So much has been said about the game. It would seem that there is something else to add. But I just wanted to say that due to age and lack of time, lately I have somehow not felt like playing long games, because there are so many games coming out, and a long game for a working person can mean months of playing one game, while for At the same time, you can complete several interesting smaller projects.
But in the case of this game everything changes. I just want to live in it. Feelings are about the same as during the passage of The Witcher 3. I.e. Usually big games are tiring, they have a lot of side activities, but they are boring (hello to games from ubisoft), but in RDR2 like The Witcher 3, you want to absorb all the content. In RDR, some unexpected events constantly happen, for example, I’m jumping and see a man hanging on a tree branch, I think something strange, I dismounted, approached this place, and then, unexpectedly, some rednecks came running at me from three sides with with knives, I didn’t have time to understand anything before they stabbed me. Or the Murphy family, who pays you a visit while you've lit a fire... It's all soooo atmospheric. And what landscapes there are, these rocks, mountain paths and lakes, swamps and fields, sometimes you just admire it. The world is interesting to explore, you can often come across mini-stories that you can only imagine on your own, like a house where all the inhabitants died for some unknown reason, or a house that was most likely robbed by bandits, because there are pools of blood and traces of a struggle.
In short, there are different sandboxes, most often I don’t want to tinker with them, because there is a lot of content in them, but it’s all the same and, accordingly, repetitious or from the category of entertain yourself (like just coast), but here the developers themselves entertain you, without taking away the right to decide what and when to do.
It's just a ten.