For my money, Capcom couldn’t have picked a better game to remake than Resident Evil: Code Veronica, the survival horror classic that made its debut on Sega Dreamcast all the way back in the year 2000. Capcom announced the remake during Summer Game Fest 2026, and I just about cried tears of happiness. Finally, after 26 long years, I’ll get to experience one of the strongest stories in the Resident Evil franchise, hopefully through gameplay that doesn’t make me want to chug a vial of T-virus serum and be done with it. Oh, and that voice acting. God, the voice acting.
In fairness to the English-speaking actors who brought characters like Steve Burnside, Alfred Ashford, and Albert Wesker to life, voice acting was universally bad in the late ’90s and early ’00s. But in the wake of the Code Veronica remake reveal, fans are lovingly revisiting some of the most egregious performances in the original game, a reminder of how far we’ve come in terms of video game production, and a moment of appreciation for folks like Nick Apostolides and Angela Sant’Albano, the actors behind Leon Kennedy and Grace Ashcroft in Resident Evil Requiem, a game whose top-notch performances make you feel connected to the characters and thus elevate the horror and emotional stakes dramatically.
Anyway, things were different back when Code Veronica came out, as evidenced by these, uh, memorable performances highlighted by a number of content creators and commentators. It’s worth nothing that some of these clips contain story spoilers, so if you haven’t played the original game and want to go into the remake completely blind, unfortunately you might want to revisit them later.
In this clip spotlighted by horror content creator DEERE, we hear Claire Redfield accuse bad guy Alfred Ashford of being a “cross-dressing freak,” which I can only imagine won’t make it into the Code Veronica remake. “Clair is a TERF confirmed,” jokes DEERE.
Here’s a compilation that I think does a really great job showcasing the distinct cartoonish quality of Code Veronica’s acting. I simply can’t watch scenes like the one with Alfred Ashford’s ridiculously extended sigh of anguish and Steve Burnside’s confused reaction and not laugh, which really puts a damper on the whole horror side of the game.
The grand finale of bad Code Veronica acting, seen in the video above, is the most infamous scene of them all. Another gem from the character Steve Burnside, in this clip we see a tortured son forced to shoot and kill his own father, which is objectively horrible, but again, any dramatic weight held by the situation alone is negated by the character’s wildly inappropriate tone while screaming in agony.
Of course, plenty of fans want to see this masterclass in comedic acting preserved in the remake, but again, the idea is to scare people. You physically cannot be scared with scenes like these in the game, and thus, I’m pretty sure we’ll have to keep watching them in clips online or, heaven forbid, by playing the original game.
ILL is the most violent horror game I’ve ever seen, it makes Resident Evil and Dying Light look kinda cute
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