@@robrichporter4891 i'm pretty sure that even the first game did this and they even had it expanded into the Wanted system. where after you get arrested you have to apprehend a bounty target before you're considered a free man.
@SharkTank mandalorian is set in the time when the empire collapsed and the new republic (rebellion) came to power With the Empire falling apart, the Empire's laws were gone and none was to arrest the bounty hunters the new republic (rebellion) couldn't pose as space police because they focused on buliding their new regime, they didn't feel like bothering about it
One thing you can do in Red Dead Online for NPC bounty targets is either knock them out then tie them up or tie them up then knock them out. It won’t stop them from getting loose, but it helps you decrease their chances of getting loose before you can deliver them to a jail or prison wagon. You could also just toss them into your bounty wagon if you have one. They can’t escape from it unless it gets destroyed.
i often do this not because it helps reduce their chances of running away, but because hearing them constantly yapping on the ass end of my horse gets annoying. and if you have the reinforced lasso they can't escape anyways.
@@frostsoul4199 thats why knocking them out before or after tying them up is so effective. They need to be awake in order for them to even start getting free xD
I was so confused by the "investing in the good rope" part! Then I realized he was talking about Red Dead Online! In story mode, only one bounty jumps off the horse and tries to escape! You will encounter other bounties that will try to kill you to get the reward for themselves, but the bounty just stays on the horse and there's no rope upgrade! I never play the online version so I didn't know that was a thing!!
Thank you! I was soo confused by "the good rope" line. And i have played the story twice! But now i realise he was referring to online. I've only played online for 20-30 minutes
@@vastolorde2861 they can still escape it but it takes much longer. In that time you should get the option hit them to knock them out and shut their constant yapping up. Seriously the threats of "I'm gonna escape, hunt you down and kill you" get old really fast
@Ol Dirty old thread but still, your missing out a lot dude , it is true that its really hard to get into it ive been there myself. But the moment you get into it its so much fun , you will be from "this shit is anoying as hell" to "i wish this was in story mode" in no time.
@@mje8798 collector by far, and it's the most passive since there's no dedicated missions really. It's treasure hunting. Once you buy the shovel and metal detector you'll be rolling in cash. Or instead of whole collections just sell them occasionally as you play. It adds up fast
@@MrFoxtheSpy the most passive (and one of the most profitable) roles is the moonshiner. You literally just wait for the moonshine to brew, then drive it to a destination and get a very solid amount of money for very little work. How is collector passive? It takes a looot of time and you have to constantly be in movement, which is tiring, and also not really passive, as I said.
You know if you throw your bounty on the ground, kick at their head a few times 3-4 it will knock them out. Give you a Knockout bonus on the side and they don't move like they are dead. A lot easier than punching them to shut up as you ride.
Still want to see him react to Dead to Rights: Retribution for his take on Jack's personal brand of law-enforcement, and his take on Shadow as a police K9 dog.
Props to you guys for showing the story mode aspects of RDR2 because it’s the best part of this game Online doesn’t even compare wit heists or bounties
@@Mr_van_Der_Linde gta online after it 1st released was TRASH, took them a few years to get more dlc and missions ect in the game, im expecting the same with red dead online.
It’s so satisfying watching a video where the professional reacting has not only played games before, but they’ve actually played the game they’re reacting to! Sounds like he’s even played Online based on how he talked about getting the “better lasso”. It makes for a great video where they can go in depths about the full game vs real life experience, and relay their own gameplay tales.
Playing through this game for the first time was amazing; exploring in the beautiful, vast open world whilst bumping into crazy and interesting NPC events was amazing.
As a former bail enforcement agent ( bounty hunter ) in MT it gets real interesting dealing with local and or federal law enforcement on top of occasionally tribal law. Montana doesn't have any rules, regulations, restrictions or laws in regards to bounty hunters so the only law in existence we can fall back on is Taylor v. Taintor, 83 U.S. (16 Wall.) 366 (1872), a U.S Supreme Court ruling from 1872 witch is over 150 years old. I know a lot of people don't know how bounty hunting works so I'll explain how it does in today's day and age. We worked for the bail bondsman. Say someone is arrested, has a preliminary hearing in court where bail is posted but they can't afford it, the call a bondsmen to post bail. Once that is done the bondsmen will say " you now owe me the full amount of money I just paid for you to get out but I'll take payments but only if you keep making court appearances", next court day comes and the person who was bailed doesn't show. The judge now issues a bench warrant that allows any and all law enforcement to arrest the skip on site, the bondsmen then issues a bond revocation saying that the skip now owes ALL the money NOW. The bondsmen now has 90 days to find you...that is where the bounty hunters come in, he hires the hunter and gives them ALL the information he has ( cell number, address, plate number, contact information for friends and family ect ) so that the hunter can find the skip. The bondsmen and hunter then agree on a price normally 10% of the bond itself. Most of the time it's just sitting in the car eating fast food watching the skips house or know people they hang out with. Once the hunter has arrested the skip they then take them to the closest police/sheriff station to turn them over, call the bondsmen and report the arrest an determine when an where payment is. Now for the next skip on the list.
@@rngxro2368 depends on the state your in, some require that you get licensed via the police academy, others don't. With me I was lucky enough to know a hunter that worked with a large team ( large enough to almost be a small business ) I expressed my interest to him, he introduced me to his boss, the boss did an interview and once that was cleared they talked with the police academy on my behalf to get licensed. I spent 2 years as a hunter but I ended up quitting because my family was getting death threats from people who I had arrested along with the friends and family of people who I arrested.
@@keagancrick2899 Gotcha. It's a career path I've been interested in for a while, just never exactly knew how to get my foot in the door you know? Anyways, I appreciate the info 👍
I've heard that the bail enforcement officer is exempt from a lot of things the police would need a search warrant for -- the suspect counts as a human to the police, but counts as a material investment to the bondsman and the enforcer. Is this true?
@@TheRoboKitty yes and no. Yes in that bail enforcement don't need a warrant to arrest someone regardless of where they are ( home, work, on public or private property ect. ) All they need is the bond revocation. With that they have all the arrest authority they need. No because very few local law enforcement agencies actually recognize bail enforcement as legal law enforcement. Because of that bail enforcement has to hop through a lot of extra hoops in regards to transferring some to police custody. With how we view our skips, I always told that if they behave like a human being I'll provide some basic courtesy ( last cig before Lock up, won't cuff in front of family, won't mention any weed found to cops ect) but if you act like an asshole then I don't care about your feelings or comfort.
