Resident Evil 4 remake review


Review Information

Time played: 11 hours (completed)
Difficulty: Standard
Platform: PS5  

I remember the original Resident Evil 4 as an action-packed, mutant-fuelled, guns-blazing, epic quest to infiltrate a Spanish cult and rescue the President’s daughter. It’s only now I look back on it that I realize it may not have been as slick and cool as I had once thought.

This is where the remake swoops in like special agent Ada Wong on a zipline to save the day. Coming in to patch the narrative holes, fix the questionable voice acting, and give the battles and monsters a much-needed face-lift. It turns out that 18 years on, Resident Evil 4 needed a remake more than I thought.

Resident Evil 4 price and release date

  • What is it? A remake of 2005’s Resident Evil 4 
  • Release date: March 24, 2023 
  • Price: $59.99 / £49.99 / AUS$79
  • What can I play it on? PC, PlayStation, Xbox 

Guns blazing

Leon parrying Dr. Salvador's chainsaw attack

(Image credit: Capcom)

It’s been a long time since I felt like an actual threat in a Resident Evil game and not just like some poor bystander whose luck had run out. While I immensely enjoyed Resident Evil 7 Biohazard in all its horrors, being hunted at every turn was welcomely terrifying but draining. So when I got to jump into the depths of the Los Illuminados cult armed to the teeth and with all the combat knowledge to go with it, I couldn’t have been happier. 



Source link

Previous articleResident Evil 4 review: It feels like next-gen is finally here
Next articleBitcoin price surges to $26K as bulls react to CPI data