Luis’s story sees him struggle to help Tony out of his mess, both by keeping back those who wish to claim their money, and by getting himself involved in even more murky areas of the city’s underworld. That his current boyfriend is keeping him well supplied in drugs isn’t helping, either. He’s sold his business to two different unsavoury groups, and has no idea how he’s going to get out of this mess. Gay Tony, nicknamed for not exactly complicated reasons, is in a lot of trouble. Luis Fernando Lopez is a business partner, bodyguard and muscle for Tony Prince, owner of two of Liberty City’s biggest nightclubs. The Ballad Of Gay Tony is by far the better of the two, but it’s here that this attempt to create other Niko Bellic-alike feels most conflicted. When introducing yesterday’s The Lost And Damned WIT, I mentioned that I think a possible mistake made in these two excellent additional episodes for the GTA IV world was to repeat the downbeat, reluctant central character both times. Having played it from beginning to end, I feel rather equipped to let you know Wot I Think. Today it's the other half, The Ballad Of Gay Tony.
Yesterday I told you wot I thought of the first half of the GTA IV: Episodes From Liberty City, The Lost And Damned.