Red Dead Redemption Fans, These Open-World Games Deserve Your Time

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Talking to an NPC in Kingdom Come Deliverance 2

by Tristan Jurkovich

Fans may forget that the Red Dead series began as a more linear experience in 2004 with Red Dead Revolver. After that, Rockstar expanded the scope of their Western epic with the release of Red Dead Redemption in 2010. The game now featured an open world to explore, along with a mission structure similar to Grand Theft Auto's.

Fans liked it, but the next game, Red Dead Redemption 2 in 2018, changed everything. There aren’t many Westerns that are open-world experiences akin to either Red Dead Redemption game. However, there is one specific game fans may enjoy, along with similar open-world experiences that represent the joy of freedom in big, open natural environments.

Gun

Before Red Dead There Was…

Shooting enemies in Gun (2005)

The most obvious comparison to Red Dead Redemption has to be Gun, which is also an open-world Western. It's smaller in scope, with fewer ways to explore, but it features everything one could want in a Western at the time, including cowboys, revolvers, and riding horses.

While the name was silly then and is still silly now, it is a game that is fun to go back to for a more arcade-like open-world experience. Gun did come to the Xbox 360, but it is sadly not backwards compatible on modern Xbox systems. However, it is available on Steam and should work on a Steam Deck for those interested.

Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2

Red Dead Medieval Edition

Exploring the city in Kingdom Come Deliverance 2

Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 is like a medieval version of Red Dead Redemption. It can be taken as a simulator in a more realistic, non-fantasy world. Everything players do matters, from getting mud on their clothes to not taking a bath, because NPCs will notice.

Building up a life from squalor to riches is a lengthy endeavor, but it’s an engaging one thanks to well-written characters and a tough combat system that is fun to master. There’s a big open world to explore on foot or on horseback, and everything players do could kill them, making each encounter risky but rewarding.

The Elder Scrolls 5: Skyrim

An Important, Must-Play Open-World Game

Exploring the world in The Elder Scrolls 5 Skyrim (2021)

The Elder Scrolls 5: Skyrim does take place in a fantasy world, and it’s hard to believe that fans of Red Dead Redemption would not have also played it. Launching in 2011, Skyrim helped establish the modern open-world genre and is readily available on most modern consoles out there.

Players can create their character, and after a brief hour-long intro section, they are given the entire world to explore at their leisure, either in first or third-person. There are horses, but it’s more fun to discover castle ruins or crypts on foot. There are sprawling cities to explore, but Red Dead Redemption fans will also appreciate the beauty of Skyrim’s untouched nature as they explore.

The Legend Of Zelda: Breath Of The Wild

Shooting arrows in The Legend of Zelda Breath of the Wild (Switch 2)

Unless players had a Wii U or Switch in 2017, they may have missed The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, but they likely heard about it. Even though the game is almost a decade old, it still feels fresh thanks to the recent update on Switch 2.

Red Dead Redemption fans owe it to themselves to get one of these three systems to play Breath of the Wild, because it is unlike anything else there, including in the Zelda series, since it is more non-linear than most. The hauntingly empty open-world of Hyrule is dotted with dungeons, enemy camps, and small towns that survivors of a post-apocalyptic calamity set up in an effort to rebuild society, sort of like the great American Frontier.

Ghost Of Tsushima

A Samurai Western

Attacking an enemy in Ghost of Tsushima

Ghost of Tsushima is like a samurai Western, and Red Dead Redemption fans would eat this one up. Taking place on the Japanese island of Tsushima, players will inhabit the role of Jin, a samurai who is trying to quell a Mongolian invasion of his country, which is based on real history.

One of the coolest things in a Western game like Red Dead Redemption is the quickdraw showdowns, and Ghost of Tsushima has similar showdown mechanics but with samurai swords. Also, for a more authentic Japanese cinema feel, players can turn on a black and white filter as they fight and explore this open-world samurai game.

Read the full article on GameRant   

This article originally appeared on GameRant and is republished here with permission.

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