RDR2 changed my life so much it basically became the last game I played or cared for. After falling absolutely in love with the atmosphere of the game, I took up hiking and wanted to see bueatiful locations in real life.. I then started taking photos of my hikes and fell in love with photography as well... 5 years later I run my own business now doing landscape photography, with side photo shoots for others outdoors. I owe so much to this game. I'll be 40 this year, and with my kids, wife, and my business, I hardly have time to play games these days. The feeling when I play RDR2 now is unlike anything I can describe. Thanks for reading this far!
It's also the last game I ever played. Having kids and work it's almost impossible to find time, but I'm glad I finished up my gaming days with my favorite game ever.
As some one from Oklahoma i can say that the heart lands are based on Oklahoma and the Cornwall oil mine is most definitely based off of 1 of many oil mines in the area infact Oklahoma had a big oil business and a oil rush plus a lot of native American history that lines up with the Wapiti tribe
I can def agree as someone from arkansas. On my mothers side my ancestors were cowboys and on my fathers side my ancestors were native Americans and its very cool seeing both sides getting recognized through media such as rdr.
Wish that in the epilogue colter would be reestablished as an active settlement. Or maybe if there was rest stop in the wilderness like Minnie’s haberdashery in the hateful right
@@filmsbyhen I've said that from day one! Wish they had added something like the haberdashery. Considering that there are so many nods to real life figures and western fiction in the game, it would have been SO cool to get a nod to The Hateful Eight. Or even to some other Tarantino westerns.
Very cool! As a European I am not really familiar with how American states have 'sterotypical' landscapes, so it's cool to see the RDR2 map being matched to the real world! I really wish to visit the US one day :)
Hey, I watched most of your videos and I had some entertaining hours with them. I have a suggestion, though, if I may: videos like this one could benefit a lot from a slower pacing in my opinion. There is so much beautiful imagery, but as soon as I'm about to take it in, you jump to the next chapter. Keep up your work, it's appreciated!
Awesome video, it really shows that you put your research into this! I actually think that grizzlies east us also partly inspired by wyoming backcountry. Not only does the rockies go through wyoming but if you search up wyoming island lake you will find mountain scenes looking almost identical to those surrounding the lake were hamish lives.
I come back to this game regularly and I think a huge reason why is because of the environment. Kansas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Arkansas, and that region of America is rarely depicted in any kind of media. Let alone a game. To enjoy a setting faithfully recreating those kinds of places and making it as vast of a section of RDR2’s world is something I’ll always enjoy, and I don’t think it’s likely to happen again. It’s really sad how everyone including rockstar as a developer acknowledge and joke about how they abandoned the game to focus on GTAonline. The potential for DLC content is really a big what if for me. If R* had split and dedicated a third of their resources they did to GTAonline since 2018 RDR2 would be seen as something transcending the medium of gaming (more than it did) and be a legendary piece of fiction and culture. For all of their flaws, Bethesda succeeded with making Skyrim a game that will be seen in history as a touchstone piece of fiction for generations to enjoy. People mock all of Skyrim’s re-released versions but they exist because it’s still profitable. R* dropped the ball completely on being able to enjoy that same privilege for Rdr2. They could have been supporting something they produced and doing pretty minimal work to benefit from their customers satisfaction and trust with one or two DLC expansions. As insult to injury the story of RDR2 is SO good that it would take the place of a game like Skyrim in the bigger picture of video games and storytelling narratives having the potential to be as universal of an art as movies or paintings, sculpting, photography.. whatever.
I think the Heartlands is my favourite region of the map. Even in real life I always like wide open spaces, where you can see for miles in any direction. I always thought Hennigan's Stead and MacFarlane's Ranch from the original game was inspired by 'Of Mice and Men', which is meant to be somewhere near Soledad, California.
Id argue that places surrounding Annesburg strike me as that I am exactly where Im from in Central PA. the surrounding mountains are effectively just like Allegheny county. No terribly interesting terrain, just trees, grass, some waterfalls, creeks, rivers. Same tree species, animals, hill terrains, people from PA would most likely agree with me also considering Annessburg gives off old Pittsburgh vibes.
