The words “f**k,” “c*nt,” “sh*t,” “n*gger,” "sp*c," and “k*ke” appear in dialogue. Some sequences allow players to collect/manipulate drug-related evidence such as marijuana packets, morphine syringes, or barbiturate pills in one sequence, players can examine overdose victims shown with needle marks, rubber-hose tourniquets, and nearby syringes. In one cutscene, there is an implication that a character is engaged in a sexual relationship with a teenager (e.g., "You take love where you can find it as you get older, Jack"/That has nothing to do with love."). Investigations sometimes pertain to sexual assault crimes, and details are often conveyed in clinical terms through dialogue or on-screen text (e.g., "He's some kind of sex fiend," "Woman's briefs torn at seams, forcibly removed," and "Head trauma.external bruising to genitals."). During the course of the game, players may come across crime scenes in which badly beaten or mutilated corpses are subject to investigation players are able to examine victims' bodies close-up, surveying various bruises and bloody cuts for evidence-a few female corpses are depicted fully nude with fleeting images of pubic hair. Cutscenes also depict instances of violence, including a character being beaten with a crowbar (off screen)-large spurts of blood are depicted in the foreground. Players use pistols, rifles, machine guns, and flamethrowers to engage in firefights with various enemies-these shootouts are highlighted by realistic gunfire, cries of pain, and blood spurts that stain injured characters and the surrounding environment. Set in late 1940s Los Angeles, the game allows players to advance through various "desks" at a police department (i.e., Patrol, Traffic Squad, Homicide, Vice, Arson) by interviewing witnesses and suspects, searching crime scenes for clues, and apprehending criminals. In a Linkedin announcement, Australian developer Video Games Deluxe said Having finished the critically well received L.A.Noire: The V.R. As Phelps delves deeper and deeper into the criminal underbelly of Los Angeles, the player is. The developer behind LA: Noire The VR Case Files is once again working with Rockstar on a new open-world VR game.
This is an open-world action-adventure game in which players assume the role of Cole Phelps, a rookie detective on a mission to stop a deranged serial killer. Noire casts the player as Cole Phelps, a World War II veteran and rising star in the L.A.P.D.