🦮 Problem Red Dead Redemption 2
All Discussions Screenshots Artwork Broadcasts Videos News Guides Reviews. Red Dead Redemption 2 > General Discussions > Topic Details. Hoodsolinni 6 minutes ago. Dualshock/Dualsence compatibility problem. I used to play RDR2 on my dualshock. With a last steam update, somehow now i got an XBOX controller layout!
Purchase newspaper after completing Chapter 1. Heavy weapons. Greed is American virtue. Purchase newspaper in Chapter 3 after completing the mission 'Advertising, the New American Art'. Remove map
Hi all,I recently installed Rdr 2 on windows 11 after a clean format from Epic Games. It shows some dll files are missing.Earlier the game used to work.Is there a correct way to install those files
This is so discouraging that I am considering dumping the game. This is just terrible. Go to your Documents folder and right click Rockstar Games folder and go to Properties, untick the ReadOnly box and click OK and then YES to subfolders + files. Then load the game back up and see how it does.
Red Dead Redemption 2 has received a hefty update for the PC version which cures a bunch of problematic crashes and issues, including the ‘ unexpected exit ’ blues affecting some gamers, and
Red Dead Redemption 2 is one of the most popular games of this modern age. Although the game has received a lot of good reviews from players around the world
Plenty of gamers have taken to Rockstar’s official forums and the Red Dead Redemption Reddit page to state that there’s a bug that is stopping them from progressing in these missions. Whether
Red Dead Redemption 2. i have the same problem. how did you even manage to get an answer from the rs support? im waiting now for more than a week, but still no
Regardless, the more important detail is that disabling your microphone in-game can immediately resolve audio issues. So, launch Red Dead Redemption 2 and head into the game’s settings. From there, just switch your mic off and try to play again. You probably won’t encounter the problem again. Tweak Audio Settings
NRhUNl. Recommended Posts kelk19 Posted July 28, 2021 Mam spory błąd z grą. Najlepiej pokażą go screeny. Problem pojawia się gdy zmieniam głośność, bo po zmianie w miejscu paska pojawia się taka oto mozaika migających pikseli. Drugi screen pochodzi z kolei po minimalizacji i powrocie do okna gry. Sterowniki karty graficznej aktualne, dodałam do wyjątków w Windows Defender i nic to nie dało. Nie wiem co robić, bo tak grać się nie da. Z minimalizacji jeszcze mogę zrezygnować ale głośność czasami trzeba regulować. Jeśli ktoś wie co można na to poradzić byłabym bardzo wdzięczna. Link to comment Niebieska Posted July 28, 2021 Wygląda to na padającą kartę graficzną. Podaj specyfikację swojego kompa wraz z marką i mocą swojego zasilacza. Link to comment kelk19 Posted July 28, 2021 Author Posted July 28, 2021 @Niebieska ASUS TUF GAMING A15 FA506II-AL038 Procesor: AMD Ryzen 7 4800H, 16 RAM, NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 Ti, moc zasilacza: 48 Wh Link to comment Niebieska Posted July 28, 2021 To laptop, sprawa się komplikuje. Odinstaluj sterownik karty graficznej za pomocą DDU i zainstaluj ponownie. Jeżeli nie pomoże to lapek leci na gwarancje bo wygląda to na uszkodzenie karty graficznej. Link to comment kelk19 Posted July 28, 2021 Author Posted July 28, 2021 @Niebieska Tylko dlaczego z innymi grami nie ma problemu? Przykładowo taki cyberpunk nie miał żadnych problemów. Link to comment Niebieska Posted July 28, 2021 Link to comment kelk19 Posted July 28, 2021 Author Posted July 28, 2021 Link to comment Niebieska Posted July 29, 2021 Pokaż screen z HWInfo64 zakładka Sensors po ok 15min grania w tą grę. Link to comment kelk19 Posted July 29, 2021 Author Posted July 29, 2021 Link to comment Niebieska Posted July 29, 2021 Trochę się grzeje CPU, widzę, że integra miesza się do działa karty dedykowanej. Teraz pytanie, przez którą grafę masz te problemy. 1 Link to comment 2 weeks later... Solution kelk19 Posted August 9, 2021 Author Solution Posted August 9, 2021 @Niebieska Minęło trochę czasu ale chciałam dać znać z czym był problem, może komuś się przyda, chociaż rozwiązanie było dość proste. W ustawieniach był wybór karty graficznej. W sumie screeny lepiej to pokażą. Zmieniłam z 0 na 1 i problemu już nie ma. Teraz trochę głupio, że nie przeczytałam tego dokładniej, ale dzięki za poświęcony czas. Link to comment Create an account or sign in to comment You need to be a member in order to leave a comment Sign in Already have an account? Sign in here. Sign In Now
