

Johnny confesses that Dogeyes was behind the attack as he is tortured to death by Mrs. Chu, Wei captures a member of the 18K called Johnny Ratface. For saving his life, Uncle Po promotes Wei to the rank of Red Pole and succeeds Winston as leader of the Water Street Gang. Amidst the fighting, Winston and Peggy are shot dead and Uncle Po is critically wounded, but Wei manages to get him to the hospital. During Winston and his fiance Peggy Li's wedding day, the Sun On Yee is attacked by a rival Hong Kong Triad gang, the " 18K". However, Raymond relents as Wei has gotten ever closer to infiltrating the Sun On Yee. When Winston is contacted by Uncle Po, who wishes to meet with Wei, he relays the meeting to Raymond, who is concerned that Wei is becoming "one of them".

Wei successfully does so and fully earns the trust of the Water Street Gang. Wei convinces Winston to spare Dogeyes' drug maker Siu Wah and give Uncle Po a bigger profit than what the Jade Gang offers. However, doing so will displease the Chairman and Dragon Head of the Sun On Yee, Uncle Po. During one mission, Wei is arrested again by Inspector Jane Teng, but Pendrew bails him out and affirms his identity as an undercover cop to Teng.Īfter learning of Dogeyes' attack on the Golden Koi, Winston takes the offensive by attacking one of Dogeyes' warehouses. To prove his loyalty, Winston sends Wei on various missions to seize back territory from Winston's rival, "Dogeyes", the leader of the " Jade Gang". After meeting with Jackie, Wei is introduced to Winston Chu, a Sun On Yee Red Pole and leader of the " Water Street Gang". Wei asserts that he now has links with the Sun On Yee. Wei later meets with his superiors: Superintendent Thomas Pendrew and his handler Raymond Mak in the interrogation room. Thrown into jail, Wei meets his childhood friend, Jackie Ma, who offers Wei to join his gang after they are released. The game starts in Victoria Harbour, where undercover police officer Wei Shen is arrested after a drug deal goes bad. Development was resumed and finally brought to fruition by United Front Games with assistance from Square Enix London. Six months later, in August 2011, Square Enix bought the publishing rights from ActiVision, but renamed the game due to not purchasing the True Crime IP. It is also rumored that many of the development difficulties stemmed from ActiVision demanding a GTA-quality game while providing the developer a much smaller budget. Yet the project was again canceled on February 9, 2011, due to the game’s high development budget and delays, as well as a belief that it was just not up to the standards set by Rockstar's hit. Not only the protagonist was changed into a male, the game was renamed True Crime: Hong Kong, making it the third game in an existing franchise.

At this point, however, Treyarch was busy with the Call of Duty series, so the duties were handed to United Front Games. It is speculated that the huge success of Rockstar's Grand Theft Auto IV convinced ActiVision that they needed a sandbox game of their own. ĭevelopment was resumed the following year. However, publisher ActiVision halted the project in 2007 under the belief that a game with a female protagonist would not sell well. This concept was inspired by the hit films Charlie's Angels and Kill Bill. The game was originally pitched by developer Treyarch as Black Lotus, and was to star an Asian female assassin modeled after Lucy Liu. 20 Sleeping Dogs and True Crime Hong Kong comparison.11.5 Mouse, Keyboard, and Controller Support.
