I bounced off Red Dead Redemption 2 the first time I tried it. The second attempt — about three months later, after a long flight, on a recommendation from a friend — was when the design clicked. This is a review of the second attempt.
There's an interesting trap that games in the Open-World Western space tend to fall into. Red Dead Redemption 2 mostly avoids it, but the way it avoids it is more interesting than the genre itself.
Gameplay
There's no fluff in Red Dead Redemption 2's systems. Every menu is one click deeper than you expect; every tooltip says what it means; every system interacts with at least one other system. It's the kind of design that's invisible while you play and obvious when you stop.
Combat in Red Dead Redemption 2 rewards reading more than reflexes. Rockstar Games clearly built around the idea that you should always have time to think — but the consequences for thinking wrong are real. The result is the rare action game that respects deliberate play.

Story & Setting
Where Red Dead Redemption 2 stumbles narratively is in the middle. The opening is sharp, the ending is satisfying, and the long middle stretch — somewhere between hours 15 and 24 — has pacing problems that Rockstar Games hasn't fully solved. Patches have helped. They haven't fixed.
The story is told mostly through environment and incidental dialogue, which is the right choice for the kind of game this is. There are no twenty-minute cutscenes. There are no NPCs who follow you around explaining lore. What there is, instead, is a world that responds to attention.
Visuals & Performance
Visually, Red Dead Redemption 2 prioritizes legibility over spectacle. That's the right call. Rockstar Games could have built a tech demo. Instead they built a game where you can read the board at a glance and that's worth more than any number of polygons.

Verdict
Red Dead Redemption 2 is the kind of game that rewards patience. The first three hours don't sell it. The thirtieth hour does. If you have the time, give it. If you don't, the verdict is honest: it's not a 'short session' game.
Rockstar Games has earned the benefit of the doubt with Red Dead Redemption 2. It's not their best work — that's probably still Dark Souls III — but it's a stronger argument for taking small studios seriously than any pitch deck.
Verdict
| Category | Score |
|---|---|
| Gameplay | 8/10 |
| Story | 8/10 |
| Visuals | 7/10 |
| Replayability | 6/10 |
Frequently asked questions
How long does it take to finish Red Dead Redemption 2?
Main story runs around 18-25 hours depending on how thoroughly you explore. Completionists can spend 2-3× that.
Is Red Dead Redemption 2 good for newcomers to Open-World Western?
It depends. The systems are deep but the tutorial does a fair job. Veterans of Open-World Western will feel at home faster.
Which platform should I play Red Dead Redemption 2 on?
Console version is the most stable on launch. PC version benefits from the modding scene long-term.
Was Red Dead Redemption 2 worth the launch-day price?
If you're a fan of Rockstar Games, yes. If you're new to the studio, a sale price is more comfortable.
Are there DLCs or expansions worth picking up?
Wait for the Game of the Year edition — it bundles everything at a fair discount.
What did Rockstar Games get right (and what could be better)?
The systems are confident and the combat is satisfying. The story handoffs and load times are the rough spots.
Comments
Comments are moderated. Be civil — disagreement is fine, abuse isn't.

Spent 60 hours with this. Worth every minute.
Multiplayer mode adds 30+ hours of replay value. Underrated section.
I disagree on the verdict. The story pacing is the real issue, not the combat.
Started a new game+ run after reading this. Different experience entirely.
The economy is broken in the late game, surprised this wasn't mentioned.
Wish more outlets pushed back on the difficulty spike around hour 10.