RDR2 takes place in 1899 as Arthur and in the very early 1900's when playing as John. I heard you mention 'in the 1850's at one point so figured I'd mention that. The entire basis of the story in a way is getting to see the West right as industrialization and civilization caught up with it and changed it, so they set it in a time period where the West was letting out its dying breath.
If you tie them up with the normal rope, just take a pistol out, and hit melee, knock them out and no more running away, and their still alive (doesnt work on legendaries)
A quick shout out to Officer Cano thank you for you service. You part in keeping chaos from running rampant in our society to extremely appreciated and it's great to see that you are in fact a gamer.
He's one of my favorites. I hope that I'll see him one-day debunking myths about search warrants. For instance: Can cops really detain all inhabitants? If so, for how long? How much do they care about not breaking things? The worst case would be a search warrant for a big villa with many inhabitants, many expensive items, rare plants, a huge library, and even more random junk in the basement... Would cops need to pay, if they plough the garden, in case something was buried? Repairing a garden can cost a small fortune. Sorting a library can take ages and walking with dirty boots over tatami can quickly become very expensive as well...
Yes. Usually as long as needed for safety. Depends on the cops & type of case. Cops don’t pay, usually city/county will. I’m a retired cop (& teacher) & have interacted with cops from all over the country. A high majority of cops (like the cop in this video) are pros that prefer doing the job without breaking things & being a-holes. Most are decent treating the public they’d want a cop to treat their family. Most don’t want to write paper (reports) and long-time cuffed suspects, broken libraries, angry people, etc… = more reports & going to court. Most cops don’t want to do paper or go to court. Most (nearly all) want to get through each day without grief, someday get a pension & walk away without major injury. Stuff Chris says represents how I’ve seen most cops do the job. That being said, there are cops that are angry and/or abusive dicks that don’t mind wrecking another person’s day, are happy to write paper & view going to court as some easy overtime. That is the guy I’m concerned about dealing with my family members and the public in general. That is usually the guy on video that gets caught screwing up and being on 24-hour news channels at the top of every hour. (At the opposite end of that spectrum is officer friendly interacting with everyone easy-going that doesn’t think tactically & gets killed or hurt). You (the public) see the cop screw ups on the news… in training and/or academy, the cops see videos of officer friendlies interacting with the public getting killed so they are weary of every interaction. Most try to operate in a middle area - courteous but cautious. The attitude of the person the cop is sent to contact (or pull over) will usually determine how the interaction goes. Most police/deputies don’t want to write tickets or arrest some random member of the public… most want to warn you and go do real cop work. If a cop contacts a driver or person they were sent to investigate - and that driver or person starts screaming, calling the cop expletives, told he should be defunded, that he’s a Nazi, etc…. the cop is going to get more willing to write paper, make an arrest, write a ticket, etc…. The ticket exception is if you’re pulled over by motor cops, highway patrol, a city traffic unit, etc… anyone that spends their whole shift writing tickets will 9/10 write the ticket (AAA with a gun cops). Most cops prefer actual police work - anyone writing tickets on everyone they pull over is probably writing some very chicken sh-t tickets. That’s way more than I planned to write - just know most cops will let you determine how the encounter goes. Most are not interested in ruining your day - the dick cops screaming at the public & being overly aggressive are a problem that hopefully body cameras help weed out.
@@JustTheFlecks Thank you very much! I totally underestimated the paperwork LOL. You certainly got a point. That said, my experiences with law enforcement are pretty bad and I’m a white, middle-class guy. I know that cops have a tough time. They are underpaid, often need to pay for their own equipment, and risk their lives while earning less than an illegal cleaning maid. They also have constant unpaid overtime and everyone hates them. However, nearly every time cops got involved it didn’t help, or things got even worse. Here are some highlights of my personal experiences: 1) Austria: my relatives are in a feud among themselves and both sides are in conflict with the law on multiple levels. One of them made an anonymous call to the local PD and gave them detailed intel on the other family’s branch racketeering and smuggling activities. They apparently begrudgingly made a search, but one of them called the property owner days in advance so that they had all-time in the world to make all evidence disappear and bake some cake for their guests! 2) Germany: the school I went to had a mass brawl right at its gates and several people had to be hospitalized (broken ribs, noses, concussions). The ambulance came and went, but cops only showed up long after everything was over despite them being far closer than the hospital! 3) A classmate of mine had a father who stalked his ex using state funds and used their surveillance equipment and other resources! 4) A neighbor got stalked by a traffic cop for months and that cop constantly wrote him tickets despite parking correctly. What had he done? He was stopped by said cop and asked for his ID and name. He then commented that the name in the passport was wrong, as spelling and pronunciation didn’t match up. He then informed the cop that he should know by now that in many languages word combinations are pronounced in different manners… 5) Another neighbor was forced to undress in public in the cold while missing his train right under his nose because they didn’t like his shirt. The official reason was that he looked like a junkie and wanted to search him for drugs. 6) The worst for me was a cop pulling a gun on my mother. The cops were stopping cars on a busy road and caused a huge traffic jam apparently on purpose. They were apparently fed up that the morning traffic went through their town and thus tried to get people on their way to work so annoyed that they drive some additional 20km to avoid the town. My mother asked one of the cops why she was stopped and the other cop immediately drew his gun. The senior cop, who stopped my mother immediately intervened, but still, it left a very bad impression. 7) My mother had a different experience as well when we were younger. Some punks brandished knives and threatened to gut us with them. We ran off and my mother called the police. They told her that they aren’t sending any patrol cars due to the fact that the PD had only two of them in working conditions and neither of them was available and they’ll definitely not use their private cars, just because some kids played pranks… My mother came to the PD and had to tell the entire story at the door to be let in, repeat it all at the desk and repeat it a third time for the protocol. Then she was told that she should avoid dangerous places i.e. our door and she should thank the party that had defunded them and that they’ll do nothing now! 8) France: a class trip of my school ended up for half the class at the PD. One guy played with his knife in public and cops swooped in and took them all into custody, allegedly for partaking at a demonstration and being armed. The kids (around 13-15) were detained without being able to call their parents, get a lawyer, get something to drink, or go to the toilet. They were left as is until they all signed some documents in French, which barely anyone understood. Some understood enough that it was a written confession! 9) Switzerland: someone tried to scam me when I looked for a flat and found out that it was an international scam and I did some more research and compiled a document with all the intel and went to the local PD. They refused to file a report since I didn’t fall for it. Moreover, I noticed that one office had the door wide open and a gun was lying on the desk. If any crook got stupid ideas after entering the PD, he would have had a great opportunity to make headlines… 10) Also, I later saw a cop in a supermarket and he creeped me out. He was pale, sweaty, and constantly shifted his balance and kept touching his gun on his belt, sometimes even gripping it, while he was enqueued.
