Yes, we may have waited 18 months for Online Heists to come to Grand Theft Auto V, but if the first one I got to play with Jon and two Rockstar reps is any indication, these massive (and free!) new quests will be well worth the wait. Because even in spectacular defeat, hoo-boy did we have fun! And better yet, the delirious insanity described above didn’t even happen during the actual heist proper; it was only one of the five setup missions!
The online heist we played was called “Raid on Humane Labs.” Our overall goal was to break into a laboratory, steal their data, and get out clean, splitting up $540,000 in the process. It featured five setup missions and then the heist itself, and from start to finish it took us almost exactly three hours. I’m confident we could get that down to two-and-a-half or even two flat with an experienced, well-coordinated team, but the point is that these long-awaited four-player online heists are meaty and, in our initial experience, very different from anything else in GTA 5.
One person, as we’ve previously detailed, is the leader who fronts all the cash and doesn’t get paid until the end. The other three participants get paid after each job, which could lead to squabbles over how big each person’s cut is. For the Humane Labs heist, we started by meeting at the heist leader’s apartment, where the anonymous middleman relayed instructions from the even-more-anonymous boss. We went over the first couple setup jobs on the planning board. We needed to get key codes from a contact in a downtown parking lot, and then steal two APC-esque Insurgent vehicles from a Merryweather test site in Blaine County.
I was the buyer, another player was my bodyguard, and two others were lookouts perched atop fire escapes above the parking lot. When the contact arrived, she seemed to know of us. “That bank…that was you, right?” she asked, likely alluding to one of the other Online Heists. And a moment later, “What you’re getting into now is a whole different ballgame, my friends.”
Yes, we may have waited 18 months for Online Heists to come to Grand Theft Auto V, but if the first one I got to play with Jon and two Rockstar reps is any indication, these massive (and free!) new quests will be well worth the wait. Because even in spectacular defeat, hoo-boy did we have fun! And better yet, the delirious insanity described above didn’t even happen during the actual heist proper; it was only one of the five setup missions!The online heist we played was called “Raid on Humane Labs.” Our overall goal was to break into a laboratory, steal their data, and get out clean, splitting up $540,000 in the process. It featured five setup missions and then the heist itself, and from start to finish it took us almost exactly three hours. I’m confident we could get that down to two-and-a-half or even two flat with an experienced, well-coordinated team, but the point is that these long-awaited four-player online heists are meaty and, in our initial experience, very different from anything else in GTA 5.One person, as we’ve previously detailed, is the leader who fronts all the cash and doesn’t get paid until the end. The other three participants get paid after each job, which could lead to squabbles over how big each person’s cut is. For the Humane Labs heist, we started by meeting at the heist leader’s apartment, where the anonymous middleman relayed instructions from the even-more-anonymous boss. We went over the first couple setup jobs on the planning board. We needed to get key codes from a contact in a downtown parking lot, and then steal two APC-esque Insurgent vehicles from a Merryweather test site in Blaine County.I was the buyer, another player was my bodyguard, and two others were lookouts perched atop fire escapes above the parking lot. When the contact arrived, she seemed to know of us. “That bank…that was you, right?” she asked, likely alluding to one of the other Online Heists. And a moment later, “What you’re getting into now is a whole different ballgame, my friends.”
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