Gameplay Analysis: Red Dead Redemption 2

Read Dead Redemption 2 is also a title where the Xbox One X framerate is locked to 30 FPS, and as it has not been optimized yet for the Series X, the more powerful console inherits this limitation.

In this St. Denis scene, the Xbox One X did suffer from some frame time glitches and stutters, whereas the Xbox Series X did not have the same issues. It was locked in much more consistently at the 30 FPS level.

In the cutscenes though, there was clearly a much lower framerate lock on the game as the developer was likely trying to add a cinematic feel. Both consoles exhibited the same framerate in the cutscene here, which is well below 30 FPS.

Overall Red Dead Redemption 2, despite being frame locked to 30 FPS on the Series X, did show that the game was a smoother experience on the new console.

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  • lefenzy - Monday, November 9, 2020 - link

    Both MS and Sony consoles are very impressive. How do they manage to put 8-core zen 2 plus high-end graphics and solid state storage into a $500 console? Are both manufacturers losing money on each unit?
  • Sub31 - Friday, November 13, 2020 - link

    Yes- consoles are loss leaders.
  • versesuvius - Tuesday, November 10, 2020 - link

    "solid-stage storage" ?
  • madseven7 - Wednesday, November 11, 2020 - link

    tell me a phone with 16GB of ram, AI, that can play at 2k on a 65" screen
  • Alexvrb - Wednesday, November 11, 2020 - link

    "a much smaller 4 TFLOP GPU, which is not even as powerful as the Xbox One X from 2017"

    Technically the final performance is roughly equal. 4 RDNA2 TFLOPS is comparable to 6 GCN2 TFLOPS. The problem is the reduced total memory means for CURRENT titles, they have to run an upscaled version of the Xbox One S game.

    For new titles specifically built with the Series S in mind (and possibly existing titles with a major update), they can use the SSD and DirectStorage to produce titles with graphics at least on par with what a One X can do. The Zen 2 cores are also a massive improvement over the ancient Jaguar cores.
  • vol.2 - Friday, November 13, 2020 - link

    There are obviously no more game consoles. But this "generation" is significant in that it is overtly marketed as incremental upgrades. I guess the switch is still pretending with it's in-between size and semi-portability, but there isn't anywhere Nintendo can go from there. Either they continue to upgrade the switch and make the form-factor their differentiator, or they do the same thing as Sony and MS and just overtly make and sell computers that are simply locked into their own game title ecosystem.
  • CoderScribe - Saturday, November 28, 2020 - link

    Great review, please now do PS5, since that's what most of us will actually be playing and has more interesting architectural quirks for analysis.

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