The Red Dead Redemption 2 Troubleshooting Guide will help you fix the many problems that gamers will face trying to play the new AAA title from Rockstar Games! The Red Dead Redemption 2 Troubleshooting Guide! Red Dead Redemption 2 for PC, one of the most promising AAA title of Q4 2019, has been wracked by severe launch issues. In this guide, we will take a look at the biggest problems facing gamers trying to play Red Dead Redemption 2, and share with you the solutions! Red Dead Redemption 2 PC : What’s New? Red Dead Redemption 2 was one of the best selling games in 2018, and the PC edition with enhanced graphics, uncapped frame rates, new content and a raft of enhancements has just been released! Improved graphics, including support for 4K, HDR and higher frame rates! Three new Bounty Hunter missions! Two new Gang Hideouts! Four new weapons for Story Mode! Two new treasure maps! Four new horses, and three new wild horse variants! Five new trinkets with new effects! New photo mode! Recommended : Red Dead Redemption 2 PC : What You Need To Know! Here are some online purchase options for PS4 and Xbox One : US : PS4 | PS4 55 Gold Bars | Xbox One Special Edition | Xbox One Ultimate Edition UK : PS4 | PS4 Ultimate Edition | PS4 55 Gold Bars | Xbox One Special Edition AU : PS4 | PS4 Special Edition | Xbox One MY : PS4 | PS4 Special Edition | Xbox One SG : PS4 | Xbox One Here are the online purchase options for PC : MY : Special Edition | Ultimate Edition SG : Standard Edition | Special Edition | Ultimate Edition We will have more PC purchase links up shortly. Red Dead Redemption 2 : Known Problems Here is the current list of known problems with Red Dead Redemption 2 for PC : Rockstar Games Launcher fails to initialise, with this error message The Rockstar Games Launcher failed to initialize Rockstar Games Launcher gets stuck decrypting preloaded files. Rockstar Games Launcher crashes when you attempt to launch Red Dead Redemption 2, with this error message : The Rockstar Games Launcher exited unexpectedly Rockstar Games Launcher crashes when being launched from Epic Games Launcher Rockstar Games Launch refuses to launch Red Dead Redemption 2, when initiated from Epic Games Launcher, with this error message Unable to launch game, please verify your game data Rockstar Games Launcher refuses to launch Red Dead Redemption 2, with the error message : Activation Required Red Dead Redemption 2 crashes with this error message : Red Dead Redemption 2 exited unexpectedly Stuttering or freezing during game play due to CPU maxing out Sudden drop in frame rate (fps) during game play Red Dead Redemption 2 PC Solution Guide Solution #1 : Update Your Graphics Card Driver As we pointed out in an article we posted earlier, make sure you update your graphics driver : AMD : Radeon Software Adrenalin Edition or newer NVIDIA : GeForce Game Ready Driver or newer Recommended : Red Dead Redemption 2 : Use These AMD + NVIDIA Drivers! Solution #2 : Disable Antivirus or Add To Whitelist / Exemption List Antivirus software are apparently causing RDR2 to crash, especially during the intro / shotgun scene. Either disable your antivirus software temporarily (not really advisable), or add Red Dead Redemption 2 to its whitelist or exemption list. Solution #3 : Update The Rockstar Games Launcher Rockstar just issued a update to fix the many issues this buggy launcher was causing : Close any running Rockstar game Close the Rockstar Games Launcher Restart the Rockstar Games Launcher, and let it update to or newer Solution #4 : Logging Out And Back Into Rockstar Games Launcher The Activation Required error can apparently be solved by simply logging out of the Rockstar Games Launcher, and logging back in again. Solution #5 : Clear The Rockstar Games Launch Profile Cache But in certain situations, if logging out and back in again fails, you will need to clear your local profile cache : In Rockstar Games Launcher, go to Settings > Account Information Select Delete Local Profile (This will only delete the local cache. It will not delete your Social Club account or saved games) Select Confirm Sign into the Rockstar Games Launcher again Solution #6 : Reduce Number Of CPU Cores Red Dead Redemption 2 is apparently hogging the CPU, causing stuttering or freezing. A temporary workaround has been suggested – reduce the number of CPU cores it can use : Right click on in Windows Explorer In the drop-down list, select Set Affinity You will a list of available CPU cores. Uncheck one or two cores. Solution #7 : Switch To DirectX 12 Generally, Vulkan will offer significantly better performance than DirectX 12. Where possible, you should enable Vulkan, instead of DirectX 12. However, if you notice sudden drops in frame rate, try switching from Vulkan to DirectX 12. This will likely get fixed in a future graphics card driver. Solution #8 : Lower The Graphics Settings Rockstar appears to be overly optimistic about the system requirements of RDR2. NVIDIA ran their own benchmarks, and recommended these cards for 60 fps gaming instead : 4K (Medium High) : GeForce RTX 2080 Ti or better 1440p (Ultra) : GeForce RTX 2080 Ti or better 1440p (High) : GeForce RTX 2070 SUPER or GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER 1080p (Ultra) : GeForce RTX 2070 / GeForce RTX 2070 SUPER or better 1080p (High) : GeForce RTX 2060 or better So, if you are getting low frame rates, reduce the graphics settings. In particular, volumetric graphics and water quality settings. Recommended Reading Red Dead Redemption 2 PC : What You Need To Know! Shadow of the Tomb Raider Definitive Edition : Get It Now! Red Dead Redemption 2 : Use These AMD + NVIDIA Drivers! Cosmic Pioneer : Find Out How To Get It FREE! 