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Red Dead Redemption: Game of the Year Edition - Xbox One and Xbox 360

  • Based on 6,625 reviews
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Availability: Only 1 left in stock, order soon!
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Arrives Wednesday, May 13
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Platform For Display: Xbox 360


Features

  • The Dead Eye targeting mechanic, allowing the player to slow down time for shot accuracy
  • Expansive open-world gameplay set in the final years of the American Wild West.
  • Massive play area filled with NPCs, made up 3 unique regions composed of towns and outposts filled with varying characters
  • Morality system based on honor and fame generated by the players actions throughout the game.
  • Western themed mini-games including showdowns, gambling, hunting bounties, cattle herding and five finger fillet

Description

Red Dead Redemption is a Western epic, set at the turn of the 20th century when the lawless and chaotic badlands began to give way to the expanding reach of government and the spread of the Industrial Age. The story of former outlaw, John Marston, Red Dead Redemption takes players on a great adventure across the American frontier. The Legends and Killers Multiplayer Pack: Adds to the Red Dead multiplayer experience with nine additional active Competitive mode map locations tailored for multiplayer action, 8 playable characters from Red Dead Revolver, the devastating Tomahawk weapon and more.

Number of Players: 16


Publication Date: October 11, 2011


Computer Platform: Xbox 360


Global Trade Identification Number: 71


UPC: 710425490071


Compatible Video Game Console Models: Microsoft Xbox 360, Microsoft Xbox 360 E, Microsoft Xbox One, Microsoft Xbox One S, Microsoft Xbox One X


Release date: October 11, 2011


Product Dimensions: 0.5 x 5.4 x 7.5 inches; 2.47 ounces


Type of item: Video Game


Language: English


Rated: Mature


Item model number: 49007


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Item Weight: 2.47 ounces


Department: All Ages


Manufacturer: Rockstar Games


Batteries: 1 AAA batteries required.


Date First Available: September 19, 2011


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Wednesday, May 13

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Simply, A Must Own Game
Platform For Display: Xbox 360
I’m a day late and a few dollars short getting to the Red Dead Redemption party. I bought the Game Of The Year edition some time ago. The Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 action-adventure game debuted on May 18, 2010. The game proved to become one of Rockstar Studio’s masterpieces. I’ve been a fan of Rockstar’s storytelling since Grand Theft Auto III released back in 2003. Their particular brand of storytelling shines through in Red Dead Redemption. Red Dead Redemption is based inside Rockstar’s version of our universe (which is not the same as the Grand Theft Auto universes) in 1911. The Wild West is dead and dying as American civilization reigns in outlaws and charlatans. John Marston, a reformed outlaw, is caught in the middle of progress’ warpath. As Marston, you step off a train at the station in fictitious Armadillo (based on Amarillo). There you head to Fort Mercer with a local guide where you are shot in the gut and left for dead. Marston awakens in a ranch hand’s hut. It’s revealed through the ranch owner, Bonnie MacFarlane, scooped you up, put you in a wagon, and took you to a doctor in Armadillo. Bonnie politely interrogates Marston, revealing that he was hunting wanted outlaw and gang leader, Bill Williamson. She then asks Marston to work off the fifteen-dollar medical bill and he obliges. After the bill is paid, Bonnie recommends heading to the U.S. Marshall’s office in Armadillo concerning any aid in assaulting Fort Mercer in search of Bill Williamson. I’m going to stop with the plot here because I hate spoilers as much as the next person. Where gameplay is concerned, Red Dead Redemption functions like any other open-world game that you would expect from Rockstar. The major difference here is that many towns, settlements, and cities are in-game days apart. It gives a more realistic experience, but after two hours real world time it becomes a pain in the ass. Over time, Rockstar has learned a few things about what fans want. In Grand Theft Auto IV, developers introduced a functioning taxi system that allowed gamers to travel to any selected area within reason. That idea transferred over to Red Dead Redemption in the form of stagecoaches. They do not allow you to travel to any point on the game map, but they cut ten-minute journeys into 3-second hops between towns. Red Dead Redemption employs a slow-motion gunslinging ability called the Dead-Eye. This allows the player to successfully fend off an insane slew of enemies ranging from the garden-variety coyote, the coyote’s cousin – the wolf, to Mexican rebels and fugitive American outlaws. Within a few hours of playing, you will pick up on the importance of the shotgun to stagecoach drivers and their passengers “riding shotgun.” The game being set in early 1900s America; there is a wide array of weaponry available. There are at least three or four variants in each type of gun (pistol/revolver, shotgun, repeater rifle, sniper rifle, thrown, explosive, and lasso/whip). Carriages can become difficult to maneuver because they have a different default button scheme than what the average gamer has been accustomed to with other vehicles in videogames. The setting in Red Dead Redemption is mostly based on the Four Corners area of the American Southwest. The graphics are gorgeous. Leaves in the trees and wild fields move in the breeze. In two years, Rockstar considerably updated their graphics. That’s a comparison between Red Dead Redemption (2010) and Grand Theft Auto IV (2008). It’s easy to forget your goal and simply ride off into the sunset on a wild mustang you just broke in (entirely possible, by the way). Erik Brudvig at IGN (2010) said, “The setting of Red Dead Redemption, leaving out the interactive elements, is an achievement in itself.” When I purchase videogames, I ask myself why should I purchase them. In regards to Red Dead Redemption in particular, this game has a huge factor to figure. If you love Western genre entertainment then you will love this game. If you hate Western flicks then this game is going to lose about sixty percent appeal. Western movie fans will appreciate the subtle nods to popular movies like The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly, Fistful of Dollars, For A Few Dollars More, Tombstone, and True Grit. If you happen to enjoy the open-endedness of open-world games then you will most likely enjoy Red Dead Redemption. Maybe you prefer the freedom to embrace good or evil. If you have ever wanted to act out your favorite Western – this is your chance! So why should you purchase Red Dead Redemption? Well for one, this award-winning game currently holds a 95 and a 9/10 on Metacritic. IGN gives it a 9.7. It currently holds 4.6 out of 5 stars on Amazon. The Official Xbox Magazine (2010) said, “Red Dead Redemption is a truly epic resuscitation of the Western theme in games. It's also easily the best gunslinging game we've ever played.” Critics and fellow gamers aren’t wrong about the game. It’s a masterpiece – complete with a compelling story that is deserving of your time and money. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 19, 2015 by S. Wojtkiewicz

