Tijuana Adult Entertainment: Red Dead Redemption AU Review
John Marston’s moral compass – which is your moral compass, actually – never explicitly guides you down a clear-cut path per se. Instead, the onus is on you to complete the game as you see fit. If a dispute between a prostitute and a drunken, knife-happy patron strikes you as funny, walk on. If you want to intervene, hog-tie him with your lasso and leave him there. If your hackles are up, shoot him. Or her. Your infamy and honour are tracked at all times and any good deed or misdemeanour is tallied and weighed up against your running total – and the world reacts accordingly. People treat you differently – or opt not to talk to you at all, if your crimes are so severe and your reputation precedes you so greatly. Want to be a fearsome, immoral gun-toting robber of bandwagons and whorehouses? Want to maim the old man and collect his deed? Go nuts; but remember, that old man has family somewhere – and they can gun for blood just as easily. In fact, some of the game’s most interesting structural moments come from early decisions that come back to haunt you.
See the full article from “IGN”







