2026 has been good to me. My Resident Evil Requiem review points to the staggering impact of Capcom’s latest, charting the path forward for a survival horror legacy by bringing us back to where it all began.
The moment I rolled credits, I already had my suspicions about what might come next. Requiem’s ending builds two futures at once, seeding what might transpire in the mainline series as well as hinting at which remake could come next. Now that the Code Veronica remake has finally been revealed, I’m even more excited to see how Resident Evil’s past might influence its future – but in order for that to work, I’m all too happy for Capcom to rewrite itself.
New nightmares
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Resident Evil Veronica is my most-anticipated upcoming horror game of the next year. A huge part of that is down to two words in the official game description: “reimagined story.”
It’s no secret that much of Capcom’s older material hasn’t aged well. Subtle changes in Resident Evil 4 Remake suggest that the developer itself is keenly aware of it. I fully expected that any remake of Code Veronica/X would have a few nip-tucks to update the humor for a modern audience, so I would be very surprised if Claire still calls Alfred Ashford a full-on slur in 2027. The bigger mystery is how the eccentric villain will be presented at all, since the original game’s big twist plays on outdated shock tactics that are in dire need of an update.
I won’t spoil the above for you, but it does leave me wondering if Resident Evil Veronica’s “reimagined story” will update more than just a dicey script. This is Capcom’s chance to alter who these characters actually are and keep the game in line with the modern day.
That idea alone might have you clenching your jaw, but hear me out. Following on from three stunning remakes created alongside the series’ mainline entries, Resident Evil is running out of viable options to choose from. Resident Evil 5 is still one of the most controversial games of the bunch, while even the best Resident Evil game spin-offs are such an acquired taste (including my beloved Morpheus from Resident Evil Dead Aim) that many of those might be discounted on principle.
If Capcom wants to maintain pace with its rapidfire releases – and I really hope it does – it’s time for all of us to call a spade a spade and admit when something just would not hit the same in the 2020s as it did in the early 2000s. We need small, meaningful changes that maintain the series’ integrity, preserving pivotal plot points while reframing the supporting narrative.
It’s something we already see hints of in Resident Evil Requiem. Wesker is miraculously “back” again, perhaps another clone, since he was supposed to be dead as of Resident Evil 5. More than that, the game’s finale suggests that Oswell Spencer was potentially not quite the palm-rubbing psychopath many of us had him pegged as for 30 years. None of this makes sense given the current canon laid out by Code Veronica and Resident Evil 5, but maybe it will once Resident Evil Veronica sheds a little more light.
At this early stage, there’s no telling how big or small Capcom’s changes might be. Maybe the lengthier exposition with Claire seeking Chris out in Paris, as seen in the announcement trailer, will be all there is to it. Or maybe Capcom will take the opportunity for reinvention that so few developers ever get, soldering the future of Resident Evil in the process.
Check out our best Resident Evil games list for more to play while you wait!
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