I think of western Montana and Wyoming in Ambarino, but I can see Colorado there too. I see a lot of Nebraska and eastern Wyoming in the Central part of New Hanover, which makes sense with Valentine resembling Cheyenne and other livestock towns in that region. However, Roanoke Ridge is definitely more modeled after Appalachia, not so much the Ozarks. Those hills are very west Tennessee and West Virginia.
Cholla is pronounced "CHOY'-uh", its a cactus found in the Sonoran Desert. In Spanish, the letter ll is pronounced like a y. Cholla is often called "Jumping cactus" for how easily it will leave its own parts, covered with strong quills, in the skin of the invader. They are all over the map in Cholla Springs in the game as well. In fact, this is really what got me hooked on RDR(1) a dozen years ago: it felt like I was back home in the desert west of Tucson, in Avra Valley (near old Tucson)
@1:46 The canyon walls there and a few other places in this state are the same style as the walls of Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park in Colorado.
Great video and great research! Just a constructive idea for the next ones: perhaps it would be a great idea for you to slow down a little bit, showing places in RDR's map and then showing places in the USA's map (just as you did with the Rocky Mountains in the very beggining) with their names, etc. In this video everything seems too fast-paced, it is a little bit hard to follow everything
Ive been to all 50 states, and I would say this is a really solid video, and I agree with many of these, but there are quite a few I have differing opinions on- 1.For Amberino's huge waterfall I would actually say this is based on bridal falls or other various large CO waterfalls. 2. Citadel rock more closely resembles all those limestone rock formations you find in the great plains region of the USA, mostly notably Scottsbluff. 3. Little creek big valley is weird because it connects West Elizabeth to Amberino, mount Shann is likely based off of a Cascade loner mountain, while the range on the other side as you previously mentioned is 100% the Rockies, the valley itself is actually modeled off of Colorado. I agree with everything else
As someone who is 44 years old, i can only say this. THERE IS ONLY WORLD BEFORE AND AFTER RDR2. Nothing can compare with that game on equal level. Great video.
06:00 - Interesting maps, but I don't think it's important to imagine how the RDR2 universe USA would look like. All I am interested in is what places the rich RDR2 map was inspired by. This you covered very well! Great video!
I just recently moved to New York City, but riding around in Cholla Springs makes me miss my home back in Arizona. I much prefer the heat of the Sonoran. 🌵
Great video but just to be pedantic for a second, Mt Hagen is further south than that one 2:23 (this specific mountain range overlooks Colter and Spider Gorge runs alongside it, and is notable for its jagged peaks). Mt Hagen however is disconnected from the others, south of Lake Isabella as a standalone structure. Anyway, love the details of the real life inspirations and and insight.
1:58 this waterfall here looks a lot like Snoqualmie falls in Washington State, (specifically the right side waterfall in the game) interestingly, it is a taller waterfall than Niagara falls too! It also sits at the foothills of the Cascade mountains similar to how in game the waterfall is more at the foothills rather than up in the mountains. Snoqualmie falls also often has 2 streams falling down, depending on hoe much water there is. It looks like Rockstar just took a picture of Snoqualmie falls and mirrored it(flipped it). The water fall on the left is 100% Yosemite falls. Look it up, you'll see it starts with a big wide waterfall, splashes on the ground in a little pool and then keeps going down in a smaller thinner stream. 100% EXACTLY like the waterfall on the left in RDR2. It also makes sense for it to be Yosemite Falls, because that waterfall in game is also near the hot springs/geisers which is based on Yosemite. The one on the left also kind of reminds me of Colonial Peak Falls, Washington - The Tallest Waterfall in the contiguous USA (48 states). It is extremely tall, and there is many many different parts of the waterfall, it is so tall you cant actually see the whole waterfall at once, so there is a couple spots of that waterfall that reminds me of this one, especially the one on the left. But it is obvious RDR 2 based that waterfall on Yosemite falls 100% especially considering the geisers hot springs are nearby which are based on Yosemite.
I always thought Roanoke Ridge was more of a stand in for Appalachia, more specifically the West Virginia/Virginia area. There is a Roanoke, Virginia which is in the mountains.
Would you do something exploring the turn of the century American politics in RDR2? (i.e. reconstruction, indigenous american policy, corrupt mayors, the rise of corporations, etc.) ik its kinda broad but I feel like there are definitely some interested things to explore
Really good video thanks man. Fantastic references and you clearly have an understanding of the geography which, being from Australia, is really helpful. USA has some of the most beautiful terrain in the world. I think R* did an excellent job bundling it all together. Shame they didn’t include Mexico etc.