We kinda still have bountys like back then. It would be the FBI most wanted list, since you can be rewarded as just a normal person if you give information leading to an arrest.
And bail bonds. If you skip bail, guys like Dog the bounty hunter(and guys not like him lol) can arrest you. You can also make citizen's arrest if someone does something real bad
Also interesting to note, not just an old west thing. Bounty Hunting was the majority of law enforcement throughout human history. The first civilian police force was established in London in the early 1800's (I want to say 1820's but I'm not sure) and in the US it was New York in the 1840's. There were always adhoc systems, like the hue-and-cry, and elected officials like parish watchmen and sheriffs, but formalized civilain police forces are a very recent invention. Military police have a history that goes back to the Romans, with the Pretorian Guard and the Urban Cohorts, so the military has long held some law enforcement duties, but having a professional civilian force is very recent. But back on track, when whoever the local law was, be it a local warlord or strongman, elected official, appointed magistrate, or commander of the local garrison, whoever, had problems with criminals it was common to post bounties simply because it was usually the most effective option at the time. They might not have the men to spare, or simply might just want the criminals caught quickly and think this was the most cost-effective option. Why sacrifice your own men when someone else will get paid to do it? If they die, don't pay them, if they succeed, criminal gone and you didn't really have to do much. It just made sense
I like how he's honest about getting killed by old girl first play through. Same shit happened to me. I clapped the boyfriend turned around and she fucking blasted me lol. On the second try I shot them both no questions.
Every state has different bounty hunting laws. Where I am at, you are allowed to be armed if you are licensed but we all carry non lethal options as well. 90% of the time they run and will fight or hide. I generally will go on a bounty if the suspect is a female (im the only female bounty hunter that my boss has).
I am a real life bounty hunter, I am impressed by how the bounty hunters in RDR2 use violence to take down a fugitive. I use pepper spray, teaser pistol, rubber bullets. But I know back there in late 1800s, early 1900's they did not had the same technology that we have in the 21th century.
There are lethal armed bounty hunters. Just a few years ago in Greenville Tx a 2 armed bounty hunters went to arrest a suspect in a car dealership. Due to lack of training, the suspect was able to pull out his own gun, a shootout occurred and all 3 men died. Sad stuff. No bystanders were harmed though.
Disclaimer for prospective players: Chris is mainly referring to Red Dead Online gameplay when he talks about bounty hunting (timers, better ropes, and a bounty hunter license). Red Dead Redemption 2 does not have these features.
I'm glad that one of the experts they had react to RDR2 actually played the game, a lot of the others had absolutely zero context and they were so confused/wrong about certain things bc they didn't know how the game works lmao
RDR2 is open world af! I mostly camp at the Tall Trees. The atmosphere is beautiful yet creepy. Every wood crack or bird wing flap got me thinking, “bear, wolf or cougar!” 😆
I always camp out in Roanoke ridge (it’s based off my region of Appalachia) but at night you gotta be careful, Murfree brood tent to set up ambushes along the road
Probably robbery (If I was an outlaw) but I think if I was a civilian or sheriff then I would probably be falsely accused for treason. No idea why I thought of treason, but I thought of it either way 😂
I always think that you really would not want to fall off the back of the horse (in the place of the bounty) those hooves can pack a real kick and if you draw a straight line one will hit your face meanwhile the other will show what a real nutcracker is.
I absolutely loved doing bounties in this game I always brought them in alive but I think there was one instance where I had to kill the target though most of the times I would either use dead eye to shoot both their legs or disarm them by shooting their hands
When ever I play the bounty hunting on RDR2 story mode I just do the Clint Eastwood style as the bounty killer from Dollar trilogy when the poster said dead on it I just kill the target and collect the bounty. The Blackwater police chief as playing John Marston want the target dead on the Skinners Brother gang.
Am I the only one that accidently kills Linsey a lot? I usually accidently blow him up or shoot him because he's bunched up with the others. Then when I did hogtied him I accidently kicked him down the ladder and he died
Bounty hunters can wield deadly weapons and if after giving you a chance to surrender yourself they can absolutely break into your house without a warrant with the caveat that you have to be in the house. Of course this can very from state to state.
Bounty hunting is something that I enjoyed more in the first game. I would’ve gladly traded the more story based bounty hunting of the rdr2 for more generic missions. In the first one you could get like 8 bounties per town but in this one you only get like 2 per town
This may sound like a weird question but you think he can review Oddworld: Strangers Wrath since that game also features bounty hunting as well (on a weird alien world anyway)?
Here's a tip for rdr2 bounty hunting, get your cattlemen revolver to the lowest quality so it does like no damage, equip it with your main handgun, shoot a bounty target in the leg with the cattlemen so he/she falls and then hogtie
admittedly, i don't really use bounty hunter anymore. i used it for gold to buy the other trades then never really touched it. i still do the daily challenges from time to time but that's about it
When most people hear the term "Bounty Hunter" I'd wager the first thing that comes to mind is someone like Boba Fett. But I've heard that a lot of times, that is NOT how things go in real life. I've heard some bounty hunters say their way of doing things is a scenario something like this: the bounty hunter walks up to the target (they're in a public place, like a restaurant or something), sits down in front of them, and says something along these lines--"I want you to listen to me very closely. I'm a bounty hunter, and you are my target. You have two options: You can come quietly, and nobody gets hurt, or you can try to run, in which case my teammates, who are currently waiting by the doors, will jump you."
As a former bail enforcement agent ( bounty hunter ) had to do this in a bar once, won't lie I was scared out of my mind even though I was one of the teammates out side with a taser.
I recently watched a VRChat video about a guy who's a real life bounty hunter and the facts being mentioned here match the ones the VRChat guy explained in his video.
I thought this was going to be “urr duhurrr dis is unrealisdick cuz it a game” like the hunting one you did but i was thoroughly entertained with this one
4:20 Basically what Chris The Cop is saying here, If you hire a Bailbonds Agency to get outta jail and you don't show up to court that supposed day, The Agency will contact a Bailbondsman (Bounty Hunter) [The Agency usually have different Bailbondsman to contact for different states to save their money but also save the bounty hunter's time and gas to go there] track the suspect down and take him alive (not dead)
9:19 Dude, that's hilarious, but maybe it's not a good idea right now, as a cop, to joke about you not being able to bring people in alive even in this capacity lmaooooo
When talks about how a lot of the laws and systems back then are the same now I feel like that should be a sign to take a good look at the justice system and police departments and really reform them or replace them with updated systems to our current world
I didnt even know that bounty hunting was still a thing, or atleast something thats super strict. Now I kinda wanna dress up like a tacticool cowboy and pursue bounty hunting as a career.
