They Both Have Horses

Yesterday, Rockstar teased Red Dead Redemption 2 with a brand new story trailer. As its predecessor is one of the greatest games to grace the PS3 and Xbox 360, the hype surrounding the series’ latest entry is reaching incredible highs. Do not be alarmed, though. While “hype” is steadily becoming a dirty word in the industry, Rockstar would be the one developer to properly manage growing publicity and deliver an incredible product. After all, they have become the poster-child for massive, open-world experiences, ripe with cinematic storytelling and memorable characters. While Red Dead Redemption is absolutely worth revisiting, consider adding a different game to your backlog to get that sprawling, third-person fix.

Starting October, MGSV: The Phantom Pain is free for PS Plus members. Aside from being one of the best games this console generation, The Phantom Pain is a masterpiece in the tactical stealth genre—on top of being one of the greatest, most player-freedom driven video games I have ever experienced. While the story is solid (as political as a Metal Gear game should be), story takes a backseat to character customization, rigorous (but not overwhelming) base building, and hours upon hours of open-world objectives to tackle at your leisure. But why would a vaguely Cold War-themed espionage game fill a cowboy-shaped hole? True, The Phantom Pain lives in a different genre, but more connections exist beyond “Grizzled White Man Rides Horse in a Desert.”

Brothers in Arms

Mechanically, the two are massive, third-person shooters. Their vast open worlds are littered with locations ripe for set pieces, not to mention a tremendous cast of characters. Though The Phantom Pain’s story feels (ultimately) incomplete, the cinematics and scope make it one of the few games to compete with a Rockstar entry. Hideo Kojima is one of gaming’s most ambitious storytellers and his final project with Konami (PT aside) proves this in every minute of play. Punished Snake’s journey for revenge parallel John Marston’s well. The Phantom Pain is intense, sad, thrilling, and a must-play for anyone with a PS4.

How does all this tie to Red Dead Redemption? Snake is fighting to save his family, the Diamond Dogs. Because of this, loss and redemption are essential themes to the game. How do our choices make waves that spread over the world around us? Isolation in a foreign world; watching time break and evolve everything that once felt familiar. Both John and Snake are men placed out of their time, old dogs forced to adapt to a strange world. These story notes are delivered through incredible voice acting performances (24 fans rejoice! Kiefer Sutherland does a fantastic Snake). What’s more, the gameplay mechanics will feel familiar to anyone looking to mount the saddle once again.

Use D-Horse to roam the rolling plains of Afghanistan. “Hunt” animals to add to your base’s zoo. Activate Reflex Mode to pull of satisfying headshots as you sneak around enemy encampments. Shower! At the very least, download The Phantom Pain this October because it’s FREE.

PJ's played games for the better part of 16 years. His earliest gaming memory involved going to his neighbor's house to play GTA Vice City way too young. His second was being thoroughly unamused at a demo in Target. It was weird and hard. You had to keep swinging on ropes. That game was The Wind Waker, his favorite game of all time.He speedruns. He writes about speedrunning. He plays music. He writes about music. He Tweets. Find it here: @HashtagPManning

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