Saints Row: The Third is a more recent installment in the over-the-top, action-adventure game series.
Click a title to learn more about each topic.
Story & Themes
Saints Row is basically a parody of Grand Theft Auto. It's a series that aims to reach ever higher levels of absurdity. The third game focuses on the leader of the 3rd Street Saints, referred to as "The Boss", and his struggle to free Steelport from the clutches of a criminal network known as The Syndicate.
br>
Saints Row is filled with pop culture references and over-the-top humor. With this in mind, the series' themes are not for the weak at heart. Excessive swearing, violence, and sexual content give the games their M-Rating.
br>
Themes include humor, absurdity, family (of a kind), and offensiveness. The games do not aim to be politically correct. For instance, one co-op mode has the player battling waves of prostitutes with a giant purple dildo. While it's clearly over-the-top, it's perhaps sexually and violently charged to an extent that many people are not comfortable with. Strong caution is warranted.
br>
However, many have praised the series for its outrageous content and fantastic gameplay. While basically all NPC characters are caricatures of reality—and not always positive ones—the main character customization process is extensive. Saints Row IV, for instance, contains options for not only skin, hair, and eye color, body type, weight, facial structure, and age, but also options for adding unearthly skin tones and extras such as horns and tentacles. Although some would hesitate to call this an attempt at diversity, it has been quite freeing for many gamers who are tired of playing different models of the white male protagonist present in so many other games.
Save Points
Players can save at an in-game savepoint or any time via the main menu—however, they will find their character returned to the nearest savepoint if they have used the menu option.
Difficulty
Much of the fun of Saints Row: The Third is in the relatively easiness of the gameplay. The playable character is meant to be overpowered, so new gamers need not fear giving the game a try.
Heads Up!
Violence A variety of weapons and vehicles are used to inflict damage on human beings and the landscape. Though the primary enemies are gang members, violence against pedestrians (including sex workers) and police is also possible. There is a fair amount of blood, but little-to-no gore.
Sex & Nudity Costumes frequently include low-cut tops on female characters. There is an abundance of cleavage, both bouncing and over sized. There is also a move called “Indecent Exposure”—it is what it sounds like—that players can use to distract enemies. There is no full-scale nudity in the games, though censored nudity does occur.
br>
Players can wield giant dildos and alien anal probes as weapons. Sex-workers and BDSM practitioners are enemies in co-op mode. References to stripping, sexual sound effects, sex toys laying around, and sexual dialogue and images are abundant. However, there is no explicit sexual content, and most sexual content is played for laughs.
Strong Language Characters swear frequently. Gendered language is also used (e.g., "c-t" and "p-ssy").
br>
The game is filled with crude humor.
Substance Use Characters partake of drugs and alcohol periodically, as well as cigarettes. References to an illegal drug trade and references to hard drugs are made throughout the game.
Discrimination Minority groups of all kinds are portrayed in Saints Row: The Third, and are often stereotyped or demeaned. However, the game is billed as being satirical.
br>
The representation of one of the main characters, Shaundi, is arguably empowering.
Online Community
Co-op mode is accessible over Xbox Live and Playstation Network.
Conversation Starters
- There's certainly a lot to talk about in Saints Row, if you're willing to go there. Here are a few ideas:
- The treatment of women, and especially sex workers, is not respectful in the least. Does this make you uncomfortable, and if not, why not?
- What is the purpose of parody? Saints Row is purposefully irreverent, and is not meant to be taken seriously, but is there a point at which parody has gone too far?
- Do you think the portrayal of gang rivalry is realistic? How so?
- Some people consider Saints Row an extreme form of escapism—it’s a dark fantasy that no one (hopefully) would ever enact in real life. What do you get out of playing this game? Does it help you relax, or help you live out these unrealistic fantasies in a safe way? Do you think it’s okay to explore dark fantasies, or do you think it impacts the way you think about things outside of the game?