Technically since the end of the Civil War, all bounty hunters have been operating under the defunct Escape Slave Act, meaning that someone who gets taken in by a bounty hunter could, if they were savvy enough and had a good enough lawyer, have not only have the actions of the bounty hunter that took them in, but also every bounty hunter across the nation, be declared unconstitutional, meaning that every bounty hunter, if they didn't want to face lawsuits or criminal charges, would either have to be deputized or become an officer of the courts.
Nope... Doesn't work like that... You think you or whomever you heard that idea from was so big brained nobody else tried or thought about that? I can promise you "in theory" and "in practice" are too completely different terms for a reason. Thisay be "theoretically" true but "practically" the supreme court wouldn't even attempt to rule in the way that is in favor of a criminal gaining more rights.
Guys, Chris needs our help. He has been inactive on his channel for over a month now. It has been confirmed that he has been involved in a tragedy, wether in his line of duty or his family that is unknown. All we know is that it’s bad. Check out his channel, show him our support and send your prayers. ❤️
A good trip to is if you don’t have Or can’t get the better rope right away just tie them up take out you’re gun and double tab the melee button and kick them till there knocked out and if you hog tie them before you knock them out they stay knocked out the entire time
Okay quick google search and i just found out that only 2 countries allow bounty hunting The Philippines (my country) and the United States. Highly doubt the success of the bounty hunters though since the country is quite corrupt and you, the hunter, becomes a target with enough quotas due to the connections everyone has in these tiny islands you can barely run from when they find you. Doesn't stop them though since every police force is quite small on the islands and the big metropolitan areas are prettyyyyy crowded for such a small police force so I see the benefit of hiring some and allowing them to operate.
Wow, the cop knows about the online and how the bounty hunters work there. Pretty impressive! Should’ve shown some gameplay from that! He kept talking about reinforced lasso which is also online exclusive
@@sigsauer_firearms I figured he did. Didn’t know about the channel though. Either way I was basically trying to say they should’ve used online gameplay for some of the stuff he talked about
My town still has wanted posters with rewards on the when you enter government buildings it rules might different depending on state I'm guessing or maybe it's a federal posted notice? Not sure
i wish they would add more bounty missions in single player or be able to replay the old ones.
Yeah, even some randomly generated generic bounty missions would suffice. Just so bounty hunting isn’t entirely gone after you complete the main ones.
there’s a mod that does exactly that
More single player content? Some executive at Rockstar saw your comment and spit 50 year old scotch all over his screen.
@@robrichporter4891 i'm pretty sure that even the first game did this and they even had it expanded into the Wanted system. where after you get arrested you have to apprehend a bounty target before you're considered a free man.
Yeah In rdr1 there's an unlimited bounty hunting
I love that he drops some history and brings in the historical context. Love Chris!!
ACAB ABOLISH THE POLICE
@@furryprideworldwide816 lol
@@furryprideworldwide816 if anything, the police needs more funding than ever.
@@furryprideworldwide816 🤡
@@furryprideworldwide816 look at this guy lol
Bounty Hunting: *exists*
The Mandalorian: "The can bring you in warm... or I can bring you in cold."
Cuz its fucking star wars not reality
I just watched this episode like about an hour ago...
@SharkTank mandalorian is set in the time when the empire collapsed and the new republic (rebellion) came to power With the Empire falling apart, the Empire's laws were gone and none was to arrest the bounty hunters the new republic (rebellion) couldn't pose as space police because they focused on buliding their new regime, they didn't feel like bothering about it
"I can bring you in warm or I can bring you in lukewarm" - Tomar
@@Youraveragegamer_97 it clearly says it happened a long time ago in a galaxy far far away.
Nice try 😉
One thing you can do in Red Dead Online for NPC bounty targets is either knock them out then tie them up or tie them up then knock them out. It won’t stop them from getting loose, but it helps you decrease their chances of getting loose before you can deliver them to a jail or prison wagon. You could also just toss them into your bounty wagon if you have one. They can’t escape from it unless it gets destroyed.
i often do this not because it helps reduce their chances of running away, but because hearing them constantly yapping on the ass end of my horse gets annoying. and if you have the reinforced lasso they can't escape anyways.
ACAB ABOLISH THE POLICE
@@frostsoul4199 they can escape it only takes alot longer
@@Big-BossX never noticed. They seem to never escape it.
@@frostsoul4199 thats why knocking them out before or after tying them up is so effective. They need to be awake in order for them to even start getting free xD
I always bring them in alive. I never miss the opportunity to hear some good dialogue lol
I see you're a man of culture as well! I treat Dialogues as collectibles in most games 😅
And to smack them
@@Fake_gamer_cat "please I di-OOF!" "OH SHUT UP!" 😂
@@PositivePasta14 AMEN as a wannabe voice actor I wanna give these VAs the chance to strut their stuff haha
I literally want to hear 100% of the dialogue and i really get angry when i miss a word
I was so confused by the "investing in the good rope" part!
Then I realized he was talking about Red Dead Online!
In story mode, only one bounty jumps off the horse and tries to escape! You will encounter other bounties that will try to kill you to get the reward for themselves, but the bounty just stays on the horse and there's no rope upgrade! I never play the online version so I didn't know that was a thing!!
yeah, there's a reinforced lasso you can get in the online mode that helps with bounty hunting greatly.
Thank you! I was soo confused by "the good rope" line. And i have played the story twice! But now i realise he was referring to online. I've only played online for 20-30 minutes
@@vastolorde2861 they can still escape it but it takes much longer. In that time you should get the option hit them to knock them out and shut their constant yapping up.
Seriously the threats of "I'm gonna escape, hunt you down and kill you" get old really fast
Same
@Ol Dirty old thread but still, your missing out a lot dude , it is true that its really hard to get into it ive been there myself.
But the moment you get into it its so much fun , you will be from "this shit is anoying as hell" to "i wish this was in story mode" in no time.
