The map for the Red Dead Redemption series is almost as much of a character as any of the outlaws, gunslingers, or innocent civilians that players meet along each campaign. While some fans have attached Red Dead Redemption's map to the real world, or traveled across it for various challenges, one player has pulled the fictional world together in a way that shows the scope of the playable area.

Shared on Reddit by user Kalemdt90, the image has quickly picked up some attention from the Red Dead Redemption community, with many fans surprised to see some of the size comparisons between locations. The location of Guarma in particular shocked some players with how what appeared as a small tropical island compares when actually put side-by-side with the rest of the explorable America.

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According to Kalemdt90, the map seen bellow is a result of compiling the maps from Red Dead Redemption by scouring through images found on Google from both games. Some fans have compiled this view before, attaching the areas from across the river in the original game when John Marston travels to Mexico, but usually not extending further out of America than that. This latest image, however, goes a step further, including what appears to be a recreation of Guarma based on both the in-game map as well as information made available about what is referred to as an island nation.

The major section pulled from the original Red Dead Redemption and into these types of fan-made maps is often the Nuevo Paraiso locale, given that it is one of few places not accessible in the sequel. This makes piecing together most of the map to be not too difficult of a task for dedicated fans, but the same can't be said for the island nation of Guarma which is never shown in-game in relation to the rest of America. It's a small section of the game, but as a piece of the map, this section does show itself as being a large part of the overall world.

While a lot of Rockstar Games' titles tend to pull more directly from reality, such as the city of Los Santos being a close recreation of Los Angeles, there is a type of fantasy to Red Dead Redemption's wild west. Putting together the world of this alternate America is similar to doing the same in the Elder Scrolls series or Warcraft, where the map doesn't always pull out to show the whole globe. So, it's always interesting to see the fan community put their heads together to paint a clearer picture of the world as a whole outside of what is shown within the confines of the game.

Red Dead Redemption 2 is available now for PC, PS4, PS5, Stadia, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X/S.

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