Red Dead Redemption 2has been out for a year and six months now, which means that many have laced their boots up and donned their hats as Arthur Morgan for the last time for now. Almost certainly, there have been players who have complete everything in theRDR2campaignright now, all the side activities, and discovered plenty of secrets. Those players and even those who beat the campaign to never return are all likely clinging to hope for a single thing: single-player DLC.
Unfortunately, Rockstar Games has stated that there would be no suchDLC forRed Dead Redemption 2, instead the company is focusing on its online counterpart,Red Dead Online. This is the same approach it took withGrand Theft Auto 5, and while there are key differences worth considering, hope for DLC dies with every passing month. The biggest culprit for building hype for this was the datamined map expansion, but perhaps, just maybe, there’s a future to that.
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Many likely remember last fall when dataminers discovered a potentialmap expansion forRed Dead Redemption 2, a big hint for DLC at the time, as it showed deactivated game models for Mexico. This included elements for the town Chuparosa, a Mexican Army soldier model, and even a bounty/wanted level for a region. It caused an uproar for a Mexico-related DLC, in fact, especially given that players had managed to glitch into Mexico well before these files were discovered.
But alas, like pyrite to real gold, this map expansion never came to fruition, and Rockstar’s message surroundingRed Dead Redemption 2suggest it never will be. A mainline story expansion set in Mexico, thereturn ofUndead NightmaretoRDR2, or even something small and surprising would still be welcome, and arguably it should be added at some point.
Rockstar’s attention may be onRed Dead Onlinecontent, but that’s not to say it could never shift its eyes back to the single-player campaign. After all, for a plethora of reasons,Red Dead Onlineisn’t as popular asGrand Theft Auto Online. There’s no doubt the latter’s popularity helped makeGTA 5the most profitable entertainment product of all time, so it makes sense from a business standpoint why it received a ton of support. On the other hand, that doesn’t seem likely to be the case forRed Dead Online, which means Rockstar could (and should) turn its eyes back
Reports indicate thatRed Dead Onlineis comparable toGTA Onlineat a similar stage, but with the advent of next-gen consoles on the horizons, it’s worth wondering if it itself is sort of fool’s gold.Red Dead Redemption 2itself, the main campaign and world, is incredibly popular, and that’s a guaranteed fact. Turning its eyes back to the single-player content, and actually releasing single-player DLC would make the game’s fan base incredibly happy.
Of course, it remains to be seen, asRockstar Gameshas to do what’s best for it as a business, but it doesn’t hurt to cling to hope that it could be something more tangible forRed Dead Redemption 2’s main campaign and single-player…eventually.
Red Dead Redemption 2is out now for PC, PS4, Stadia, and Xbox One.
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