RESIDENT EVIL: REQUIEM is the latest installment of the incredibly long-lived franchise that started when I was a wee teenager and has continued steadily ever since. I'm a huge Resident Evil fan, albeit not really someone who masters the games. I got my start reading the SD Perry novels and enjoyed all of the Mila Jovavich movies that were a source of comfort during a dark period in my life alongside Kate Beckinsale's Underworld series. Long story. Resident Evil has always been dumb fun for me but also my baby's first horror series as well. There's darkness and scares in the series but up against a bunch of people who like to shoot it in the head.
Requiem is the ninth numbered installment of the series but there's literally dozens of spin offs ranging from Revelations to light gun games. I haven't played all of them but I have played a lot of them and my favorites are probably VII and the Resident Evil II remake. I prefer Resident Evil to Silent Hill but I never really came to love Resident Evil IV the way so many other video game fans have. I'm just not a big fan of pulse-pounding action versus more methodical investigation that others emphasize.
Resident Evil: Requiem is a game that chooses to split the difference between the action and horror elements of the franchise after recent games have been struggling to balance the two. It also attempts to marry the extensive past of Resident Evil (which is for old folks like me) with an introduction for newcomers. Whether it succeeds in this is going to be a matter of individual taste rather than something that can be definitive spoken.The premise is that Grace Ashcroft is the adopted daughter of Alyssa Ashcroft, a protagonist from Resident Evil: Outbreak. Grace's mother was murdered years before in a creepy hotel that Grace is sent to investigate by the FBI despite the fact she's not an agent but an analyst. She's also not accompanied by any backup, which does take me out of the story a bit. Seriously, you should send an experienced agent along with her so they can be horribly murdered! Anyway, she soon finds there's an evil conspiracy afoot and is kidnapped by the game's villain, Gideon.
Meanwhile, Leon S. Kennedy has found himself investigating yet another Umbrella scientist on the run. Leon is now 52 and still looks fantastic but he's changed out Hunnigan for aged-up Resident Evil 2 mascot, Sherry Birkin. Sherry is 40, by the way, which tells me just how old I've become. Leon spends his portions kicking ass and taking names, roundhouse kicking zombies in the face while blowing their heads up with his super pistol. The two protagonists could not be more different and it does give the game some much needed variety.
The Grace sections of the game deal with the fact she's a clumsy, terrified, and confused young woman who is struggling with creatures that will kill her instantly. The Leon sections are full of pulse pounding action that sadly gets a bit repetitive. Still, I think they struck a pretty good balance with both sections giving you a break from the other. I think the Raccoon City sections are less interesting than the ones set in the abandoned mental hospital (which is as classic a place for a horror setting as possible). Basically, there's only so much you can do with a bunch of abandoned ruins unless you're Fallout.
The villains are kind of one-note with Gideon being little more than another evil Umbrella scientist and Zeno being a rehash of a character that I thought was overused before 5. Still, the plot is perfectly serviceable and the climax promises a resolution to a lot of longstanding plots. One element I did dislike was the attempt to redeem a longstanding Resident Evil bad guy who you can't really redeem just by saying he had a daughter he loved.In conclusion, Resident Evil: Requiem is a solid entry into the franchise with some truly creepy moments and good gameplay but it's also somewhat mid compared to Resident Evil VII and Village that managed to reinvent the formula. Still, I would have preferred to either have Rose as the protagonist of this or have a deeper examination of Leon Kennedy as an aging hero.
8/10








