Grand Theft Auto 6 may be absorbing most of the attention heading into its launch window, but an ambitious fan project is giving Vice City its own “next-gen” moment. The latest evolution of the Grand Theft Auto: Vice City Nextgen Edition mod folds in HD textures, RAGE-engine upgrades and newly added RTX Remix support, creating one of the most striking visual overhauls the game has received outside official channels.
Vice City has long been one of the series’ most enduring entries, helped by its setting, its characters and its role in defining what an open-world game could be in the early 2000s. So it isn’t surprising that modders have invested years into reimagining it on more modern foundations. The project began as an attempt to rebuild the game inside GTA IV’s RAGE engine, effectively giving Vice City updated lighting, physics and environmental detail. From there, the community layered on high-resolution texture packs, environment polish and now RTX Remix compatibility, which adds path-traced lighting and reflections for a far more contemporary look.
The result isn’t a one-to-one reconstruction — it still carries clear signs of its stitched-together origins — but the combination of technical upgrades produces a version of Vice City that feels dramatically refreshed while retaining the structure and personality of the original. For many players, that balance is the appeal. It delivers the sort of stability and polish that the official 2023 Definitive Edition struggled to maintain, without straying into full remake territory.
The strong reaction to these enhancements speaks to a wider appetite for revisiting classic GTA titles in a more substantial form. Rockstar’s mainline releases continue to launch in solid shape, but the company’s remaster efforts have been uneven enough that fans often look to community creations to fill the gap. With GTA 6 looming, that demand isn’t disappearing; it’s growing. Each time a fan project like this demonstrates how well older entries can shine with modern tools, it reinforces the idea that there’s room — and a willing audience — for more faithful, carefully executed remakes of the early games.
Once the dust settles around GTA 6, the question becomes whether Rockstar will revisit its back catalogue with more attention to detail than the Definitive Editions received. The response to mods like Vice City Nextgen Edition makes it clear that there’s a sizable audience waiting for those classics to return in a form that respects both the original design and contemporary expectations.