1:29 My Anxiety went 1000% seeing him get cover behind a red box
Yeah, that was insane
I made the same mistake
Shoots box
They might not pay as well as other RDR online jobs, but they're by far the most fun. You did a fantastic job explaining everything too
Which pays the most?
@@mje8798 collector by far, and it's the most passive since there's no dedicated missions really. It's treasure hunting. Once you buy the shovel and metal detector you'll be rolling in cash. Or instead of whole collections just sell them occasionally as you play. It adds up fast
@@MrFoxtheSpy bet
@@mje8798 worked for me. I'd do bounties or other jobs and pick up collectables.
@@MrFoxtheSpy the most passive (and one of the most profitable) roles is the moonshiner. You literally just wait for the moonshine to brew, then drive it to a destination and get a very solid amount of money for very little work. How is collector passive? It takes a looot of time and you have to constantly be in movement, which is tiring, and also not really passive, as I said.
He's not just a cop he's a gamer
He is Gamer-Cop.
You know if you throw your bounty on the ground, kick at their head a few times 3-4 it will knock them out. Give you a Knockout bonus on the side and they don't move like they are dead. A lot easier than punching them to shut up as you ride.
They can still wake up, and a knocked out bounty is much easier to accidentally kill if they hit the ground the wrong way.
@@fierysmile2929 Indeed. I always get then to the destination before they wake up again, so be quick folks!! XD
Just drag them with the rope while on your horse until they get knocked out.
I like to listen to them squirm, and also if you hit them along the way sometimes Arthur/john will have some real funny retorts
Still want to see him react to Dead to Rights: Retribution for his take on Jack's personal brand of law-enforcement, and his take on Shadow as a police K9 dog.
ACAB ABOLISH THE POLICE
@@furryprideworldwide816 this is why your father doesn’t love you Logan
dead to rights is that PS2 game where you constantly dive and shoot enemies Matrix style right?
@@Mrmonkey1488 lol…
@@RenShinomiya121 That's Max Payne
Props to you guys for showing the story mode aspects of RDR2 because it’s the best part of this game
Online doesn’t even compare wit heists or bounties
Shit online has shitty heists
At least the bounties and stagecoach robberies are unlimited
That's the only thing online has going for it
Online is fun. The new missions are fun, the bounties are fun. And call to arms is fun... Doing that shit with your Pals, priceless
@@tobe1207 after a while it gets boring nothing like gta online
@@Mr_van_Der_Linde gta online after it 1st released was TRASH, took them a few years to get more dlc and missions ect in the game, im expecting the same with red dead online.
It’s so satisfying watching a video where the professional reacting has not only played games before, but they’ve actually played the game they’re reacting to! Sounds like he’s even played Online based on how he talked about getting the “better lasso”. It makes for a great video where they can go in depths about the full game vs real life experience, and relay their own gameplay tales.
Playing through this game for the first time was amazing; exploring in the beautiful, vast open world whilst bumping into crazy and interesting NPC events was amazing.
It brought me back into gaming
Its a game one wish could completely forget so every gameplay is a unique experience
As a former bail enforcement agent ( bounty hunter ) in MT it gets real interesting dealing with local and or federal law enforcement on top of occasionally tribal law. Montana doesn't have any rules, regulations, restrictions or laws in regards to bounty hunters so the only law in existence we can fall back on is Taylor v. Taintor, 83 U.S. (16 Wall.) 366 (1872), a U.S Supreme Court ruling from 1872 witch is over 150 years old. I know a lot of people don't know how bounty hunting works so I'll explain how it does in today's day and age. We worked for the bail bondsman. Say someone is arrested, has a preliminary hearing in court where bail is posted but they can't afford it, the call a bondsmen to post bail. Once that is done the bondsmen will say " you now owe me the full amount of money I just paid for you to get out but I'll take payments but only if you keep making court appearances", next court day comes and the person who was bailed doesn't show. The judge now issues a bench warrant that allows any and all law enforcement to arrest the skip on site, the bondsmen then issues a bond revocation saying that the skip now owes ALL the money NOW. The bondsmen now has 90 days to find you...that is where the bounty hunters come in, he hires the hunter and gives them ALL the information he has ( cell number, address, plate number, contact information for friends and family ect ) so that the hunter can find the skip. The bondsmen and hunter then agree on a price normally 10% of the bond itself. Most of the time it's just sitting in the car eating fast food watching the skips house or know people they hang out with. Once the hunter has arrested the skip they then take them to the closest police/sheriff station to turn them over, call the bondsmen and report the arrest an determine when an where payment is. Now for the next skip on the list.
I think this is a question a lot of people have on their minds, but how does one become a bounty hunter exactly?
@@rngxro2368 depends on the state your in, some require that you get licensed via the police academy, others don't. With me I was lucky enough to know a hunter that worked with a large team ( large enough to almost be a small business ) I expressed my interest to him, he introduced me to his boss, the boss did an interview and once that was cleared they talked with the police academy on my behalf to get licensed. I spent 2 years as a hunter but I ended up quitting because my family was getting death threats from people who I had arrested along with the friends and family of people who I arrested.
@@keagancrick2899 Gotcha. It's a career path I've been interested in for a while, just never exactly knew how to get my foot in the door you know? Anyways, I appreciate the info 👍
I've heard that the bail enforcement officer is exempt from a lot of things the police would need a search warrant for -- the suspect counts as a human to the police, but counts as a material investment to the bondsman and the enforcer. Is this true?
@@TheRoboKitty yes and no. Yes in that bail enforcement don't need a warrant to arrest someone regardless of where they are ( home, work, on public or private property ect. ) All they need is the bond revocation. With that they have all the arrest authority they need. No because very few local law enforcement agencies actually recognize bail enforcement as legal law enforcement. Because of that bail enforcement has to hop through a lot of extra hoops in regards to transferring some to police custody. With how we view our skips, I always told that if they behave like a human being I'll provide some basic courtesy ( last cig before Lock up, won't cuff in front of family, won't mention any weed found to cops ect) but if you act like an asshole then I don't care about your feelings or comfort.
RDR2 takes place in 1899 as Arthur and in the very early 1900's when playing as John. I heard you mention 'in the 1850's at one point so figured I'd mention that. The entire basis of the story in a way is getting to see the West right as industrialization and civilization caught up with it and changed it, so they set it in a time period where the West was letting out its dying breath.
If you tie them up with the normal rope, just take a pistol out, and hit melee, knock them out and no more running away, and their still alive (doesnt work on legendaries)
It would be cool if you had both Chris and a bail bonds officer breaking down bounty hunting in video games.