  • Why are you here and haven't bought it yet?
Platform For Display: Xbox 360
This is it, the original, the OG. This game will go down in history, at least, my own personal historical memory. It is rather embarrassing how many hours I put into this game. As a teenager, I spent a lot of time alone because of my mom’s work schedule. As a result, much of my time was spent fantasizing about lives I couldn’t live at the time. At first it was books like enabled that and then once the Xbox 360 came out, it was video games. This game basically allowed me to live an alternate, impossible life, in a century I could see myself living in. Some may say western games are cliché, boring, too drawn out. Being drawn out is certainly an attribute Red Dead Redemption is worthy of, but for me, that was a good thing. The plot is summed up nicely in the product description that says “Experience Marston’s journey across the sprawling expanses of the American West and Mexico as he fights to bury his blood-stained past and seek a new future for himself and his family”. It is anything but boring and cliché. The slow pace allowed for an experience of realism and proper plot development. Anything faster would feel too plastic and artificial. After coming home from the horror that was high school, I would immerse myself in a fantastic world of gunslingers, gangs, and turmoil. Nothing ever seems routine here. At school, everything was predictable. Everything followed an orderly schedule and you always knew what was going to come next. In the world of Red Dead, however, this was just the opposite. Every time I would gallop into the town of Armadillo, for instance, something new happened. Whether it’s encountering a gang of miscreants shooting up the town, a criminal fleeing from a robbery, or some smart-mouthed stranger targeting my massive ego to a duel, it all seemed real. My real life at the time was robotic, and this game fulfilled my desire for a life of danger, adventure, and heroism. I chose to write this review because of how much this game meant to me in the past. The reality is, however, that I bought this game mainly to prepare myself for the sequel coming out in October (which I pre-ordered the day it was announced). I’d be lying if my nostalgia didn’t also secretly hope that playing would also give me the same effect as before. In case you’re wondering, it did. No matter how many playthroughs I go through, I am never bored, and I’m always in awe. I discover something new every time. I didn’t want to waste my review blabbing about how the gameplay plays out, what the plot is, how many guns there are, etc. You can read the other reviews if you want that. Just another sheep sums up the stuff you can do pretty well and I’ll just quote it here: If you like skinning animals, riding horses, pissing off locals, being a gentlemen, shooting birds from a moving train, outrunning lawmen, becoming a lawman, betraying the lawmen, outrunning the lawmen, shooting bad guys, shooting good guys, saving women, deciding not to save women, collecting herbs, wearing badass clothes, owning a lot of badass guns, winning money from strangers, hunting outlaws, killing cougars with a knife, silencing witnesses, abusing dynamite, buy the game already.”. All of that pales in comparison to what really makes a game good. I believe that how a game makes you feel is really the reason why we enjoy a game. If you want to live a life you never can and be swept away in a brilliant storyline in a beautiful world, this in the game for you. Even though it is old by video game standards, Red Dead Redemption is hands-down the best game I have ever played. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 15, 2018 by Margaret Zehren

  • Great game with the extras too.
Platform For Display: Xbox 360
A classic western game with all the extra. Worth the price. If you like westerns, this is a must have.
Reviewed in the United States on April 3, 2026 by David J8

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