Rockstar has kept us waiting when it comes to news on Red Dead Redemption 2 coming to PC. This feels familiar, after the long, year-plus wait for GTA 5. RDR2 has launched on consoles, and Red Dead Online has launched too—it’s inarguably one of the defining games of its era, particularly in the creation of its world. If Red Dead Redemption 2 is destined to come to PC, we’re probably going to hear about it in 2019. There’s no official news yet, but there are reasons to be hopeful about RDR2 coming to PC. Shortly after the game’s console launch, the official companion app was apparently datamined, and it strongly points towards Red Dead Redemption 2’s eventual release on PC, with suggested graphics options and more. This remains the best evidence yet that the game will arrive on PC—scroll down for more. While the PlayStation 4 Pro runs the game beautifully, it’s outperformed by the Xbox One X. But this gap is much smaller than the one Digital Foundry saw in last gen’s Red Dead Redemption. Also notable: in December 2018, an alleged ‘leak’ of a graphics option menu for a PC version of the game was uploaded to YouTube. We’ve detailed the graphics options shown in the video—see below. We’re dubious of its legitimacy, as it’s a bit basic and the video is super brief, showing nothing meaningful in-game. In this article, we sum up what we know about the evidence pointing towards the game’s possible PC release, plus we explore Rockstar’s background of staggering ports on PC to see if we can make an informed guess on when Red Dead Redemption 2 will arrive on our PCs (assuming it does). An alleged Red Dead Redemption 2 PC ‘leak’ with graphics options was posted to YouTube An off-screen recording of what’s allegedly Red Dead Redemption 2 running on PC and a graphics options menu was posted to YouTube, and discussed intensely on Reddit. It’s since been deleted along with the original account by the user, but it was reuploaded shortly after—see above. The menu shows the option to adjust vsync, shader quality, texture quality, shadow quality, reflection quality and more. ![]() We’ve reached out to Rockstar to see if this RDR2 PC leak is real or not. Either way, it’s not a bad effort—the fonts all look pretty correct. But some elements give away that it’s probably not the real deal. Where are the rest of the graphics options, for example? Why not show actual in-game footage? Red Dead Redemption Graphics ComparisonSynthesia free serial. Why, when the resolution changes, isn’t there a menu suggesting Where’s GTA 5’s video memory bar? There’s the option for FXAA in the menu, but the companion app data dump below suggests TXAA will be one of the anti-aliasing options, while the console version’s default is TAA—so it doesn’t quite line up.
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