“I really suck at bringing my bounties in alive” not a reassuring thing to hear from a police officer lmao
A quick shout out to Officer Cano thank you for you service. You part in keeping chaos from running rampant in our society to extremely appreciated and it's great to see that you are in fact a gamer.
Cano: "This is officer Cano, open....."
Outlaw: "I surrender! I heard you only bring in the dead one!"
He's one of my favorites. I hope that I'll see him one-day debunking myths about search warrants. For instance:
Can cops really detain all inhabitants? If so, for how long?
How much do they care about not breaking things?
The worst case would be a search warrant for a big villa with many inhabitants, many expensive items, rare plants, a huge library, and even more random junk in the basement...
Would cops need to pay, if they plough the garden, in case something was buried? Repairing a garden can cost a small fortune. Sorting a library can take ages and walking with dirty boots over tatami can quickly become very expensive as well...
Yes.
Usually as long as needed for safety.
Depends on the cops & type of case.
Cops don’t pay, usually city/county will.
I’m a retired cop (& teacher) & have interacted with cops from all over the country. A high majority of cops (like the cop in this video) are pros that prefer doing the job without breaking things & being a-holes. Most are decent treating the public they’d want a cop to treat their family. Most don’t want to write paper (reports) and long-time cuffed suspects, broken libraries, angry people, etc… = more reports & going to court. Most cops don’t want to do paper or go to court. Most (nearly all) want to get through each day without grief, someday get a pension & walk away without major injury.
Stuff Chris says represents how I’ve seen most cops do the job.
That being said, there are cops that are angry and/or abusive dicks that don’t mind wrecking another person’s day, are happy to write paper & view going to court as some easy overtime. That is the guy I’m concerned about dealing with my family members and the public in general. That is usually the guy on video that gets caught screwing up and being on 24-hour news channels at the top of every hour.
(At the opposite end of that spectrum is officer friendly interacting with everyone easy-going that doesn’t think tactically & gets killed or hurt).
You (the public) see the cop screw ups on the news… in training and/or academy, the cops see videos of officer friendlies interacting with the public getting killed so they are weary of every interaction.
Most try to operate in a middle area - courteous but cautious. The attitude of the person the cop is sent to contact (or pull over) will usually determine how the interaction goes.
Most police/deputies don’t want to write tickets or arrest some random member of the public… most want to warn you and go do real cop work.
If a cop contacts a driver or person they were sent to investigate - and that driver or person starts screaming, calling the cop expletives, told he should be defunded, that he’s a Nazi, etc…. the cop is going to get more willing to write paper, make an arrest, write a ticket, etc….
The ticket exception is if you’re pulled over by motor cops, highway patrol, a city traffic unit, etc… anyone that spends their whole shift writing tickets will 9/10 write the ticket (AAA with a gun cops).
Most cops prefer actual police work - anyone writing tickets on everyone they pull over is probably writing some very chicken sh-t tickets.
That’s way more than I planned to write - just know most cops will let you determine how the encounter goes. Most are not interested in ruining your day - the dick cops screaming at the public & being overly aggressive are a problem that hopefully body cameras help weed out.
@@JustTheFlecks Thank you very much! I totally underestimated the paperwork LOL. You certainly got a point.
That said, my experiences with law enforcement are pretty bad and I’m a white, middle-class guy.
I know that cops have a tough time. They are underpaid, often need to pay for their own equipment, and risk their lives while earning less than an illegal cleaning maid. They also have constant unpaid overtime and everyone hates them.
However, nearly every time cops got involved it didn’t help, or things got even worse. Here are some highlights of my personal experiences:
1) Austria: my relatives are in a feud among themselves and both sides are in conflict with the law on multiple levels. One of them made an anonymous call to the local PD and gave them detailed intel on the other family’s branch racketeering and smuggling activities. They apparently begrudgingly made a search, but one of them called the property owner days in advance so that they had all-time in the world to make all evidence disappear and bake some cake for their guests!
2) Germany: the school I went to had a mass brawl right at its gates and several people had to be hospitalized (broken ribs, noses, concussions). The ambulance came and went, but cops only showed up long after everything was over despite them being far closer than the hospital!
3) A classmate of mine had a father who stalked his ex using state funds and used their surveillance equipment and other resources!
4) A neighbor got stalked by a traffic cop for months and that cop constantly wrote him tickets despite parking correctly. What had he done? He was stopped by said cop and asked for his ID and name. He then commented that the name in the passport was wrong, as spelling and pronunciation didn’t match up. He then informed the cop that he should know by now that in many languages word combinations are pronounced in different manners…
5) Another neighbor was forced to undress in public in the cold while missing his train right under his nose because they didn’t like his shirt. The official reason was that he looked like a junkie and wanted to search him for drugs.
6) The worst for me was a cop pulling a gun on my mother. The cops were stopping cars on a busy road and caused a huge traffic jam apparently on purpose. They were apparently fed up that the morning traffic went through their town and thus tried to get people on their way to work so annoyed that they drive some additional 20km to avoid the town. My mother asked one of the cops why she was stopped and the other cop immediately drew his gun. The senior cop, who stopped my mother immediately intervened, but still, it left a very bad impression.
7) My mother had a different experience as well when we were younger. Some punks brandished knives and threatened to gut us with them. We ran off and my mother called the police. They told her that they aren’t sending any patrol cars due to the fact that the PD had only two of them in working conditions and neither of them was available and they’ll definitely not use their private cars, just because some kids played pranks… My mother came to the PD and had to tell the entire story at the door to be let in, repeat it all at the desk and repeat it a third time for the protocol. Then she was told that she should avoid dangerous places i.e. our door and she should thank the party that had defunded them and that they’ll do nothing now!
8) France: a class trip of my school ended up for half the class at the PD. One guy played with his knife in public and cops swooped in and took them all into custody, allegedly for partaking at a demonstration and being armed. The kids (around 13-15) were detained without being able to call their parents, get a lawyer, get something to drink, or go to the toilet. They were left as is until they all signed some documents in French, which barely anyone understood. Some understood enough that it was a written confession!
9) Switzerland: someone tried to scam me when I looked for a flat and found out that it was an international scam and I did some more research and compiled a document with all the intel and went to the local PD. They refused to file a report since I didn’t fall for it. Moreover, I noticed that one office had the door wide open and a gun was lying on the desk. If any crook got stupid ideas after entering the PD, he would have had a great opportunity to make headlines…
10) Also, I later saw a cop in a supermarket and he creeped me out. He was pale, sweaty, and constantly shifted his balance and kept touching his gun on his belt, sometimes even gripping it, while he was enqueued.
