Brian Jeremy's Safehouse: Difference between revisions

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The safehouse was originally Brian Jeremy's home. During "Bad Standing", Johnny (Along with [[Terry Thorpe]] and [[Clay Simons]], if the player chooses) attacks Brian's house and kills everyone in there and heads to Brian's room and decides to kill him or let him live. If the player chooses to execute Brian, Johnny will shoot him in the chest and say "fuck...you!".
The safehouse was originally Brian Jeremy's home. During "Bad Standing", Johnny (Along with [[Terry Thorpe]] and [[Clay Simons]], if the player chooses) attacks Brian's house and kills everyone in there and heads to Brian's room and decides to kill him or let him live. If the player chooses to execute Brian, Johnny will shoot him in the chest and say "fuck...you!".


In [[Grand Theft Auto IV]] the house is near identical to the version in [[The Lost and Damned]], the only thing it lacks is a back door.   In [[The Ballad of Gay Tony]], the house is the [[Grand Theft Auto IV]] version, but only to a certain point in the game, as eventually, it converts to the version in [[The Lost and Damned]].
== Differences in GTA IV, The Lost and Damned and The Ballad of Gay Tony ==


<u>'''Trivia'''</u>
The design of the safehouse interchanges between the base game, [[Grand Theft Auto IV]], and its DLCs, including the [[The Ballad of Gay Tony]]. It appears in two forms, as either a non-interactive location or a fully interactive safehouse, although both renditions are near identical in terms of the exterior's designs except the back door in the interactive rendition. The former design is present in GTA IV, whereas the safehouse in The Lost and Damned, is, obviously interactive. In the Ballad of Gay Tony, however, the house initially assumes the appearance of the non-interactive rendition, before changing to the version in [[The Lost and Damned]] at a certain point in the game, this point in time when the building changes is the same time that in The Lost and Damned, [[Johnny Klebitz]] takes over the building.


*The house remains the same from the&nbsp;beginning of the story&nbsp;to the&nbsp;end in the original [[GTA&nbsp;IV|GTA&nbsp;IV]], though in [[The Ballad of Gay Tony]], it has the same exact architecture as it does in [[GTA IV]] but switches over to the version seen in [[The Lost and Damned]].&nbsp;&nbsp;The building's transformation happens at a certain point in [[The Ballad of Gay Tony]], this point in time when the building changes is the same time that in [[The Lost and Damned]], [[Johnny Klebitz]] takes over the building.
[[Category:Safehouses]]
[[Category:Safehouses]]
[[Category:Safehouses in The Lost and Damned]]
[[Category:Safehouses in The Lost and Damned]]
[[Category:Alderney]]
[[Category:Alderney]]

Revision as of 15:14, 16 November 2009

File:Brian Jeremy's Safehouse (GTA4) (exterior).jpg
The run down home, as depicted in Grand Theft Auto IV, adopted in TLAD as Brian Jeremy's Safehouse.

Brian Jeremy's Safehouse is a safehouse in The Lost and Damned. It is unlocked after the mission "Bad Standing", when Johnny Klebitz kills Brian Jeremy or lets him escape.

Description

The safehouse is essentially a dilapidated three-storey yellow corner townhouse at Emery Street in west Tudor, Alderney, just below the western half of Plumber's Skyway. While seemingly appearing with three floors up front, the player can only access two floor of the building inside. The building is also shut from the front, so the player can only enter the house from its back door.

The safehouse was originally Brian Jeremy's home. During "Bad Standing", Johnny (Along with Terry Thorpe and Clay Simons, if the player chooses) attacks Brian's house and kills everyone in there and heads to Brian's room and decides to kill him or let him live. If the player chooses to execute Brian, Johnny will shoot him in the chest and say "fuck...you!".

Differences in GTA IV, The Lost and Damned and The Ballad of Gay Tony

The design of the safehouse interchanges between the base game, Grand Theft Auto IV, and its DLCs, including the The Ballad of Gay Tony. It appears in two forms, as either a non-interactive location or a fully interactive safehouse, although both renditions are near identical in terms of the exterior's designs except the back door in the interactive rendition. The former design is present in GTA IV, whereas the safehouse in The Lost and Damned, is, obviously interactive. In the Ballad of Gay Tony, however, the house initially assumes the appearance of the non-interactive rendition, before changing to the version in The Lost and Damned at a certain point in the game, this point in time when the building changes is the same time that in The Lost and Damned, Johnny Klebitz takes over the building.