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== Synopsis ==
== Synopsis ==
In contrast to [[The Lost and Damned|''The Lost and Damned'']], a gritty and hardcore account of life in a biker gang, ''The Ballad of Gay Tony'' shines light on arguably the most glamorous place on earth - the celebrity nightclub scene. [[Luis Lopez]] and [[Anthony Prince|"Gay" Tony Prince]] are the two main characters struggling with, as Rockstar Games says themselves, "the competing loyalties of family and friends, and with the uncertainty about who is real and who is fake in a world in which everyone has a price". Being in debt to gangsters, Luis and Tony are barraged with the temptation to sell out their beliefs and even each other for money - their beliefs often taking the symbolic form of their shared nightclub, [[Maisonette 9]]. The duo surprisingly turn their noses at some substantial opportunities ([[Yusuf Amir]] franchising them, or [[Cloe Parker]] bailing them out), but are heavily tempted and will even abuse each other's trust for others ([[Ray Bulgarin]] buying them out, [[Mori Kibbutz]] having a high-stakes bet, [[Rocco Pelosi]] threatening them, and Tony himself resorting to fraud). At the end of the game Tony and Luis are still a team, successfully erased their debt and tell Yusuf Amir they won't franchise, leading to the moral that loyalty to "family" (blood or otherwise) should not be sold for all the money in the world.
In contrast to [[The Lost and Damned|''The Lost and Damned'']], a gritty and hardcore account of life in a biker gang, ''The Ballad of Gay Tony'' shines light on arguably the most glamorous place on earth - the celebrity nightclub scene. [[Luis Fernando Lopez|Luis Lopez]] and [[Anthony Prince|"Gay" Tony Prince]] are the two main characters struggling with, as Rockstar Games says themselves, "the competing loyalties of family and friends, and with the uncertainty about who is real and who is fake in a world in which everyone has a price". Being in debt to gangsters, Luis and Tony are barraged with the temptation to sell out their beliefs and even each other for money - their beliefs often taking the symbolic form of their shared nightclub, [[Maisonette 9]]. The duo surprisingly turn their noses at some substantial opportunities ([[Yusuf Amir]] franchising them, or [[Cloe Parker]] bailing them out), but are heavily tempted and will even abuse each other's trust for others ([[Ray Bulgarin]] buying them out, [[Mori Kibbutz]] having a high-stakes bet, [[Rocco Pelosi]] threatening them, and Tony himself resorting to fraud). At the end of the game Tony and Luis are still a team, successfully erased their debt and tell Yusuf Amir they won't franchise, leading to the moral that loyalty to "family" (blood or otherwise) should not be sold for all the money in the world.






'''Characters:'''
'''Characters:'''
*[[Luis Lopez]] and [[Tony Prince|"Gay" Tony Prince]]: The two main characters of the story, Luis being the playable protagonist. They are very much like a father and son pair, despite getting frustrated with each other. They are forced to make decisions about loyalty, often having to consider how their decision effects each other.
*[[Luis Fernando Lopez|Luis Lopez]] and [[Tony Prince|"Gay" Tony Prince]]: The two main characters of the story, Luis being the playable protagonist. They are very much like a father and son pair, despite getting frustrated with each other. They are forced to make decisions about loyalty, often having to consider how their decision effects each other.
*[[Rocco Pelosi]], [[Ray Bulgarin]], [[Yusuf Amir]] and [[Mori Kibbutz]]: All men of wealth who are interested in owning Maisonette 9. Their motivations ranging from benevolent (Yusuf) to sinister (Bulgarin and Rocco), they are all temptations for Tony to literally sell out, and Luis to pursue more money behind Tony's back, having to lie to Tony and [[This Ain't Checkers|make major decisions]] without properly consulting him (something Luis hypocritically criticizes Tony about). Luis is eventually punished in a sense, when Bulgarin [[In the Crosshairs|attempts to kill him]] and he must confess his actions to Tony. Tony and Luis symbolically defeat their trust issues, as they literally [[Party's Over|defeat Rocco]] [[Departure Time|and Bulgarin]], and are entirely solidified as a duo in the game's finale.
*[[Rocco Pelosi]], [[Ray Bulgarin]], [[Yusuf Amir]] and [[Mori Kibbutz]]: All men of wealth who are interested in owning Maisonette 9. Their motivations ranging from benevolent (Yusuf) to sinister (Bulgarin and Rocco), they are all temptations for Tony to literally sell out, and Luis to pursue more money behind Tony's back, having to lie to Tony and [[This Ain't Checkers|make major decisions]] without properly consulting him (something Luis hypocritically criticizes Tony about). Luis is eventually punished in a sense, when Bulgarin [[In the Crosshairs|attempts to kill him]] and he must confess his actions to Tony. Tony and Luis symbolically defeat their trust issues, as they literally [[Party's Over|defeat Rocco]] [[Departure Time|and Bulgarin]], and are entirely solidified as a duo in the game's finale.


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