Driver '76 might sound like a step back in time, but it is actually a nice step forward in a franchise that has stuck very close to its mission all these years. The retro aspect of the game comes across in many ways, in some very cool cut scenes that look like old comics and the overall feel of things. Take a dose of GTA, bring it way back to before the 80's and you have Driver '76. This game looks almost nothing like GTA but will draw comparisons, especially from naysayers. The graphics aren't as polished and most of the visual presentation is a notch down from GTA. The driving action is superior in the sense that there are more special scenes you can trigger and more missions revolving around the use of vehicles that can be customized to almost any taste. This aspect of Driver '76 makes it more like a street racing game than a mission-based crime simulator like GTA. The music is excellent and it almost brought tears to my eyes when David Bowie's Suffragette City started playing on the radio. Bowie's Ziggy Stardust record was one of the first cassettes I ever owned, probably not in 1976, but maybe about two years later. The only downer is not hearing songs run longer as you move through short missions, but you get a chance to really enjoy all the music as you play through the game.