Highlights

  • Take-Two Interactive CEO defends the high price of the Red Dead Redemption port for the Nintendo Switch, despite gamer complaints.
  • The Switch and PS4 ports of Red Dead Redemption come bundled with the Undead Nightmare expansion.
  • Gamers are frustrated with the high-priced ports due to the lack of multiplayer functionality and the inability to play at 4K, leading some to wait for Red Dead Redemption 3.

Take-Two Interactive CEO Strauss Zelnick is defending the high price of the Red Dead Redemption port for the Nintendo Switch as some gamers cry foul about what they see as an inflated price tag for the aging title. The announcement of a Switch port of Rockstar’s classic open-world Western came earlier this week following months of speculation over a potential Red Dead Redemption remaster.

Originally released on the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 in 2010, Red Dead Redemption saw Rockstar take the open-world expertise it’d gained from the Grand Theft Auto franchise and transfer it to an Old West setting. Putting players in the shoes of former outlaw John Marston as he hunts down members of his former gang in order to free his family, Red Dead Redemption was praised by critics and players alike for providing a fresh take on the open-world genre. Despite longstanding calls for a full remaster of the fan-favorite title, Rockstar announced ports of Red Dead Redemption for Nintendo Switch and PlayStation 4 earlier this week instead.

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While the PS4 and Switch ports of Red Dead Redemption will finally give players on those systems a chance to get their hands on Rockstar’s beloved Old West title, many gamers have expressed disappointment at the high price of the ports. With a price tag of $50, only slightly cheaper than most new console releases, the pricey port of the acclaimed but aging title has been viewed as a cash grab by some disgruntled gamers. Responding to these complaints in a statement to IGN, Take-Two Interactive CEO Strauss Zelnick stated “That’s just what we believe is the commercially accurate price for it.”

red dead redemption john marston

The often-controversial and always outspoken Take-Two CEO was backed up by the company’s EVP of Finance, Hannah Sage, who noted that the ports also come bundled with the Undead Nightmare expansion which had previously been released as a standalone title. Despite including both the base game and its zombie-filled expansion for less than the cost of most new releases, many gamers are still frustrated with the high-priced port. These frustrations are compounded by the fact that Red Dead Redemption’s ports lack both multiplayer functionality and the ability to be played at 4K, with Xbox Series X owners having enjoyed the latter for several years.

Although Zelnick claims that the Switch release of Red Dead Redemption is “certainly a great value for consumers” it’s abundantly clear that a sizable contingent of those consumers see things very differently. And given the surprisingly high price of the ports and the pushback they’ve already received, some gamers may simply choose to sit out this re-release and wait for Red Dead Redemption 3 to be announced instead.

Red Dead Redemption is out now for PS3 and Xbox 360 with PS4 and Switch versions coming August 17.

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Source: IGN