Xbox port of this PC masterpiece, masterful 1930s mob narrative. Tommy Angelo is a memorable protagonist, Lost Heaven city magnificently evoked. Remarkable authentic driving simulation. One of the generation's best narrative games.
Your verdict
Category
Action Adventure1 player18+
Description
Tommy Angelo, an ordinary taxi driver, becomes against his will a high-ranking gangster in the fictional city of Lost Heaven, inspired by 1930s America. Published by Gathering of Developers, released in 2004 in the United States and Europe. Adapts the PC classic with meticulous atmosphere, 20 scripted missions, realistic driving physics including a fuel gauge, period-authentic vehicles, and traffic law enforcement.
Mafia review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
4/5
Music
★★★★★
"Excellent"
MAX
Story
★★★★★
"Masterful"
1940s-50s America recreated with a nostalgic elegance, golden light and gleaming automobiles: the city breathes the golden age of the gangster film. The care of the reconstruction and the stylistic coherence compose a credible theatre. This art direction, polished and atmospheric, elevates a classy mob story.
A driver drawn against his will into the 1930s underworld, Tommy climbs and then suffers the ranks of a merciless mafia family. Far from any glorification, the tale paints rise and fall with the gravity of film noir. This criminal chronicle, melancholy and adult, leaves its mark through its tragic sincerity.
An Xbox adaptation of 2K's cult gangster game, a 1930s mob tale praised for its atmosphere and writing, a narrative alternative to the open-world competition. Printed widely, it stays accessible and lightly priced. Its collector interest lies in its status as an underrated narrative classic of a license turned notable rather than manufacturing scarcity.
A questionable morality
Rising through a 1930s mob family has the air of a grand cinematic saga, until you draw up the list of jobs done: intimidation, holdups and executions in the name of loyalty. The polished story makes you forget that promotion is earned through crime, and you sign off on each mission with the quiet enthusiasm of a model employee.
Is Mafia still worth playing in 2026?
Released on Xbox in 2004 after its PC launch, Illusion Softworks' project tells the rise of a taxi driver into the 1930s American mob with a sense of pacing worthy of great cinema. The open city of Lost Heaven, the narrow tyre handling and the old fashioned shootouts build a world of rare coherence. Dated AI, stiff controls and abrupt difficulty spikes demand patience from anyone arriving from modern action games. Recommended today for fans of authorial crime drama and admirers of mob storytelling that predated Grand Theft Auto IV's more cinematic turn.