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Mafia: The Old Country review In Sicily, women are more dangerous than shotguns, but less dangerous than knives.
Mafia: The Old Country is a great new single-player game with a fantastic setting and compelling story, but it could use a bit more open exploration between the on-rails missions.
Mafia The Old Country returns to the series' roots with a stunning and refreshingly straightforward take on mobster story conventions.
Murder mysteries have returned in full force. But aside from the “Knives Out” movies, rarely do they have casts with stars this big.
Mafia: The Old Country, however, doesn't have that or much else, as the game lacks so much of the substance in its big, open world that made previous games so rich and enjoyable.
GREENWICH — Upgrades and additions are being planned at the Greenwich Country Club. The club plans to add a new squash court and expand the fitness room by 2,812 square feet. A new family grill ...
There might not be a golf course that's more Rhode Island than Cranston Country Club – and that alone makes it a place you should play every year.
This week's Mane Street Memphis includes updates on Colonial Country Club, Hyosung HICO expansion and a new Barnes & Noble location.
Thomas Constantine of Franklin Country Club is tied for third after the first round of the 107th Massachusetts Junior Amateur Championship. Constantine shot a 3-under 68, including seven birdies.
Mafia: The Old Country doesn't just set out to tell a typical mob story. Instead, it contextualizes organized crime in Italian economic history.
As with all of Mafia: The Old Country, these pop-and-stop combat encounters aren’t bad, they just don’t feel particularly exciting, and will quickly overstay their welcome.
Gaming Games reviews Mafia The Old Country review – a beautiful but trivial take on what a crime gangster epic should be This story of greed, crime, and forbidden love is wonderfully stunning to ...