After 14 years, Rockstar's epic horse opera Red Dead Redemption hits PC later this month

Cal Jeffrey

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Better late than never: Dust off your six-shooters for some old-school Western action as Red Dead Redemption rolls out on PC later this month. Players who have only played the 2019 prequel-sequel Red Dead Redemption 2 should enjoy continuing the cowboy adventure, this time filling John Marston's boots.

On Tuesday, Rockstar announced a PC conversion of Red Dead Redemption slated for launch later this month. It has been 14 years since it released the title exclusively on the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 in 2010. The Nintendo Switch and PlayStation 4 got remasters last year. Now it's ready for the Master Race.

Now, before y'all go raisin' a fuss about it taking longer than a coon's age, just you remember that portin' a game from two generations ago to the latest goldarn hardware is a hard row to hoe (sorry, I went retro 1899 there for a second). Rockstar collaborated with studio Double Eleven to ensure the port has all the goodies, including native 4K at up to 144Hz, with HDR10, Nvidia DLSS 3.7, and AMD FSR 3.0. The game also supports Ultrawide (21:9) and Super Ultrawide (32:9) monitors.

Of course, no PC remake would be complete without all the usual PC tweaks and settings, like Nvidia Frame Generation, adjustable draw distances, shadow quality settings, and the like. While the game retains controller support for those who like the feel of a gamepad, it also has full keyboard-and-mouse support for that snappy responsiveness. Ray tracing was suspiciously absent from the announcement, but give it a few weeks, and we will undoubtedly be able to say, "There's a mod for that."

According to its Steam listing, players need an Intel Core i5-4670 or AMD FX-9590 processor, a GeForce GTX 960 or Radeon R7 360, 8GB RAM, and a modest 12GB of available storage to meet the minimum requirements. Recommended specs are a bit higher, requiring an Intel Core i5-8500 or AMD Ryzen 5 3500X and an Nvidia RTX 2070 or AMD RX 5700 XT or better. Although an HDD will suffice, Rockstar recommends a fast SSD for the best performance.

Preorders should open next week on Steam, Epic Games Store, and through the Rockstar Store. However, the announcement didn't mention a price. Considering the PS4 version costs $50, the PC port will likely ask as much. It launches on October 29, just in time for players to enjoy the spooky bundled standalone DLC, Undead Nightmare, during the Halloween holiday.

The combined value of the two games and the modern visuals should make it a worthwhile buy, especially for those who have never played it. Players who have completed Red Dead 2 should enjoy the few "spoilers," as they fit nicely into the original game's narrative.

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I thought RDR was a super slow and boring reskin of GTA3. You couldn't pay me to play the game, the 5-6 hours I put into it trying to play and enjoy it was more than enough for me.
 
I remember back in the day when I was a poor school and a college student who yearned for this game on my low end pc. I would look up ps3 emulators and check for rumors surrounding a pc release. I eventually ended up getting a ps4 but never got around to play this. In fact I dont even know if I can or not on a ps4. I'm actually excited about this more than most modern games in the last 5 years. Gaming sucks and if a certified banger like this can be played, I wont think twice.
 
I love the concept, we don't really get a lot of games in a western setting, but I've never been able to get into Rockstar's story telling.

Always came off with a strong "suburban kid tryna be gangsta" vibe to it in any of the GTA 3 and onward games.

Maybe I'll pick this up at some point if the price ever gets low enough to justify a shits n giggles purchase.

Not sure if
 
My brother bought me Rdr2, played it for a bit a got completely bored with it.
Spent a few months disparaging it as a 'Horse riding simulator ' etc etc.
One day, had nothing to play, so went back to it, gave it a good few hours and then I couldn't leave it alone until I finished it.

Great game, looking forward to this release.
 
This is the new norm: No new games, no worries. Let's recycle old games to sell as though as they are new.
Its easy cash grab for people who want that nostaglia. its like a drug. Only re-mastered game I bought (and recent) was dead rising deluxe remaster....because killing zombies is fun no matter what.
 
My brother bought me Rdr2, played it for a bit a got completely bored with it.
Spent a few months disparaging it as a 'Horse riding simulator ' etc etc.
One day, had nothing to play, so went back to it, gave it a good few hours and then I couldn't leave it alone until I finished it.

Great game, looking forward to this release.

Yes its a slowburner. Gets better and better, as you move the camp, gets fast travel etc.
 
I'm the rare case of someone who never played rdr, I did buy and try rdr2 but it was boring af,

I'll snag this game and hopefully since its an older rockstar game before they got all super serious it'll actually be "fun".
 
This is the new norm: No new games, no worries. Let's recycle old games to sell as though as they are new.

Sometimes I agree, but not in this case. This game was never released on PC. I always wanted a remastered RDR1 port for PC.

It is playable in emulators, in PCs with specs as high as the recommended specs for this official port. But this port is a remaster and will probably look and run much better.
 
I enjoyed this game a lot when it came out.
Not nearly as deep or complicated control scheme as RDR2.

$50 tho? I can wait for a price drop
Yea, I mean...I loved RDR when it came out all those years ago. There's no chance I'd pay money now to play it again. But the community who has pushed for this for years obviously indicated they would. I just don't know why. RDR2 is better in every way.
 
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