

The more police tasks you complete, the more experience you gain to improve those skills the same for triad tasks. The role-playing elements consist of upgrades that fall under both police and triad skill trees. Wei Shen’s moral ambiguity and his personal stake in taking down the Sun On Yee begin to weigh on him as the game moves forward, making him one of the more well-drawn characters in the genre.

“Sleeping Dogs” is played in the traditional over-the-shoulder view of similar sandbox games such as “Grand Theft Auto” and “Saints Row.” While I could stoop to calling this a “GTA” clone - the similarities are legion - the fluid combat, a few nice touches in the shooting mechanic and the exotic locale help it stand out quite a bit.įinding the right balance to help the story progress is key, and the great voice acting - including Tom Wilkinson and Emma Stone, among others - and a solid script keep you engaged through a few clever twists and turns. This simple premise sets up a series of moral dilemmas: Can you push yourself to the limit to gain trust and rise in the triad’s hierarchy? Or will you waver and risk blowing your cover? The line between hero and villain is wonderfully blurred in the action role-playing game “Sleeping Dogs” (Square Enix for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, $59.99 for PC, $49.99).Īs undercover mole Wei Shen you are tasked with infiltrating the Sun On Yee triad in a fictionalized and fantastically rendered version of Hong Kong. You spot the car and tear the driver from the front seat, kicking him in the midsection before speeding off to claim your money. Your connection at the chop shop needs a high-end sports coupe. As you sneak away you receive a text message. You’ve just planted a surveillance bug on orders from your superior officer.