We kinda still have bountys like back then. It would be the FBI most wanted list, since you can be rewarded as just a normal person if you give information leading to an arrest.
Bet you in first RDR one Dutch Vander Linda be on that list.
It’s called a black list
And bail bonds. If you skip bail, guys like Dog the bounty hunter(and guys not like him lol) can arrest you.
You can also make citizen's arrest if someone does something real bad
Also interesting to note, not just an old west thing. Bounty Hunting was the majority of law enforcement throughout human history. The first civilian police force was established in London in the early 1800's (I want to say 1820's but I'm not sure) and in the US it was New York in the 1840's. There were always adhoc systems, like the hue-and-cry, and elected officials like parish watchmen and sheriffs, but formalized civilain police forces are a very recent invention. Military police have a history that goes back to the Romans, with the Pretorian Guard and the Urban Cohorts, so the military has long held some law enforcement duties, but having a professional civilian force is very recent. But back on track, when whoever the local law was, be it a local warlord or strongman, elected official, appointed magistrate, or commander of the local garrison, whoever, had problems with criminals it was common to post bounties simply because it was usually the most effective option at the time. They might not have the men to spare, or simply might just want the criminals caught quickly and think this was the most cost-effective option. Why sacrifice your own men when someone else will get paid to do it? If they die, don't pay them, if they succeed, criminal gone and you didn't really have to do much. It just made sense
A cop saying that he sucks at bringing someone in alive. Good stuff.
I like how he's honest about getting killed by old girl first play through. Same shit happened to me. I clapped the boyfriend turned around and she fucking blasted me lol. On the second try I shot them both no questions.
Damn Black Belle
@Finn Danger I understand. You have to repeat the mission if you do that.
i saved the dude. he didn't do nothing.
Every state has different bounty hunting laws. Where I am at, you are allowed to be armed if you are licensed but we all carry non lethal options as well. 90% of the time they run and will fight or hide. I generally will go on a bounty if the suspect is a female (im the only female bounty hunter that my boss has).
what state are you operating in? I'm thinking in getting certified in California.
@@AdrianMartinez-rq7lz I’d be interested too, also Cali
I am a real life bounty hunter, I am impressed by how the bounty hunters in RDR2 use violence to take down a fugitive. I use pepper spray, teaser pistol, rubber bullets. But I know back there in late 1800s, early 1900's they did not had the same technology that we have in the 21th century.
There are lethal armed bounty hunters. Just a few years ago in Greenville Tx a 2 armed bounty hunters went to arrest a suspect in a car dealership. Due to lack of training, the suspect was able to pull out his own gun, a shootout occurred and all 3 men died. Sad stuff. No bystanders were harmed though.
Disclaimer for prospective players: Chris is mainly referring to Red Dead Online gameplay when he talks about bounty hunting (timers, better ropes, and a bounty hunter license). Red Dead Redemption 2 does not have these features.
I'm glad that one of the experts they had react to RDR2 actually played the game, a lot of the others had absolutely zero context and they were so confused/wrong about certain things bc they didn't know how the game works lmao
RDR2 is open world af! I mostly camp at the Tall Trees. The atmosphere is beautiful yet creepy. Every wood crack or bird wing flap got me thinking, “bear, wolf or cougar!” 😆
I always camp out in Roanoke ridge (it’s based off my region of Appalachia) but at night you gotta be careful, Murfree brood tent to set up ambushes along the road
you only buy the bounty hunter license in online, you can go bounty hunting as soon as they're available in story mode
If you had a bounty on your head in the old west what would it be for? 🤠
$5 for “disturbing the peace” by accidentally walking into someone
Probably robbery (If I was an outlaw) but I think if I was a civilian or sheriff then I would probably be falsely accused for treason. No idea why I thought of treason, but I thought of it either way 😂
Loitering
Lollygagging
Something to do with whores
I always think that you really would not want to fall off the back of the horse (in the place of the bounty) those hooves can pack a real kick and if you draw a straight line one will hit your face meanwhile the other will show what a real nutcracker is.
I absolutely loved doing bounties in this game I always brought them in alive but I think there was one instance where I had to kill the target though most of the times I would either use dead eye to shoot both their legs or disarm them by shooting their hands
When ever I play the bounty hunting on RDR2 story mode I just do the Clint Eastwood style as the bounty killer from Dollar trilogy when the poster said dead on it I just kill the target and collect the bounty. The Blackwater police chief as playing John Marston want the target dead on the Skinners Brother gang.
Am I the only one that accidently kills Linsey a lot? I usually accidently blow him up or shoot him because he's bunched up with the others. Then when I did hogtied him I accidently kicked him down the ladder and he died
After watching this and playing the game. It makes me want to also be a bounty hunter.
In the states, there are plenty of armed Bounty Hunters. However, there are soke states who don't allow them to carry certain gear.
Bounty hunters can wield deadly weapons and if after giving you a chance to surrender yourself they can absolutely break into your house without a warrant with the caveat that you have to be in the house. Of course this can very from state to state.
Bounty hunting is something that I enjoyed more in the first game. I would’ve gladly traded the more story based bounty hunting of the rdr2 for more generic missions. In the first one you could get like 8 bounties per town but in this one you only get like 2 per town
This may sound like a weird question but you think he can review Oddworld: Strangers Wrath since that game also features bounty hunting as well (on a weird alien world anyway)?
"You gotta invest in the good rope."
Excuse me what?
The good ol "California Collar"
*john punching the s*** out of a bounty*
Chris: Bounty hunting hasn’t really changed.
Here's a tip for rdr2 bounty hunting, get your cattlemen revolver to the lowest quality so it does like no damage, equip it with your main handgun, shoot a bounty target in the leg with the cattlemen so he/she falls and then hogtie
I like that he has experience with it because he also plays rdr2
I love how he's getting confused with online and story because he's talking about getting a reinforced lasso.
Yeah, i was very confused cuz I've never played online lol
admittedly, i don't really use bounty hunter anymore. i used it for gold to buy the other trades then never really touched it. i still do the daily challenges from time to time but that's about it
Fun fact:dogg the bounty hunters son is cop where i live he pulled over my grandma.
