Follows a former outlaw, John Marston, who is forced by the federal government to hunt down the members of his old gang during the decline of the American frontier in the year 1911.Follows a former outlaw, John Marston, who is forced by the federal government to hunt down the members of his old gang during the decline of the American frontier in the year 1911.Follows a former outlaw, John Marston, who is forced by the federal government to hunt down the members of his old gang during the decline of the American frontier in the year 1911.
- Awards
- 26 wins & 22 nominations total
- John Marston
- (voice)
- Uncle
- (voice)
- Drew MacFarlane
- (voice)
- Norman Deek
- (voice)
- Nigel West Dickens
- (voice)
- Seth Briars
- (voice)
- Irish
- (voice)
- (as Kharrison Sweeny)
Featured reviews
I have also seen games similar to this one, if we talk about graphics, sound effects, game-play scheme that is. However, never have I ever played a game that captured a targeted style and converted it so well to the video game screen.
I am very indulgent with video games in the aspect of their graphics, sounds, game-play, diversity, because what I am looking for is atmosphere so intense, you could cut if with a knife. Which is why I loved the first Assassins Creed, although I had to admit, it was actually a poorly finished game.
This game however cuts the atmosphere quite near to perfectly: never before has there been a game with that brilliant capture of wild western style and atmosphere! It helps the game that I am a fan of the classic Clint Eastwood westerns and John Marstons looks must've been inspired on the ones of outlaw Josey Wales, played by Clint Eastwood.
The music sometimes reveals tunes close to the good old Ennio Morricone tracks.
The guns, the dramatic imprecise shootings, the huge lands to discover, the outfits, the baddies and the goodies (and the uglies) and all of the above make for a knife sharp atmosphere.
I love it.
For me video games should be about being someone you can't be in real life (be that a soldier, a special secret agent, or, as in this case, a wild west outlaw), packed with brilliant atmosphere and this game delivers.
So much that I easily forgive it for the minor bugs and flaws it does contain. I guess no one and nothing is perfect, but this is damn close.
10/10
"Red Dead Redemption" is what Gun should have been and so far superior to "...Revolver". The level of detail is gargantuan (such as smoke rising from gun barrels or shadows under every character). The scenery is ridiculously gorgeous for a video game and the sheer size of the world is inconceivable. I have yet to explore even twenty percent of it.
The story is progressing slowly but it has only just begun for me.
I recommend this game to anyone with a love for action/adventure westerns and easily would get my vote as the best game of year.
The story missions are great. Very enjoyable, fun to play – difficult enough to avoid being a dull doddle but easy enough to get even the hardest ones after a few tries. There are a lot of cut scenes but they are well done and, if you don't rush from one story mission to the next then they don't seem crowded. The difficulty is not too bad and the options in aiming modes makes it possible to make it harder without changing the content of the game but, more importantly, the game is long. Some people prefer the games where you spent a lot of time battling one "bit" or one level to get passed it – I don't, I don't enjoy frustration, so having a game that is reasonably easy to progress is good for me – but the key thing is then that there is lots to do, since I'll do most things in one or two tries. Red Dead is awesome for this – hunting, random encounters on the roadside, missions for strangers, gambling in saloons, all of it is fun and easy to waste hours.
When I had been told of this game, the idea of riding from one point to another worried me because a lesser game would use this to "fill time" and make missions feel longer by virtue of having you spent 10 minutes crossing the map to get to a 3 minute mission. Not so here – firstly the missions are not short but also there are things to do even as you travel around – distractions that you can do or ignore whether it is a trap set by robbers or a man who needs help with wolves etc. The fast-travel is good but to be honest it is often more fun to just ride for 5 minutes and enjoy it.
