Home / Software & Gaming / Rockstar offering free game with GTA V PC pre-orders

Rockstar offering free game with GTA V PC pre-orders

Despite a couple of delays and a really long wait for PC gamers, Rockstar still wants you to pre-order its 2013 hit game, Grand Theft Auto V. Following this week's delay announcement, the company has decided to offer up a free game to those who pre-order for the PC, in addition to the extra $1,000,000 in-game cash.

You need to pre-order through Rockstar's Warehouse site to take advantage of this. The game will cost £39.00/$59.99 to buy digitally and orders need to be placed before the 1st of February. The games on offer are all titles from Rockstar's backlog.

1bSd5DAN11p0.878x0.Z-Z96KYq

Those who pre-order can redeem: Max Payne 3, Max Payne 2: The Fall of Max Payne, LA Noire, Grand Theft Auto: Episodes from Liberty City, GTA IV, GTA: San Andreas, GTA: Vice City, Midnight Club I, Manhunt, Grand Theft Auto III or Bully: Scholarship Edition.

Grand Theft Auto V originally released on the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 back in September of 2013, petitions from fans to get the game on to the PC platform were met with a long silence from Rockstar, right up until mid 2014, when the game was announced for the Xbox One, PS4 and PC.

Discuss on our Facebook page, HERE.

KitGuru Says: If you are still set on buying GTA V for the PC, then an extra incentive isn't such a bad thing. However, it is always best to wait until a game releases, particularly on the PC, where performance issues can really hurt the player experience. 

Become a Patron!

Check Also

KitGuru Games: Corporate nonsense has put Helldivers 2 in jeopardy as game removed from over 170 countries

It tends to take a lot for gamers to 'forgive' a studio after messing up a launch, for instance CD Projekt Red had to spend three additional years developing Cyberpunk 2077 before many were willing to give the game another shot. In the case of Helldivers 2, despite the game having some rough server issues at launch, the game turned out to be so good that many players simply waited things out, without leaving a trail of negative reviews. Now, a case of incredibly poor communication and a poorly thought-out plan from the game's publisher, Sony, has put Helldivers 2 in jeopardy, with the game being removed from over 170 countries.