I'm not being sarcastic
This channel has a lot of great content
When most people hear the term "Bounty Hunter" I'd wager the first thing that comes to mind is someone like Boba Fett. But I've heard that a lot of times, that is NOT how things go in real life. I've heard some bounty hunters say their way of doing things is a scenario something like this: the bounty hunter walks up to the target (they're in a public place, like a restaurant or something), sits down in front of them, and says something along these lines--"I want you to listen to me very closely. I'm a bounty hunter, and you are my target. You have two options: You can come quietly, and nobody gets hurt, or you can try to run, in which case my teammates, who are currently waiting by the doors, will jump you."
As a former bail enforcement agent ( bounty hunter ) had to do this in a bar once, won't lie I was scared out of my mind even though I was one of the teammates out side with a taser.
I love how with this guy he has played the game so he can also talk about it as a player and his actual experience
I recently watched a VRChat video about a guy who's a real life bounty hunter and the facts being mentioned here match the ones the VRChat guy explained in his video.
0:23 I was standing in front of her and I looked away for a split second to get my water cup, turned back and I was at the "DEAD" screen.
I just looked up when the last public execution was in America and I was surprised that it happened in my state of Kentucky
I’d be like Boba Fett if I were a bounty hunter.
I thought this was going to be “urr duhurrr dis is unrealisdick cuz it a game” like the hunting one you did but i was thoroughly entertained with this one
4:20
Basically what Chris The Cop is saying here,
If you hire a Bailbonds Agency to get outta jail and you don't show up to court that supposed day, The Agency will contact a Bailbondsman (Bounty Hunter) [The Agency usually have different Bailbondsman to contact for different states to save their money but also save the bounty hunter's time and gas to go there] track the suspect down and take him alive (not dead)
Never in all my playthroughs someone broke the rope and ran...So the invest in a better rope makes no sense to me
It mainly applies to Online but it happens in certain instances in Story
@@metetural9140 Thanks for explaining, never really play online since i have a lot of bugs with gold
I dont know if anyone else noticed this but during 1:02 to 1:37 Arthur is taking cover RIGHT NEXT TO A BOX OF DYNAMITE
Bounty hunting is also legal in the Philippines, the only other country in the world that allows it besides the USA.
9:19 Dude, that's hilarious, but maybe it's not a good idea right now, as a cop, to joke about you not being able to bring people in alive even in this capacity lmaooooo
i love experts reacting to RDR2 online
Bounty hunting back then is like crowdsourcing police.
its cool that he has context from playing the game too.
After you hogtie a bounty... knock'em out. you will get extra points and the bounty will never run away.
When talks about how a lot of the laws and systems back then are the same now I feel like that should be a sign to take a good look at the justice system and police departments and really reform them or replace them with updated systems to our current world
I like How he's talking about red Dead online while story mode gameplay is showed
I didnt even know that bounty hunting was still a thing, or atleast something thats super strict. Now I kinda wanna dress up like a tacticool cowboy and pursue bounty hunting as a career.
It's funny that a game about a gang of outlaws in a harsh setting has a mechanic that incentivizes players to not kill their bounty.
i think he meant Reinforced Lasso in RDO
If im ever a Bounty Hunter ima be like "I can bring you in warm, or I can bring you in cold"
Bounty Hunting in rdr2 is so fun
I bet dude loved how Sadie handled cleet when tracking down Micah
"I can bring you in warm. or i can bring you in cold" best bounti hunter line.
Technically since the end of the Civil War, all bounty hunters have been operating under the defunct Escape Slave Act, meaning that someone who gets taken in by a bounty hunter could, if they were savvy enough and had a good enough lawyer, have not only have the actions of the bounty hunter that took them in, but also every bounty hunter across the nation, be declared unconstitutional, meaning that every bounty hunter, if they didn't want to face lawsuits or criminal charges, would either have to be deputized or become an officer of the courts.
Nope... Doesn't work like that... You think you or whomever you heard that idea from was so big brained nobody else tried or thought about that? I can promise you "in theory" and "in practice" are too completely different terms for a reason. Thisay be "theoretically" true but "practically" the supreme court wouldn't even attempt to rule in the way that is in favor of a criminal gaining more rights.
You'd never catch me bounty hunting irl without carrying a firearm.
Finished every single bounty.. It was really fascinating playing that type of role in RDR2
tip to players doing the bounty role in rdr online: if you have the classic rope knock them out before you tie them up
“Bounty hunting hasn’t really changed since the 1800s yk you got the pepper spray and your tazer”
Not only is a good rope the best choice but you can also hit them every once in a while and that’ll keep them from untying themselves
Yes! An expert that actually plays Red Dead Redemption 2!
god it just sounds extraordinarily cool to have bounty hunting as an occupation
Guys, Chris needs our help. He has been inactive on his channel for over a month now. It has been confirmed that he has been involved in a tragedy, wether in his line of duty or his family that is unknown. All we know is that it’s bad. Check out his channel, show him our support and send your prayers. ❤️
He will comeback in a few month
But i'll still support him
A good trip to is if you don’t have Or can’t get the better rope right away just tie them up take out you’re gun and double tab the melee button and kick them till there knocked out and if you hog tie them before you knock them out they stay knocked out the entire time
Okay quick google search and i just found out that only 2 countries allow bounty hunting
The Philippines (my country) and the United States. Highly doubt the success of the bounty hunters though since the country is quite corrupt and you, the hunter, becomes a target with enough quotas due to the connections everyone has in these tiny islands you can barely run from when they find you. Doesn't stop them though since every police force is quite small on the islands and the big metropolitan areas are prettyyyyy crowded for such a small police force so I see the benefit of hiring some and allowing them to operate.
I like that this expert has actually played the game.
This guy looks like the nice guy off work but serious when hes on the job
Good Intel on twenty first Century bounty hunters... 😮
It's cool to know that he played this
Even for a cop
Wow, the cop knows about the online and how the bounty hunters work there. Pretty impressive! Should’ve shown some gameplay from that! He kept talking about reinforced lasso which is also online exclusive
He plays online and story on his own channel
@@sigsauer_firearms I figured he did. Didn’t know about the channel though. Either way I was basically trying to say they should’ve used online gameplay for some of the stuff he talked about
ACAB ABOLISH THE POLICE
If u wait til the last 30sec you get even more money 💰
I had no idea that bounty hunters still existed
Their is a few states that pay bounties for precourt.
It’s cool that he’s played the game, and more than once even.
9:24 why am i not surprised lmfao
9:26 You play Red Dead Online? If so, maybe I could help ya next time you’re trying to bring in a bounty.
My town still has wanted posters with rewards on the when you enter government buildings it rules might different depending on state I'm guessing or maybe it's a federal posted notice? Not sure
They need to bring back Public execution