I'd argue that Big Valley near the Little Creek River is less Yosemite and more Grand Teton NP. Donner Falls looks a lot like the Upper Falls of the Yellowstone River, which would make sense considering its proximity to Cotorra Springs.
Van Horn is very much like the old city of Natchez, MS, or at least the area of Natchez referred to as "down the hill", and kind of north west of there is much like the hills and hollars of Kentucky with it's cave system, much like the big cave near the Elysian Pool.
Another great video! Personally I like to think of the states in Red Dead as the early versions of states, so Lemoyne would eventually become Louisiana, New Austin would bevome party Texas and partly New Mexico I guess, and West Elizabeth becomes split between different states also. So perhaps in Red Dead there are less states to begin with and some states split into different ones, but others like New York were already a thing, at least in name alone, but perhaps the New York mentioned in the game is an early version of what we know as New York in real life and it will later form as what we know as New York. This is all just speculation of course, but it helps me to make sense of the map more.
The Serpent Mound in Roanoke Ridge is very similar to the actual Serpent Mound in southern Ohio, an ancient American Indian burial ground. I've been there many times, and the game does it justice.
Personally I always thought Roanoke Ridge was based more on Appalachia, considering the name Roanoke is heavily affiliated with that area and the fact that the Appalachians were full of coal mining towns like Annesburg strengthen the resemblance.
I thought that for the longest time, I even mention that in my previous historical inspiration video, but a bunch of people corrected me and honestly geographically the Ozarks make more sense. Plus there was a mining industry there too
@@filmsbyhen Pretty sure the naming for Butcher Creek & Beaver Hollow/Holler was inspired by Butcher Hollow/Holler in Kentucky, the home place of country singer Loretta Lynn. Her biggest song opens with the line "I was born a coal miners daughter in a cabin on a hill in Butcher Holler" so it's not deep lore. One of the cabins in the centre of Butcher Creek resembles her childhood home, but to be fair a lot of cabins look like that.
The area of Rhodes and Scarlet Meadows is definitely an amalgamation of the south as a whole, because it also reminds me a lot of north Louisiana/ east Texas
RDR2 has given me more than I ever expected from a game. I found a family. One that I never had as a child. I didn't cry at my grandmothers funeral, but I lose it when Arthur dies. So much so that I can't even play Chapter VI anymore. I try not to go past Chapter III or on occasion Chapter IV. Just because of the emotional toil it takes on me to lose men and women that I have grown to love. They all mean more to me that actual people in real life. I never have to be alone again as long as I have them. An interesting note is that here where I live there are 3 town with the same name as 3 in RDR2 and are quite close to each other. We have Blackwater, Rhodes, and Valentine. If we get any new towns and they are called Annesburg, Colter, or Lagras, I'm moving there. Because at some point Arthur will come riding through and *I WANNA MEET HIM* lol.
Lemoyne seems to have distinct notes of Florida as well as Louisiana. But a big difference between Saint Denis and New Orleans is Saint Denis is not a coastal city. Surely West Elizabeth is named after West Virginia, supposedly named for "The Virgin Queen", Elizabeth.
I think the area just east of Calumet Ravine including the unnamed mountain is a close resemblance to the Wind River Range in Wyoming. I agree with pretty much everything else.
In my opinion, RdR2 actually appears more visually appealing than real life, not necessarily in terms of crispness and detail, but there's something about it that makes it look better than the images you showed in the video.
I think it's the "haze". There's some sort of hue all around, that changes from place to place, along with an excess of particles...gives all locations a bit of a magical feel.
Exactly, it's also about how the environment appears; it's cuter, more perfect, rounded, smaller, with fewer imperfections than real life, and I love the color palette..@@ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid
Lowkey wish you covered Nuevo Paraiso since there's most likely never gonna be another chance to discuss RDR's Mexican geography since it's just 1 state in 1 game
Alright so here’s my “criticism:” You have great cadence, word choice, and dialogue, and it makes every video a joy to watch, which is especially refreshing since they’re original ideas 6 years after the game’s release. Just about every conceivable topic in the game has been beaten like a dead horse, but this breaks the mould (mold?). That being said, you could do well to do every state as its own in-depth video, discussing more geography and inspirations. I think I speak for everyone when I say that would be delightful, entertaining, and could offer so much content and insight into the game. Thanks for doing a great job.
