Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

A can of beans costs more than a gold ring in ‘Red Dead Online’ economy

Add as a preferred source on Google

Red Dead Online, the multiplayer mode of Red Dead Redemption 2, opened in public beta mode this week and the responses have been generally positive. But one aspect of the online game has been causing a lot of controversy — the in-game economy.

An objection that many people have been voicing is that the prices of in-game items are too high and that earning currency requires too much grinding. There are two currencies available in Red Dead Online — cash and gold bars. The gold bars are the “premium” currency that will eventually be available to buy with real-world money. It would be understandable if the gold bars were more difficult to obtain, but fans are complaining that even the regular cash is too hard to get when playing.

Recommended Videos

You get an in-game cash reward for completing missions in Red Dead Online, but the payout is very low. Most missions pay out $2 or $3, while the essential items you need to play the game like horse feed cost $1 or more. Even looting items doesn’t help, with a bizarre situation in which you can sell a gold wedding ring for $1.15, which is not even enough to buy a can of beans.

This had lead to a situation where intense grinding is necessary to play the game effectively. Players on Reddit have calculated you would need to grind for 8 hours to earn one gold bar. And to give you an idea of what all of that grinding would get you, in order to unlock a feature like fast travel back to camp you would need to spend 112 gold bars, which would take a ridiculous 900 hours to earn. Even a simple upgrade like customizing the basic revolver to be all black costs 12 gold bars, or nearly 100 hours’ worth of grinding.

Grinding is a familiar aspect of gaming, and it isn’t necessarily bad to have upgrades and cosmetic options available to those who are willing to put a few extra hours into playing. However, the sheer amount of time required to earn even the most basic supplies in Red Dead Online is highly off-putting for many. Also, users are worried about the potential effects of making gold bars available to buy with real-world money. The use of microtransactions could seriously unbalance gameplay and give paying players a massive advantage over those not willing to spend more.

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
Forget console wars. Steam Machine may help kill lazy PC gaming ports
Valve’s expensive mini PC could become PC gaming’s new baseline
Steam Machine with Steam Controller

Valve’s Steam Machine has become easy to dunk on. The price starts well above current consoles, and the hardware sits somewhere between entry-level and mid-range gaming PCs rather than a monster rig. Early reviews have also talked about how demanding games need upscaling, trimmed settings, and realistic expectations.

With the ongoing memory crisis, it sounds like a rough time to bring a PC to the couch. Though the Steam Machine doesn't need to beat high-end gaming PCs or the big consoles. Its purpose was different from the start. And what really makes it better is how it could shift the PC gaming segment entirely.

Read more
GTA 6 may not get the real physical release fans were hoping for
The game may come in a case, but not on a disc
GTA 6 cover art

Grand Theft Auto 6 pre-orders recently went live, but the excitement came with one frustrating catch. The so-called physical edition of the game will not include a disc. Instead, buyers will get a box with cover art and a download code inside.

That decision immediately caused backlash online, especially among collectors who still care about owning games on disc. For a while, there was some hope that this would only be temporary. Reports suggested that Rockstar could release a proper disc version of GTA 6 in December 2026, giving physical media fans something to wait for.

Read more
The Steam Machine launch hasn’t even happened, but the resale circus has begun
Scalpers are already trying to cash in on Valve’s Steam Machine
Valve Steam Machine Featured Design Coverplate

Valve has started sending out reservation emails for the Steam Machine ahead of its June 30 launch, and scalpers have wasted no time turning the whole thing into a comedy act.

The Steam Machine is already an expensive device, as RAM and SSD prices have made hardware pricing miserable across the industry. Valve has previously said it would like to lower the price if component costs improve. That makes the resale listings even harder to take seriously, because the official price was already higher than many people expected before scalpers added their own fantasy tax.

Read more