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Emergency Vehicle Radio: Difference between revisions

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When you enter an Emergency vehicle you well hear the radio at random times.
Upon entering an Emergency Vehicle, such as a [[Police car]], an [[Ambulance]], or a [[Fire truck]], instead of having the regular radio stations enabled, the player will be able to listen to the emergency channel, where chatter and information are relayed from the emergency PC to the vehicles listening to them, so they can quickly head to the location indicated and do whatever they are tasked or asked to do.


Police often uses codes (such as the 10-codes, 11-codes, and so on) to shorten their messages and refer to the events happening or relayed. However, in fiction, 10-codes from real police are rarely used, preferring to make their own or to use fictional codes. This is the case with GTA, as for example, a 10-37 translates to "Operator on duty", which probably doesn't really need an ambulance, or a 10-57 meaning "Missing person", made contradictory if a location is given right after. It is possible certain cases are merely parodies, but often codes given are nonsensical in fiction context.


 
==Emergency chatter in [[GTA San Andreas]]==
San Andreas:
The police messages in GTA San Andreas are simply looped audio, and don't refer to events occurring in-game.
 
 
 
The police messages in [[Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas]] are simply looped audio, and don't refer to events occuring in-game.


*MALE VOICE 1: We got a 10-37 in Verona Beach. We're gonna need an ambulance.
*MALE VOICE 1: We got a 10-37 in Verona Beach. We're gonna need an ambulance.
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