Wow a productive and informative member of a forum! lol Get a life you will, trolls YEEEAH!!
Hey it's fine, you can resort to name calling, but that doesn't change the fact that some of us consider RDR to be a really fantastic video game that's coupled with one of the best endings ever crafted in a video game. I know that may sound like hyperbole, but it's honestly not.
First off I should completely agree with the masses that RDR clearly has it's share of issues--it is by no means a perfect video game--but in the end I think it has so much to offer beyond that. Sure the gameplay is mostly your standard action 3rd-person shooter with a massive open-world to explore, but I think it carries much more on it's back because of it's social commentary. To me that matters a lot!
Predictably it deals with things like authoritative corruption and transient outlaws in urban conflicts, but it's also about the death of the Old West while the Industrial Revolution ushers in. And it does this with a real grit, to an era that is often romanticized. It's about how we carelessly continued to force back a civilization that existed hundreds of years before us as religion was spread throughout. It's about the lawlessness of bandits who did indescribably horrible things to so many women and children. So because we tend to forget how awful the era was, i think it's a fairly bold direction to take for such uncomfortable subject matters. Rockstar finds a way to weave this throughout the narrative and gameplay, and I love that! I think it's great that a video game has the balls to deal with these topics.
No one does exposition like Rockstar. The game slowly unravels like a ball of yarn as it introduces you to it's gameplay systems and complex narrative. It's all there, it just happens at a much slower pace than I think some gamers are willing to sit through. And look, that's totally fine, but there are times where I just wish we had more patience for these things to unfold.
Yes we all have different opinions--and that's why we're all talk'n and josh'n around here--but some times when it comes to the cynicism of games, I wonder if it's really the game or the gamer. Sometimes these types of experiences require patience, and a little more of a grounded perspective that what we experience is not going to be perfectly fitting.