Scarface: The World Is Yours. After replaying GTA3, I was thinking about moving on to Vice City, and I might still do that soon, but I remembered the Scarface game has a cult following, so I decided to check it out. After trying out different options, I settled for playing the PC version with the Remastered mod, which makes the game much sharper-looking, runs more smoothly, has gamepad support, and includes some nice touches like fixing the portrait in Tony's mansion to include Michelle Pfeiffer again.
The game isn't bad. It's very post-GTA3 open world stuff, although I think Vice City's version of "Miami" is more interesting. The game begins at the end of the movie, allowing you to spin around and shoot the guy coming through your office with the shotgun, and then you fight your way across your mansion to safety. Months pass and Tony vows to get revenge on Sosa by rebuilding his empire. This opening is great fun - I especially liked seeing the tiger break loose from its chain and attack the hit squad. Then you start out in Little Havana and have go from making minor deals to acquiring front businesses, getting more money to make bigger deals and acquire even more businesses until you control the whole city. Whenever you have a lot of money, you need to find a bank so you can launder your money and save the game; if you get killed, all the money goes away.
The mission design is very mixed. The major setpieces are generally fine, but the usual progression of the game is basically: run a random side mission like beating up informants or assassinating gang members; this unlocks another side mission where you get in touch with a dealer and have to do something random to get a delivery to your storage facilities; then you make a run where you pick up cash from all your businesses while enemy gangs chase you and try to smash up your fronts; and then you finish at the bank where you can launder the money and bribe the cops and gangs to make their heat go away. Then you use whatever cash you have left to buy stuff that expands your empire and fills up your mansion with stuff. This is fine at first but it gets old fast, especially when you just want some money to buy something relatively simple. And midway through the game an extra step is added where you have to travel to "the islands" to get bigger shipments and take them by boat back to Miami. The game could have used some simpler method for generating a modest amount of cash. There also isn't much to do around the city besides running races or cleaning out enemy gangs. It's also really frustrating when you just made a lot of money and then get killed over something stupid, making all of it go away.
The controls are fine and the driving has the same arcadey feel as the old GTA games, which I like. Tonally, the game comes off like an affectionate parody of the movie. When you take Tony out of the tragic context of the movie and just have him as this sort of superhero who cusses out literally everyone in his path, it just seems ridiculously funny, like you're watching Scarface as imagined by a late night comedy sketch show. It's easy to imagine the game as maybe a fantasy Tony has as he's dying. The voice actor imitating Pacino's performance isn't bad, although most of his performance is just him shouting and ranting like a psycho, so there are no layers to it. The game does carry over the idea from the movie that Tony has a code against shooting women and children and you simply can't shoot innocent people - it's one of the few games where they could have genuinely included kids without having to worry about players slaughtering them.
In terms of how it represents the movie as a licensed game, it's...very mixed. Having Pacino's likeness and a decent actor imitating him is good, and important locations like the mansion, the Babylon Club, and the Sun Ray Hotel are faithfully recreated. However, the doesn't feel at all like it takes place in 1983 or even 84 or 85. It feels largely like a product of its early 2000s time, just with a few goofy 1980s outliers like Tony himself. Vice City is much better at creating an 80s atmosphere, and it has a vastly superior soundtrack. Scarface's soundtrack sucks outside of the songs from the movie and a few random 80s tunes like Caribbean Queen. Most of it is modern rap music that got included because of the movie's popularity among rappers (who mostly didn't even understand the movie's point). Overall, I would say it's not essential but it's a good game to play if you've already played the classic GTA games and want something similar but don't feel replaying Vice City again.