Reviews were mixed but leaned positive. IGN gave it a 7.5/10, calling it “a blast from the past that holds up better than you’d expect,” while GameSpot criticized its “dated mission structure” (5.8/10). Commercially, it was a footnote; Liberty City Stories sold over 8 million copies, while GTA 2 on PSP sold approximately 300,000.

By late 2005, the PSP had established itself as a powerhouse for portable 3D gaming. Rockstar Leeds, in collaboration with Rockstar North, faced an unusual decision: release a handheld-exclusive 3D entry ( Liberty City Stories ) alongside a direct port of a four-year-old PlayStation 1 title ( GTA 2 ). This paper argues that the PSP version of GTA 2 served a dual purpose: a low-cost development filler to bolster the PSP’s launch window and a deliberate preservation effort to expose a new generation to the series’ “gang warfare” roots.

[Generated AI] Date: April 18, 2026

The port was praised for being feature-complete compared to the PS1 original, including all seven gangs (e.g., Zaibatsu, Loonies, Yakuza) and the “Respect” mission system. However, it notably omitted the PC version’s multiplayer mode (no ad-hoc or infrastructure play was included) and the “Director’s Cut” cheat menu found in the Dreamcast version.

While often overshadowed by the revolutionary 3D entries in the series, Grand Theft Auto 2 (GTA 2) represents a critical evolutionary step for the franchise. Its 2005 release on the PlayStation Portable (PSP) is particularly unique, as it arrived simultaneously with the platform’s flagship original title, Grand Theft Auto: Liberty City Stories . This paper examines GTA 2 on the PSP not as a flagship title, but as a strategic “retro pack-in” and a technical exercise in porting a 2D top-down classic to a handheld with 3D capabilities. It analyzes the game’s graphical fidelity, control adaptation, and its anomalous cultural position within the PSP’s library of mature-action games.