15 Weirdest Side Missions On Red Dead Redemption 2

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If the player returns as John Marston, he can find the painting of the Strange Man fill out over a course of days, ultimately resulting in the Strange Man appearing in the mirror behind John but disappearing before John can turn around. Later, you can also find a painting of the Strange Man at Herbert Moon's shop in Armadillo. You can also see how terrible a toll that the cholera outbreak has taken on Armadillo, as a mass pyre of bodies is burning in the town's main street.


While there’s no real way to avoid crashing the horse into things other than to just be careful where you ride, it’s also worth noting that being bucked from the horse is less likely depending on its temperament, and if players calm it during a ride through predator country with cougars, gators, snakes, and bea

From exclusive clothing to entire missions, there’s a lot of missable content that some players might have never experienced in their first playthroughs as there are cut-off points in the story that the game doesn’t make players aware of until it’s already too late to go ba


There’s a reason that seatbelts in cars are so important, and riding a horse too fast can show just that. If players ever run too fast into a tree or an obstacle, their horse is going to trip and Arthur is going flying into the dirt. It might be funny at first, but it can be a pretty annoying reoccurrence that everyone does, especially when trying to evade the


This is also fairly evident in his gameplay. Arthur can do all the same activities available to John in the first Red Dead Redemption 2 Guide Dead Redemption plus more. Furthermore, many of the activities included in both games are much more realistically detailed in the sequel. In Red Dead Redemption 2, players have to clean their guns, feed their horse, and keep in mind whether they are downwind from any prey they are hunting . Assuming the player wants to fulfill a semi-accurate fantasy about the trials of being an Old West outlaw, then playing as Arthur Morgan is definitely the way to


Later on, in the events of the original Red Dead Redemption , Williamson is one of the game's main antagonists. When John first approaches him he has no interest in a meaningful conversation, instead insisting that he is happier being a leader without the interference of Dutch and his old gang. As Williamson goes deeper into the outlaw lifestyle, he shows no interest in reconnecting with John or finding a way out of his criminal ways. Whereas so many of Red Dead Redemption 2 's characters find the error in their ways, Williamson simply continues on with business, seemingly without any guilt or remo


John's story also provides less incentive for the player to do some of these activities. In both games, John is trying his best to be a reformed outlaw-turned-family-man. Assuming the player is in a mood to have a conscience, robbing strangers and heisting the local bank is less attractive of an activity. They become especially unattractive when both games track the player's honor level. It's harder to be no-good when you can see just how bad you really

Arthur ends up killing the other four shootists, then is asked to get Calloway a duel with the gunman named Slim Grant. Grant refuses, Calloway shoots him in the back, feels guilty, and then asks Arthur to duel him to regain his honor. It's all fairly depressing and bloody and shows how being a legendary gunslinger can only really end one way.


John, however, is much more effective at fulfilling one specific archetypal role within Western fiction, meaning that though Arthur serves a wider variety of purposes, John Marston is still superior depending on who is making the decision. Subjectivity, then, cannot be entirely excluded from the situation. However, if one had to recommend one of **Red Dead Redemption ** 's __ two protagonists under the pretense that they might fulfill a particular fantasy, then the safest recommendation would be for Arthur. His versatility means that even if a player wants to be a good cowboy or The Man With No Name, then Arthur can still fill that role for them. He may not be able to do it as well as John, but the player will still leave the game feeling as if their Western fantasies had been fulfil


Unfortunately, her desire to snap Dutch out of his paranoia leads to a mistake that not only harms herself, but the Van der Linde gang as a whole. In Chapter 6 of Red Dead Redemption 2 she returns to camp still drunk from Saint Denis. She then begins berating Dutch, claiming that she isn't like " any of your stooges, " a reference to the gang's blind faith in Dutch. She eventually "admits" to ratting the gang out to the Pinkertons, a reveal that players later find out is a lie. While O'Shea likely told Dutch she ratted in a desperate attempt to anger him, or at the very least grab his attention, it ended up costing her her life. In addition, it protected the actual snitch, which lead to further misfortune for the rest of the gang. Despite being a sympathetic character, her final action hurt the people she cared the most ab