@@kalinridenour It's like the old saying goes... "Time flies when you're -having fun- calling in sick to work four days in a row so that you can mash a 91-hour RDR2 bender, being an absolute psychopath to every last person you meet on the trails!" 🙃
This is gonna sound ridiculous... But this video told me that, as a British person, I'd been pronouncing Yosemite wrong my entire life💀 I always pronounced it "Yo-seh-might", not 'yuh-sem-atee" as you did. Had to pause, open a new tab, had my "hold up" moment right there haha
as a californian my fav state in the game is west elizabeth as it reminds me of california so much(atleast the mountain part). but it leaves me wondering what rockstar's actual california would look like if west elizabeth already has tall trees and big valley. i guess for rockstar, california would just be the coast and beaches?
Texas is in new Austin and only in new Austin, Texas is not in the Great Plains in my opinion, I made a map drawing where I think most of the states are
No way real life copied rdr2
Fr shame on real life
Game so good they made it real
Every masterpiece has its cheap copy
I can’t believe God based real life on rdr2
which one real which one rdr2?
RDR2 changed my life so much it basically became the last game I played or cared for. After falling absolutely in love with the atmosphere of the game, I took up hiking and wanted to see bueatiful locations in real life.. I then started taking photos of my hikes and fell in love with photography as well...
5 years later I run my own business now doing landscape photography, with side photo shoots for others outdoors. I owe so much to this game. I'll be 40 this year, and with my kids, wife, and my business, I hardly have time to play games these days. The feeling when I play RDR2 now is unlike anything I can describe.
Thanks for reading this far!
That's amazing! The greatest art inspires to do great things.
That is a very inspiring story. Congrats.
Beautiful story. I'd love if you shared your Instagram or anywhere else that we might find your work.
It's also the last game I ever played. Having kids and work it's almost impossible to find time, but I'm glad I finished up my gaming days with my favorite game ever.
Fake story 😂
As some one from Oklahoma i can say that the heart lands are based on Oklahoma and the Cornwall oil mine is most definitely based off of 1 of many oil mines in the area infact Oklahoma had a big oil business and a oil rush plus a lot of native American history that lines up with the Wapiti tribe
I can def agree as someone from arkansas. On my mothers side my ancestors were cowboys and on my fathers side my ancestors were native Americans and its very cool seeing both sides getting recognized through media such as rdr.
Can you tell me more that's so cool
I'm also from Oklahoma
@@moaimemes5843bruh you’re John Dahkeya from Ark: Survival Evolved
Where I live at in Oklahoma, that area between Rhodes and emeralds ranch remind me of home.
i went to Scotts bluff last year. the whole Nebraskan panhandle looks just like the heartlands. it's so beautiful out there.
Love Ambarino, Just wish you'd see more people
Wish that in the epilogue colter would be reestablished as an active settlement. Or maybe if there was rest stop in the wilderness like Minnie’s haberdashery in the hateful right
@@filmsbyhen Ambarino is bigger than what we actually see in the game, it extends further north.
I wish it had Minnie's Haberdashery
@@filmsbyhen I've said that from day one! Wish they had added something like the haberdashery. Considering that there are so many nods to real life figures and western fiction in the game, it would have been SO cool to get a nod to The Hateful Eight. Or even to some other Tarantino westerns.
you would have, if they're weren't driven out or killed.
Babe, wake up. Henry films just dropped another video
Banger *
Very cool! As a European I am not really familiar with how American states have 'sterotypical' landscapes, so it's cool to see the RDR2 map being matched to the real world! I really wish to visit the US one day :)
Hey, I watched most of your videos and I had some entertaining hours with them. I have a suggestion, though, if I may: videos like this one could benefit a lot from a slower pacing in my opinion. There is so much beautiful imagery, but as soon as I'm about to take it in, you jump to the next chapter. Keep up your work, it's appreciated!
Awesome video, it really shows that you put your research into this!
