Several Brazilian retail catalogue pages have surfaced with extra details tied to Grand Theft Auto 6, adding specifics about editions, packaging, pre-order bonuses and launch availability. The listings repeat global reporting while also naming features that appear on product pages, from a "code in box" physical SKU to a pre-order window that grants the Vintage Vice City pack.

Those entries list PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S as target platforms and show a November 19, 2026 launch date, with wording that indicates availability to play on November 19, 2026 and early shipment options for some pre-orders.

Physical format: the "code in box" and retailers' response

The Brazilian pages describe the boxed physical edition as a "code in box" format, meaning the retail package contains a download code instead of a game disc. Product text and packaging blurbs in the listings emphasize the download-code SKU as the standard for boxed copies.

That approach mirrors wider coverage and has already influenced retailer policies. This echoes earlier reports about some US retailers that said they would not carry discless boxed copies, and the Brazilian entries show local stores preparing to sell boxed download codes rather than discs.

Pre-orders and the Vintage Vice City pack

According to the catalogue text, all pre-orders and purchases of Grand Theft Auto 6 made before November 20 will receive the Vintage Vice City pack, a collection of items themed to the neon-soaked era. Listings also mention additional incentives tied to early purchases, such as a month of GTA+ on select editions.

Retail pages lay out Standard and Ultimate SKUs consistent with international breakdowns, the latter described as including extra content bundles and additional story missions in retailer copy.

Map scale, protagonists and a more living open world

Product descriptions highlight a larger Vice City map, inviting players to explore beaches, swamps, small towns and multiple regions of a territory named Leonida. The catalogue text frames the setting as broader and more varied than previous entries in the series.

The listings also name two playable protagonists, Jason and Lucia, and state players can switch between them during the story and take part in missions that involve both characters. Retail copy emphasizes NPCs with daily routines, random events and interactive establishments intended to boost immersion.

Integrated social features and next‑generation graphics

Store descriptions call out an integrated in-game social network, letting players watch viral videos, follow influencers and learn about live events through the character's phone. That detail aligns with previous coverage of an integrated short-form social app in GTA 6, and the Brazilian pages repeat the emphasis on influencer-driven content and world triggers tied to the feed.

Technical blurbs in the listings boast next-generation visuals: advanced lighting, dynamic weather, more natural animations and a higher level of environmental detail. Those phrases appear alongside platform and edition information in product copy.

Together, the Brazilian catalogues add regional confirmation of packaging, pre-order timing and several game features that retailers are already advertising to customers. The entries do not replace official announcements from Rockstar, but they do give a fuller picture of how editions, bonuses and physical SKUs will be presented to buyers in at least one market.