Part of enjoying the ride is how simply stunning this game is technically. OK there are some minor glitches such as horses getting trapped in rocks but these are easily addressed by the player, but otherwise this is impressive. Sunsets are stunning and the vistas are as great as anything John Ford brought us – the difference being that every rock and plant and mountain here has been created – not just filmed. You can ride from one end of the world to the other without any loading screens or stuttering (which, as other Fable 3 players will appreciated, is a joy), you can see for miles and the weather effects of wind or rain are as unobtrusive and natural as they are impressive. So many games set challenges to explore and find things and often they are a chore just included to add time rather than enjoyment to the game (again, Fable 3 comes to mind) – but with RDR it is honestly just plain fun to ride round without any specific mission or story going on.
A lot of the reviews on this site are quite gushing and I was determined to be as objective as possible – but it is hard when the game is this good and this enjoyable. It is not that the game is like being in a western – it is like being in a brilliant western.
The story (If you have been living in a cave) goes like this: You play a FORMER outlaw named John Marsten who was apparently left for dead after a botched robbery and he left his gang that day and tried to go straight. He got married and has a son, they lived quietly on a ranch and John had tried to forget his past. for several years he was at peace with the world.
Unfortunately that obviously did not work out at all as the government wants to use him to find his old gang members and they do that by keeping his family hostage.
The game (built on RAGE which was used on GTA4) looks great and very realistic. From the style of the clothes to the buildings, horses, etc. All of the towns in the game are teeming with life with people going about their daily business.
In fact you can do so much in the game like play poker, hunt wild animals, collect on 'bounties', hunt for treasure, ride around aimlessly, or just admire the view from the top of one of the many hills and mountains. There is so much content in this game that if you had to take out all of the content that is not needed for the story, and had everything else as each as it's own game, there would be like 20 or so, just like in Grand Theft Auto 4.
Expect nothing but the best of what Rockstar has to offer and this is one of the few games that was really worth the price of purchase (unlike TERMINATOR SALVATION where I had finished it in a mere 6 hours) and will keep you entertained for months to come.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaClint Eastwood, Robert Redford, Rob Wiethoff, and Robert Duvall were all asked to voice the role of John Marston; Wiethoff got the role and the others turned it down.
- GoofsThe subtitles for the mission "Flowers for a Lady" say "/rWell, that's very sweet of you" for Jack's line. This was fixed in the Game of the Year Edition.
- Quotes
[last lines]
John 'Jack' Marston Jr.: Excuse me, you Edgar Ross?
Edgar Ross: Do I know you?
John 'Jack' Marston Jr.: Forgive me for startling you sir, I have a message for you. My name is Jack Marston... You knew my father.
Edgar Ross: [laughs] I see... I remember your father.
John 'Jack' Marston Jr.: I've come for you Ross.
Edgar Ross: And you boy, have sure as shit found me.
John 'Jack' Marston Jr.: You killed my father.
Edgar Ross: Your father killed himself with the life he lead.
John 'Jack' Marston Jr.: You killed him! I saw you!
Edgar Ross: You keep saying that...
John 'Jack' Marston Jr.: You sent him to do your dirty work then shot him like a dog.
Edgar Ross: And I'll shoot you like one too you little piece of trash! Now get out of here before I kill you as well!
John 'Jack' Marston Jr.: I ain't going nowhere old man!
[they draw, and Jack shoots Ross]
- Alternate versionsThe Game of the Year Edition censors the intro cutscene to "The Gates of El Presidio", fixes some subtitle errors and adds an additional writing credit for Rupert Humphries, a Hardcore Mode and the previously PS3 exclusive Solomon's Folly gang hideout and Walton's Gang Outfit to the Xbox 360.
- ConnectionsEdited into Red Dead Redemption: The Man from Blackwater (2010)
- SoundtracksCompass (Red Dead on Arrival Version)
Written by José González
Performed by Jamie Lidell (uncredited), José González
Published by Songs Publishing (p) 2010 Mute Records
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Languages
- Also known as
- RDR
- Filming locations
- Carlsbad, California, USA(Studio)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Color
- Sound mix