Search
Search
After 15 years, Rockstar co-founder Dan Houser reveals the meaning behind Red Dead Redemption's Strange Man: "He's a manifestation of your shadow, your karma, the devil"
19.3k
Anthony McGlynn
2025-11-03
One of the creepier mysteries in the Red Dead Redemption games surrounds the 'Strange Man', an unnamed gentleman in a top hat who makes recurring appearances. He has an ethereal presence in Red Dead Redemption 2 and its predecessor, haunting John Marston and sparking rumors among NPCs. Dan Houser, co-founder of Rockstar Games, doesn't have too many answers on what's going on with the character, but he does provide more context as to their creation. "We felt we needed more story so we, quite late in development, started putting in almost like this RPG-type content where you'd go and meet someone, and they'd be like short stories," he remembers on the Lex Fridman Podcast. "We tried to make them these short stories with a sting in the tail, and he came out as just this weird character," Houser continues. "And then we built a bit into the story where he would unlock as you were making your way through, and be a commentary on what you were doing." Red Dead Redemption 2 "was the best thing" that Rockstar co-founder Dan Houser worked on, not GTA 5: "The best single realization of open-world storytelling thematic consistency" Former GTA boss and Rockstar Games co-founder Dan Houser's "own childhood" shaped "a lot" of Rockstar's cult classic open-world game Bully, former dev says, but it also "touched on all our childhood memories" I love Red Dead Redemption 2 more than any other Rockstar game, and after 7 years it still has an important lesson to teach GTA 6 The Strange Man, as Houser sees it, was meant to be a "manifestation of your shadow, your karma, the devil," and something "any artist is scared of: a creative who's kind of sold his soul to the devil." Both of those things are frightening in their own way, giving the black-suited man an even more ghostly aura. These vignettes came about after Rockstar realized without the cars, machine guns, cities, and most of the people wandering about, Red Dead Redemption was just about "a dude riding a horse in the desert," which was "quite boring." The world needed more stimulation, and what better than an elusive phantom? Players figured there was something not quite right about the figure after the end of the first RDR, where John Marston shoots at him but the bullets appear to do nothing. "He knows what you're up to, but what's never made clear is, does he know this about everybody?" Houser adds. "Is he following you, or is he able, because of the pact he's made with evil forces, able to do this for everybody? I don't think we ever clarify that." It's still unclarified now, but it's fascinating to hear Houser's take as one of the main developers. We'll have to see how the man reappears in Red Dead Redemption 3, whenever that arrives. Red Dead Redemption 2 "was the best thing" that Rockstar co-founder Dan Houser worked on, not GTA 5: "The best single realization of open-world storytelling thematic consistency"
3.4k
6
Send
snaccmode
Nov 10, 06:34 AM
yeah cool beans
0
dark_mode_only
Nov 06, 06:14 AM
fairly decent.
0
NullKitty
Nov 03, 05:34 PM
This is easy. :and things do you agree?
0
byte_me
Nov 03, 04:24 PM
This isn't a game, it's a time sink. Could be awesome. Bad UI
0
funkySock
Nov 03, 03:54 PM
phenomenal [Removed] 🥳 Extremely complex.! this is confusing.
0
Recent Articles