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This article contains spoilers for the entirety of Red Dead Redemption 1 and 2Throughout the vast, sprawling, seemingly never-ending experience of Red Dead Redemption 2, I found myself asking the same question over and over again: Do I even want any of this?Do I need my horse's dynamic testicle physics and shitting patterns? Does having to press R2 multiple times to drink a cup of coffee really add to my immersion in the world? What in god's name do mercilessly unforgiving collision physics contribute, aside from interruptions to story moments and YouTube fail compilations? How could details like oily and muddy water, custom mounting animations, and farting ever justify the cost of Rockstar Games employees' 100-hour work weeks? 75 underwhelming hours of my life later, credits rolled on the main story, and the answer to these questions came clear as day: No. I didn't want any of it. In its haste to give me everything, Red Dead Redemption 2 finds purpose in absolutely nothing. In its haste to give me everything, Red Dead Redemption 2 finds purpose in absolutely nothing. The monumental disappointment of Red Dead Redemption 2 stems from the assumption that the sheer extravagance of its excesses bears some sort of inherent artistic value. Yet with quadruple the length, world, music, content, detail, graphical fidelity, etc., Red Dead Redemption 2 achieves far less than half the resonance of its predecessor. Existential crisis courses through the veins of Red Dead Redemption's universe. In the first game, its revisionist Western film DNA created a story that interrogated the presumed morality, social progress, ideals, and reality of our American the question plaguing the newly released prequel is a more meta one. From its slavish conceit of realism, compulsive bigness, and astounding disinterest in telling a story worth the several dozen hours it demands, Red Dead Redemption 2 fails to justify its own excessive existence. What is in a prequel?I get it. Prequel narratives are tough to justify. But few come across as such unabashed, thinly veiled find-and-replace retreads of their originals as Red Dead Redemption 2. Worse still, this game only serves to weaken the accomplishments of what came before Arthur Morgan, the most purposeless protagonist to ever grace a box art cover, was retconned into existence solely to die. You can tell from 3,000 miles away, especially knowing he's not present nor even mentioned in John Marston's future. Sucks to suck? Credit: rockstar But that isn't the only reason it's tough to invest in him. Let's try an experiment: Name a single unique characteristic of Arthur Morgan's that he does not share with John Marston. (Tuberculosis doesn't count.) Also, stop me if you've heard this one before: A down-on-his-luck Old West outlaw, known for dead-eye gunslinging, begrudgingly continues to do bad things while trying to justify them as an ultimate good, but with increasing uncertainty. He fights to do one purely good thing, until consequence catches up and he game so often forgets to give its own protagonist a reason for being, that it's probably better categorized as a preamble rather than a prequel to John's story. Its ludicrously long "epilogue" (which spans two parts and multiple hours) makes as much clear. Poor Arthur Morgan, the most purposeless protagonist to ever grace a box art cover. But even as a preamble, Red Dead Redemption 2 succeeds only in telegraphing insights and backstory already masterfully implied by the original's subtext. If anything, this new peek into the Marston family's genesis highlights a flaw the first game hid well, which is that Abigail and Jack are shallow cardboard cutouts of Wife and Child. The former is portrayed in Red Dead Redemption 2 as a grotesque cliche of the Old Ball and Chain. With no agency or desires outside of John, Abigail's little more than a continuous list of shrill demands, ranging from the understandable (yeah, you shouldn't raise a kid in this environment) to the absurd (let's buy this ranch we've never seen with our no money and experience -- or I'm leaving!).For most of the game, Jack's just a representation of innocence contrasting the cruelty of his surroundings. He practically walks around gunfights in a sailor suit licking a lollipop. Later in the game, he becomes more of