I actually think that grizzlies east us also partly inspired by wyoming backcountry. Not only does the rockies go through wyoming but if you search up wyoming island lake you will find mountain scenes looking almost identical to those surrounding the lake were hamish lives.
Brilliant video. So many real world connections. I can happily spend hours just galloping through the RDR scenery. The creators did an excellent job.
I come back to this game regularly and I think a huge reason why is because of the environment. Kansas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Arkansas, and that region of America is rarely depicted in any kind of media. Let alone a game.
To enjoy a setting faithfully recreating those kinds of places and making it as vast of a section of RDR2’s world is something I’ll always enjoy, and I don’t think it’s likely to happen again.
It’s really sad how everyone including rockstar as a developer acknowledge and joke about how they abandoned the game to focus on GTAonline. The potential for DLC content is really a big what if for me. If R* had split and dedicated a third of their resources they did to GTAonline since 2018 RDR2 would be seen as something transcending the medium of gaming (more than it did) and be a legendary piece of fiction and culture. For all of their flaws, Bethesda succeeded with making Skyrim a game that will be seen in history as a touchstone piece of fiction for generations to enjoy. People mock all of Skyrim’s re-released versions but they exist because it’s still profitable.
R* dropped the ball completely on being able to enjoy that same privilege for Rdr2. They could have been supporting something they produced and doing pretty minimal work to benefit from their customers satisfaction and trust with one or two DLC expansions. As insult to injury the story of RDR2 is SO good that it would take the place of a game like Skyrim in the bigger picture of video games and storytelling narratives having the potential to be as universal of an art as movies or paintings, sculpting, photography.. whatever.
When I was in Estes, Colorado, I noticed that there was a valley which looked nearly identical to big valley
Rdr2 is one of my favorite games
I think the Heartlands is my favourite region of the map. Even in real life I always like wide open spaces, where you can see for miles in any direction.
I always thought Hennigan's Stead and MacFarlane's Ranch from the original game was inspired by 'Of Mice and Men', which is meant to be somewhere near Soledad, California.
It’s truly an amalgamation. Hence the Oregon/Cali strawberry homage. Strawberry literally looks just like the video game town.
This is honestly my favorite UA-cam channel at the moment, keep up the fantastic content.
Id argue that places surrounding Annesburg strike me as that I am exactly where Im from in Central PA. the surrounding mountains are effectively just like Allegheny county. No terribly interesting terrain, just trees, grass, some waterfalls, creeks, rivers. Same tree species, animals, hill terrains, people from PA would most likely agree with me also considering Annessburg gives off old Pittsburgh vibes.
I think of western Montana and Wyoming in Ambarino, but I can see Colorado there too. I see a lot of Nebraska and eastern Wyoming in the Central part of New Hanover, which makes sense with Valentine resembling Cheyenne and other livestock towns in that region. However, Roanoke Ridge is definitely more modeled after Appalachia, not so much the Ozarks. Those hills are very west Tennessee and West Virginia.
Cholla is pronounced "CHOY'-uh", its a cactus found in the Sonoran Desert. In Spanish, the letter ll is pronounced like a y. Cholla is often called "Jumping cactus" for how easily it will leave its own parts, covered with strong quills, in the skin of the invader. They are all over the map in Cholla Springs in the game as well. In fact, this is really what got me hooked on RDR(1) a dozen years ago: it felt like I was back home in the desert west of Tucson, in Avra Valley (near old Tucson)
RDR2 is absolutely gorgeous, and it's so cool seeing their inspirations in real life.
@1:46 The canyon walls there and a few other places in this state are the same style as the walls of Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park in Colorado.
Great video and great research! Just a constructive idea for the next ones: perhaps it would be a great idea for you to slow down a little bit, showing places in RDR's map and then showing places in the USA's map (just as you did with the Rocky Mountains in the very beggining) with their names, etc. In this video everything seems too fast-paced, it is a little bit hard to follow everything
Ive been to all 50 states, and I would say this is a really solid video, and I agree with many of these, but there are quite a few I have differing opinions on-
1.For Amberino's huge waterfall I would actually say this is based on bridal falls or other various large CO waterfalls.
2. Citadel rock more closely resembles all those limestone rock formations you find in the great plains region of the USA, mostly notably Scottsbluff.
