Brazilian Drug Dealer 3: I Opened a Portal to Hell in the Favela Trying To Revive Mit Aia I Need to Close It
Brazilian Drug Dealer 3: I Opened a Portal to Hell in the Favela Trying To Revive Mit Aia I Need to Close It

Brazilian Drug Dealer 3: I Opened a Portal to Hell in the Favela Trying To Revive Mit Aia I Need to Close It

Joeveno Joeveno September 17, 2025
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About Brazilian Drug Dealer 3: I Opened a Portal to Hell in the Favela Trying To Revive Mit Aia I Need to Close It

Brazilian Drug Dealer 3 is a chaotic, ultraviolent FPS inspired by Quake and 2000s Brazilian bootleg games. Made by developer Joeveno using the ID TECH2 engine, it drops you into a favela where a failed ritual to resurrect funk legend Mit Aia has summoned hell. The game blends fast-paced shooting with over-the-top action, set to a soundtrack of retro Brazilian music. Released on PC and Android in 2025, it’s a love letter to modding culture and the raw energy of old-school shooters. If you miss pixelated chaos and want to fight demons in a portal-riddled slum, this is your jam.

Gameplay

You’ll spend most of your time sprinting through destructible environments, trading fire with demons and corrupted NPCs. The ID TECH2 engine gives levels a gritty, low-poly look, with favela alleys merging into hellish caverns. Weapons range from shotguns to custom pipes, and you can play solo or team up in co-op. Multiplayer modes let you battle friends over portal control or scavenge for rare loot. The story-driven campaign has you tracking down occult artifacts to seal the portal, with quick-time ritual sequences. Controls are twitchy and unforgiving, demanding tight aiming and map awareness. The whole thing feels like a 20-year-old mod that somehow got published.

What Players Think

PlayPile’s community rates it 8.2/10, with 72% completing the campaign. Average playtime is 14 hours, but 40% of users tag it as “chaotic,” while 30% call it “nostalgic.” Critics praise the homage to Quake and 2000s bootleg scenes, but 22% mention “crashy PC ports.” Android users report smoother performance, though. 55% of reviews highlight the soundtrack, with one calling it “Mit Aia in a shooter.” Completion rates drop in multiplayer, where 35% of players give up due to “wonky netcode.” Still, 88% of those who finish it say it’s “worth the frustration.”

PlayPile's Take

This is a niche hit for FPS purists and Brazilian music fans. At $14.99, it’s a bargain for its chaotic energy and 35 achievements, including the elusive “Close the Portal” finale. The technical hiccups hurt, but the nostalgia factor and co-op sessions keep it engaging. Skip if you want polish, but dive in if you crave a retro shooter with a wild soul. It’s not a classic, but it’s a loud, messy good time.

Storyline

You are a Mit Aia fan, a legend of Brazilian 70s funk music, and you tried to revive him in the favela where you live with a Pentagram, things took a bad turn and you opened a portal to hell! All the people in the state of Rio de Janeiro got Posseeessed! It’s up to you to find a way to stop the hell invasion!

Game Modes

Single player, Multiplayer, Co-operative

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