the fleshed-out human being from the original, with interests unrelated to his father. Yet another one of Red Dead Redemption 2's missed opportunities, though, is any exploration of the one question the first game left us with about Jack. How could a sensitive, shy boy mostly raised on a ranch, who wants nothing to do with outlawing, transform into the cold-blooded killer of the first game's epilogue?Now there's an interesting arc that might've actually warranted a revisitation of Red Dead the Dutch The most compelling justification for the prequel's existence is Dutch van der Linde, the only character that saves Red Dead Redemption 2's story from utter pointlessness. Portrayed only as an omnipresent, villainous specter in the first game, fruitful and unexplored ground remained in telling his origin story. Inexplicably, though, this isn't his story and Dutch isn't the protagonist. There are untold missed opportunities in showing the Red Dead world from his perspective, which would've offered a bigger shift in tone, theme, genre, and character arc. Instead, both Arthur and John act as practically interchangeable anti-heroes built for the same nihilistic cynicism that defines the revisionist Western genre. On the other hand, Dutch represented more of the idealism from classic Western movies, initially embodying this intoxicating fantasy of the gunslinger who fights for the moral soul of our American future. Just in case you missed it in the epigraph, this is repeated several times in the game too Credit: rockstar That sounds a lot like the gang's early glory days we keep hearing about in both Red Dead Redemption 1 and 2. Yet even more inexplicably, we don't start the prequel with Dutch at his prime, or the gang truly believing in his vision of a way of life that's superior to industrialist the game that could've been, though, if we (as Dutch) watched our own mask fall, the glory of our idealism crumbling under the pressures of an ever-changing and hostile originality be damned! Red Dead Redemption 2 opts to open with a literal wall of text explaining that we've already reached the Death of the West, when outlaws are being hunted. You know, kinda like the exact same premise of Red Dead Redemption 1. We're subjected to (I repeat) a minimum 60 hours of a shitty dude getting shittier From the very start of the prequel, Dutch is already falling apart at the seams. There are multiple mentions of him unnecessarily and brutally killing a girl. Arthur is already expressing doubts about what used to make their gang feel like more than just your standard beginning in the aftermath of a failed robbery, with Dutch and the gang in the midst of moral degradation, the narrative ensures it can do nothing but spin in circles. We're subjected to (I repeat) a minimum 60 hours of a shitty dude getting shittier, leaving me to wonder whether the people around him are just that stupid, or just that poorly written. Arthur is left with nothing to do but say 1,001 variations of "I dunno, man, I feel like we already tried that one." Before doing the same shit again wrong kind of nihilismIf the infuriating redundancy of Red Dead Redemption 2's story is supposed to prove a point, it doesn't. Is this epic-length journey about the utter banality of outlaw life? Not sure who that message is for if that's the maybe Rockstar wanted to reiterate the original's spectacular exhibition of the cyclical nature of violence -- how this society traps us in our own ethical demise no matter what we choose. That'd justify Arthur's death, and the switch to John in the epilogue at the end of Red Dead Redemption 2's epilogue blows that thematic takeaway to smithereens. Meanwhile, the first game's epilogue spelled it out with devastating clarity. I guess this is... cute? Credit: rockstar In Red Dead Redemption 1's epilogue, John's son negates everything his father fought for by exacting revenge on the man who killed him -- before the title card "REDEMPTION" flashes across the screen, dripping in irony. In Red Dead Redemption 2, John and company miraculously return from exacting their revenge on Micah in one piece, to live out their droll or idyllic post-outlaw dreams. At the very end, John and Abigail stand on the hill that will eventually become their graves, marveling at their modest fortunes in nauseatingly blissful ignorance. Who the hell is this cheery ending for?People who've played the first game know this new leaf is as much a false start as it is a false ending, since soon government men will come knocking to collect the debts of John's sins. Or if you're a new player, the takeaway seems to be, welp, guess it all worked out in the end!The most stuff in any game ever!To be fair, there is an initial awe inherent to the sheer scope of Red Dead Redemption 2's inconceivable the Vegas Strip, the glut of stuff to do bedazzles: Realistically meticulous