3. Little creek big valley is weird because it connects West Elizabeth to Amberino, mount Shann is likely based off of a Cascade loner mountain, while the range on the other side as you previously mentioned is 100% the Rockies, the valley itself is actually modeled off of Colorado.
I agree with everything else
Was just going to throw out, I live in Kentucky and like 15 minutes away from Cumberland Falls, which is surprisingly also depicted in the game.
As someone who is 44 years old, i can only say this. THERE IS ONLY WORLD BEFORE AND AFTER RDR2. Nothing can compare with that game on equal level. Great video.
It was cool playing it the first time thinking, "I've been there! I can almost smell it!" Solid game. Also, go travel the u.s. it's mind blowing
06:00 - Interesting maps, but I don't think it's important to imagine how the RDR2 universe USA would look like. All I am interested in is what places the rich RDR2 map was inspired by. This you covered very well! Great video!
Got back from a trip to Yellowstone a few weeks ago. Made me want to replay RDR2 again.
I just recently moved to New York City, but riding around in Cholla Springs makes me miss my home back in Arizona. I much prefer the heat of the Sonoran. 🌵
Great video but just to be pedantic for a second, Mt Hagen is further south than that one 2:23 (this specific mountain range overlooks Colter and Spider Gorge runs alongside it, and is notable for its jagged peaks). Mt Hagen however is disconnected from the others, south of Lake Isabella as a standalone structure. Anyway, love the details of the real life inspirations and and insight.
MrBeasr be like:
TODAY we’re building the WHOLE RDR2 map in REAL LIFE!
Ok?
1:58 this waterfall here looks a lot like Snoqualmie falls in Washington State, (specifically the right side waterfall in the game) interestingly, it is a taller waterfall than Niagara falls too! It also sits at the foothills of the Cascade mountains similar to how in game the waterfall is more at the foothills rather than up in the mountains. Snoqualmie falls also often has 2 streams falling down, depending on hoe much water there is. It looks like Rockstar just took a picture of Snoqualmie falls and mirrored it(flipped it).
The water fall on the left is 100% Yosemite falls. Look it up, you'll see it starts with a big wide waterfall, splashes on the ground in a little pool and then keeps going down in a smaller thinner stream. 100% EXACTLY like the waterfall on the left in RDR2.
It also makes sense for it to be Yosemite Falls, because that waterfall in game is also near the hot springs/geisers which is based on Yosemite.
The one on the left also kind of reminds me of Colonial Peak Falls, Washington - The Tallest Waterfall in the contiguous USA (48 states). It is extremely tall, and there is many many different parts of the waterfall, it is so tall you cant actually see the whole waterfall at once, so there is a couple spots of that waterfall that reminds me of this one, especially the one on the left. But it is obvious RDR 2 based that waterfall on Yosemite falls 100% especially considering the geisers hot springs are nearby which are based on Yosemite.
I always thought Roanoke Ridge was more of a stand in for Appalachia, more specifically the West Virginia/Virginia area. There is a Roanoke, Virginia which is in the mountains.
Agreed, as a resident of the Ozarks we are basically just miniature Appalachia
@@JH-fb3mp Yep. my mom was raised in southern Missouri and I still have family there.
Roanoke ridge sucks
Brilliant recap and visual usage. I love this so much!!
Would you do something exploring the turn of the century American politics in RDR2? (i.e. reconstruction, indigenous american policy, corrupt mayors, the rise of corporations, etc.) ik its kinda broad but I feel like there are definitely some interested things to explore
Really good video thanks man. Fantastic references and you clearly have an understanding of the geography which, being from Australia, is really helpful. USA has some of the most beautiful terrain in the world. I think R* did an excellent job bundling it all together. Shame they didn’t include Mexico etc.
Art copying life! 🙏🌟
I'd argue that Big Valley near the Little Creek River is less Yosemite and more Grand Teton NP. Donner Falls looks a lot like the Upper Falls of the Yellowstone River, which would make sense considering its proximity to Cotorra Springs.
This is awesome dude, your videos are so nice to just throw on. Really nice editing!
Van Horn is very much like the old city of Natchez, MS, or at least the area of Natchez referred to as "down the hill", and kind of north west of there is much like the hills and hollars of Kentucky with it's cave system, much like the big cave near the Elysian Pool.
