
It sounds lazy to describe Rockstar's new epic Red Dead Redemption as a Wild West Grand Theft Auto, but if you've spent any time wandering around GTA IV's Liberty City, the comparisons are unavoidable: this is a big, living world. Animals hunt each other, people rob each other, crews work on railways, and saloons hum with the sound of piano music, comely ladies, and unbecoming fights. All of them will cheerfully get on with their lives around you. Until you start casually slaughtering them, of course.

Red Dead Redemption hits 3.3 million Netflix downloads on mobile, underscoring how subscription access drives reach over paid sales.
More like people don't play these type of games on their phone normally and don't try them out. Not like the places where people do play these games haven't crushed those numbers easily.
How many people actually played more than an hour of the game or came close to finishing it on mobile is the real question. If people aren't playing the games to a point that is purposeful, then why try when a subscription that is behind a streaming service isn't a sign of success but just curiosity.

Rockstar says the free upgrade issue affecting Red Dead Redemption Xbox 360 owners requires more time to resolve, with another update expected within five days.
I’m not sure what the exact issue is. I had no trouble getting the free update—you basically get the new game for free if you have the 360 version in your digital library. Maybe the problem is related to owning or not owning the Undead DLC expansion.

A detailed comparison of Red Dead Redemption on Switch 2, PS4, and PS5 shows stronger settings, better performance, and a major uplift for Nintendo’s new hardware.