets. Taking on Hong Kong’s underworld with your fists and feet is great, but the gunplay is cookie-cutter by comparison. My personal favorite was body-slamming a baddie into a wooden pallet of swordfish heads, impaling him with their sharp noses. You can also pull off brutal environmental attacks. Sleeping Dogs features satisfying (albeit familiar) encounters, and you learn several painful-looking moves throughout the game.
They reward you with tons of cash, but there isn’t much to spend it on outside of cars, clothes, and food that grants temporary stat boosts.įans of Rocksteady’s Batman games should enjoy Sleeping Dogs’ fighting system, as it features Wei countering and attacking like he was the Caped Crusader himself. Fans of GTA’s hidden packages can keep an eye out for dozens of hidden lock boxes throughout the city. Helping the citizens of Hong Kong raises your Face level, which allows you to purchase fancier cars and clothing. Staying undercover and performing tasks for the gang levels up your Triad ladder, which grants you new melee skills.
Performing police-oriented duties like drug busts unlocks new gunplay abilities. Most activities take you down a unique progression ladder.
Wei can arrange drug busts via security cameras, participate in fight clubs and street races, find hidden statues that unlock new melee moves at the dojo, and pray at shrines to increase your maximum health. While the story itself doesn’t offer much in the way of creative mission objectives, a healthy assortment of distractions are available.
Wei is free to explore the city at his leisure, performing side quests or story missions whenever he chooses. On the surface, Sleeping Dogs is organized in a manner similar to Grand Theft Auto’s tried-and-tested formula. The experience is worth playing, but the buggy gameplay makes former publisher Activision’s lack of faith in the title understandable. Putting players in the shoes of undercover cop Wei Shen, the game tasks players with infiltrating Hong Kong’s expansive Triad criminal organization. Saved from the brink of cancellation by Square Enix, the former True Crime: Hong Kong has been reborn and repackaged as Sleeping Dogs.