I discuss Natchez in my history of every town video!
I love ambarino, I don’t live too far from Tahoe, so whenever I’m playing in ambarino, it reminds me of home☺️
Another great video! Personally I like to think of the states in Red Dead as the early versions of states, so Lemoyne would eventually become Louisiana, New Austin would bevome party Texas and partly New Mexico I guess, and West Elizabeth becomes split between different states also. So perhaps in Red Dead there are less states to begin with and some states split into different ones, but others like New York were already a thing, at least in name alone, but perhaps the New York mentioned in the game is an early version of what we know as New York in real life and it will later form as what we know as New York. This is all just speculation of course, but it helps me to make sense of the map more.
The Serpent Mound in Roanoke Ridge is very similar to the actual Serpent Mound in southern Ohio, an ancient American Indian burial ground. I've been there many times, and the game does it justice.
Personally I always thought Roanoke Ridge was based more on Appalachia, considering the name Roanoke is heavily affiliated with that area and the fact that the Appalachians were full of coal mining towns like Annesburg strengthen the resemblance.
I thought that for the longest time, I even mention that in my previous historical inspiration video, but a bunch of people corrected me and honestly geographically the Ozarks make more sense. Plus there was a mining industry there too
@@filmsbyhen Pretty sure the naming for Butcher Creek & Beaver Hollow/Holler was inspired by Butcher Hollow/Holler in Kentucky, the home place of country singer Loretta Lynn. Her biggest song opens with the line "I was born a coal miners daughter in a cabin on a hill in Butcher Holler" so it's not deep lore. One of the cabins in the centre of Butcher Creek resembles her childhood home, but to be fair a lot of cabins look like that.
Great video! Love Rockstar’s attention to detail with their maps.
Okay, the hype was worth it
I hope this gets a mil views
No mention of Black Canyon of the Gunnison which is clearly in the game.
Great video. Thank you for taking the time to make and post. 🤠👍💜🔥🌟💙🏆🥳💐🌻
The area of Rhodes and Scarlet Meadows is definitely an amalgamation of the south as a whole, because it also reminds me a lot of north Louisiana/ east Texas
Patrolling Gap Tooth Ridge almost makes you wish for a nuclear winter
RDR2 has given me more than I ever expected from a game. I found a family. One that I never had as a child. I didn't cry at my grandmothers funeral, but I lose it when Arthur dies. So much so that I can't even play Chapter VI anymore. I try not to go past Chapter III or on occasion Chapter IV. Just because of the emotional toil it takes on me to lose men and women that I have grown to love. They all mean more to me that actual people in real life. I never have to be alone again as long as I have them.
An interesting note is that here where I live there are 3 town with the same name as 3 in RDR2 and are quite close to each other. We have Blackwater, Rhodes, and Valentine. If we get any new towns and they are called Annesburg, Colter, or Lagras, I'm moving there. Because at some point Arthur will come riding through and *I WANNA MEET HIM* lol.
insane timing on this video i just finished watching the towns on and clicked back onto my home
Great video, will definetely keep coming back for these geographical comparisons.
Lemoyne seems to have distinct notes of Florida as well as Louisiana. But a big difference between Saint Denis and New Orleans is Saint Denis is not a coastal city.
Surely West Elizabeth is named after West Virginia, supposedly named for "The Virgin Queen", Elizabeth.
Knew this was a banger when the music started
I feel like fort Mercer is based on the Alamo. Both have similar back stories and both are near relatively near the Texas Mexico border .
I think the area just east of Calumet Ravine including the unnamed mountain is a close resemblance to the Wind River Range in Wyoming. I agree with pretty much everything else.
You are up there with Real Pixels as the best in the game right now 👍
twin stacks pass is based on Pawnee grassland in colorado
There is a Milwauke, because in the mission where you go retrieve the wapiti ceremonial stuff one soldier say that he is from milwaukee.
Rdr 2s world is by far the most realistic game world I've ever played and its not even close.
best Read Dead youtuber of the year undoubtedly
I always thought the big waterfall looks a lot like the Grand Canyon of Yellowstone
Would love to see rockstar just creating open worlds for diffrent countrys
Bro i think you're my fav youtuber right now, watched western movies cause of you lol
In my opinion, RdR2 actually appears more visually appealing than real life, not necessarily in terms of crispness and detail, but there's something about it that makes it look better than the images you showed in the video.
