By Sam Coles:
Red Dead Redemption II is one of if not my favourite game of
2018; check out my review if you haven’t. It has given me a new outlook on John
Marston, he is not the main focus of the game well not in the first three
quarters of the game but it does shine a light on the character. I want to go
over John’s transformation from a hot headed and blood thirsty outlaw to a
gentlemanly cowboy.
When the game begins, you are transporting your gang through
snow laden tundra of the mountains after a heist gone wrong, John goes missing
and Arthur has to go and find him. Arthur retorts with “He’s gone riding off
again” suggesting that this is something quite common with John, Arthur goes
and finds him like an obligated father. John is injured which gives me his
signature scares that are tattooed into his face, once John is back in good
health he is up to no good.
It’s clear that Arthur has some reservations with John, as
he is reluctant to do any jobs with him mostly due to his impulsive nature
which leads them to a cordite filled situation. However as the months go on
Arthur begins to warm up to John, and Marston begins to realise he can’t keep
the criminal life up and starts to doubt Dutch’s words of a life in a tropical
paradise as he keeps saying “Just one more time”. John starts to realise that
he can’t continue like this, as he has a child and partner and he can’t raise a
family with empty promises of paradise. So after one thing after another, he
leaves the gang after Dutch goes insane, where he then retires to a normal and
mundane life as a ranch hand.
When John leaves the outlaw life he tries to go straight and
find a legitimate job, however he has trouble adjusting to normal life at first
as his violent tendencies have a habit of surfacing in certain situations. He
stumbles on a farm as he is delivering food and supplies to them, he sees that
they are being hounded by a small time gang where he then chases them off. He
is taken on by the ranch where he and his family can stay on site; he slowly
warms up to the ranching life as he is shown the ropes as he slowly falls into
a routine.
John’s violent tendencies seep through once again, but it’s
not through malicious intent as he is trying to defend the ranch he works for against
bandits. His partner Abigale doesn’t see it that way, she sees it as John going
back to his old ways and then she leaves. John now alone and broken decides to
prove himself, he hears about a piece of land in Beechers Hope and wants to
settle there. With some help from his boss he is able to take out a loan,
gather materials and build his home where he can settle, what I like about this
character development we see Marston mature and shape into the man we know in
the original Red Dead Redemption. He truly turns into a man of honour and
respect.
With his home built John finally gets his wife back, it’s a
touching moment and we see him turn into a sensitive soul as they go and do
normal things such as going to the theatre and getting their photo taken. We
see the sensitive side of John show, and his violent and outlaw life have finally
faded away as he can leave the madness of Dutch behind and live it out with his
family, for now anyway.
It was great to see John Marston’s character to shape in Red
Dead Redemption II, from a naïve and violent outlaw to an emotional and gentle
soul who wants nothing more than to live the rest of his days with his family.
It makes it doubly hard to deal with his fate in the original game, and makes
me shed a tear more as it shows that he genuinely wants to make a difference in
his life.
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