hunting! Realistically boring fishing! Realistically unsettling debt collection! Realistically anxious preoccupations with food and hunger! Realistically involved horse bonding! Realistically cavalier homestead and campsite robbing! Realistically routine grooming! Realistically laborious housework like moving hay!But like so many other blockbuster games, Red Dead Redemption 2's gorgeous expanse is irredeemably cheapened by a mistaken belief that "more" equates to "depth." As the rush of hunting quality bear pelts wanes, you're left with a labyrinthine chore of an open world that repeatedly undermines its own the novelty wears off, a creeping, empty joylessness settles in instead. Sure, you can do all these things. But do you even want to do most of them? You're left with a labyrinthine chore of an open world that repeatedly undermines its own intent. Throwing in pointless shit is not what makes a virtual world feel like a lived-in experience. Sicking the cops on players for failures of your own finicky control scheme does not make me empathize with Arthur and the gang's feeling that outlaws are now being mercilessly Dead Redemption 2's selective realism shatters all illusion that its obsequious fetish for detail contributes to immersion in its don't even resent Red Dead Redemption 2 for its slowness, or the decided lack of fun embedded into its design philosophy. That's one of its most admirable carryovers from the original game. What irks me, actually, is its failure to even fully commit to this in any meaningful way. Unlike the first game, the most tedious tasks are left to optional sidebars (chopping wood, feeding chickens, picking up cow shit -- you can do it all on your ranch, you psychopath!). Compare that to the forced, grueling boredom of Red Dead Redemption 1's oft-debated first few hours, which starts with a 15-minute opening cinematic of a man sitting on a train, followed by missions of tiresome ranching, cow wrangling, wagon driving, and pest control. In that first game, Rockstar opened a blockbuster gunslinging Western with an onslaught of mundanity. As a result, we didn't just learn that this was the dream John Marston was fighting for -- giving up the thrill of gunslinging for the slow death of civilized life. We felt the game's end, after so many hours of emotionally exhausting murderous rampages, I truly missed those slow, simple early days on Ms. McFarlane's ranch. So much so that relief washed over me after the final deed was done, Dutch was dead, and Jamie Lidell's "Compass" played as you rode down a mountain to the modest plot of land you could at last call everything is taken from you anyway. Yay John's back! Now go pick up some cow shit. Credit: rockstar In contrast, an unmistakable arrogance runs through Red Dead Redemption 2's gratuitous bigness, with a wide swath of content that exists to say, "Because we can." It's an attitude the game shares with the very post-industrial capitalism the series purportedly that's the big, post-meta-modernist joke for Rockstar's creative leaders: To tell a story lamenting everything the cavernous black hole of American capitalism destroys, from within a game that in every way indulges our same insatiable greed for more -- whether or not we want, need, or even benefit from it. Maybe they knew we'd buy this distended monstrosity of self-indulgence no matter what, so they fed us back our own gluttony like the virtual equivalent of a human centipede eating its own shit. Or, you know, maybe its executives just wanted more biggest, most beautiful wasteThe ferocity of my disappointment in Red Dead Redemption 2 comes from a place of pure original masterpiece is, in no small part, responsible for my decision to make video games my career. The preciousness I (and many others) feel toward it leaves no easy task for the act that follows. If I cared less, I wouldn't bother giving this prequel the respect of taking it as seriously as it asks to be taken. From where I'm standing, Rockstar looks a lot like Dutch van der Linde Red Dead Redemption 2 has succeeded in capturing the large majority of our cultural zeitgeist. For many, its escapism is a gift that keeps on giving. And there's no problem with I can't shake the feeling that its failures and breathlessly glowing critical reception spell out something sinister for how we judge the art of video games. Because from where I'm standing, Rockstar looks a lot like Dutch van der Linde, the idealism that made it so singular back in the day now deteriorating into an unchecked hubris. And based on reports of how its leaders treat employees who endure that out of belief in their vision, that metaphor doesn't feel like much of a least when it comes to Red Dead Redemption 2, it's a game that sure can talk pretty -- but we're fools to believe its promise leads us anywhere but to the grave.
problem red dead redemption 2