Maybe, but nah nothing can beat real life. Being there in person with great weather would probably be more beautiful
@@jakethemcufan7021 that’s why I said details and crispiness. But other things look better in rdr2
I think it's the "haze".
There's some sort of hue all around, that changes from place to place, along with an excess of particles...gives all locations a bit of a magical feel.
Exactly, it's also about how the environment appears; it's cuter, more perfect, rounded, smaller, with fewer imperfections than real life, and I love the color palette..@@ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid
*cutley books flights*
What cant wait to see beachers hope
Thanks for the geography tour!
America is a beautiful country.
Another great video 🤠
Lowkey wish you covered Nuevo Paraiso since there's most likely never gonna be another chance to discuss RDR's Mexican geography since it's just 1 state in 1 game
Its crazy to think about the dollars trilogy and where it was recorded, it was actually recorded mostly in Almeria, Spain which has a lot of desert
Flat Iron Lake is a Geographical cryptid, the mythical sixth Great Lake.
very well put together and quick video. Id love to visit those places one day but I guess at this point RDR2 is good enough i guess.
This man needs more subscribers
Alright so here’s my “criticism:”
You have great cadence, word choice, and dialogue, and it makes every video a joy to watch, which is especially refreshing since they’re original ideas 6 years after the game’s release. Just about every conceivable topic in the game has been beaten like a dead horse, but this breaks the mould (mold?).
That being said, you could do well to do every state as its own in-depth video, discussing more geography and inspirations. I think I speak for everyone when I say that would be delightful, entertaining, and could offer so much content and insight into the game.
Thanks for doing a great job.
I had to check online when you said the game was released six years ago. You are totally correct! I cannot believe it has been out for so long!
@@matthalpin1981 Yeah it’s crazy isn’t it? Feels like it’s been half that
@@kalinridenour It's like the old saying goes...
"Time flies when you're -having fun- calling in sick to work four days in a row so that you can mash a 91-hour RDR2 bender, being an absolute psychopath to every last person you meet on the trails!" 🙃
LETS GO HE DROPPED DA VIDEO
Nice work. Excellent effort!
This video deserves way more views
Thank you for making this video.
Bro please make the “outfit for every mask” pleeeaaase
This is gonna sound ridiculous... But this video told me that, as a British person, I'd been pronouncing Yosemite wrong my entire life💀
I always pronounced it "Yo-seh-might", not 'yuh-sem-atee" as you did. Had to pause, open a new tab, had my "hold up" moment right there haha
Minor correction, Ambárino is Portuguese for ambery (adjective) not Spanish.
I’m wrong😔
It’s spanish too!
@@filmsbyhen yeah I realized that now. Portuguese is slightly different, it has the accent. You were correct.
when you post i cry tears of joy
as a californian my fav state in the game is west elizabeth as it reminds me of california so much(atleast the mountain part). but it leaves me wondering what rockstar's actual california would look like if west elizabeth already has tall trees and big valley. i guess for rockstar, california would just be the coast and beaches?
I love the game but I kind of wish they kept it in the gta universe and threw in some references.
Why Red Redemption 2 looks better than real life?
Mad underrated🔥
Lesson: if real life names are used in RDR2, you are NEVER going there or going to see anything of it
I love your videos! keep up the good work :)
6:05 you can find globes in the game and everything looks the same
Tired of people saying that East New Hanover is Appalachia because they see trees and mountains and immediately think Appalachia and not Arkansas.
Texas is in new Austin and only in new Austin, Texas is not in the Great Plains in my opinion, I made a map drawing where I think most of the states are
Very good video mate, even though me as a European I dont know how tall The Statue of Liberty really is :( but a very good work!
93 m or 305 ft
As an American, I have fucking heard of the term “Rio Bravo”…… maybe I’m not an American.
Does anyone from the us call the rio grande the rio bravo? Cuz I don’t
It's funny to think that this compressed USA is actually a couple miles far in game LMAO
4:08 Drake:
very cool video mr henry films
I haven’t finished the game yet, I’m towards the end of Ch 6.. When does the closed areas black water, new Austin etc.. become available?
In the epilogue
Keep it up your videos are great ♥♥