Resident Evil Requiem Reviews
Capcom has delivered another outstanding Resident Evil. Requiem is tense, stylish, mechanically sharp, emotionally grounded where it needs to be, and wildly entertaining when it decides to go loud. If you love this series, this is essential. If you never played a Resident Evil game, especially since the whole remakes started, while you will still enjoy the sh*t out of this one, you will miss a lot of nods to the history of the series. Still, this is a great reminder of why Resident Evil still owns this lane.
Resident Evil Requiem kicks off as a near-perfect slice of modern survival horror, but can’t sustain that brilliance across its full campaign.
Resident Evil Requiem is an amazing title, balancing survival-horror and balls to the wall action like few ever have before.
There’s no need to overcomplicate this. Resident Evil Requiem is a fantastic game that shows how to properly lay a long-running storyline to rest. If you’ve played the first two entries, this is one you absolutely shouldn’t miss. It delivers long-awaited answers to questions that have lingered for nearly 30 years.
Review in Unknown | Read full review
Resident Evil Requiem shows again why survival horror games are still popular by careful planning, control of atmosphere, and well-thought-out ways to progress. It's not a big change; as an alternative, it's a steady, meaningful progression in a legendary bloodline.
Requiem is a triumph of modern Resident Evil, with alternating perspectives between Grace and Leon keeping the pacing dynamic, puzzles that challenge your wits, and exploration that rewards careful observation. The gameplay loop feels both familiar and refined, all while weaving decades of Resident Evil lore into a coherent, satisfying narrative. With its depth, content, and meticulously crafted gameplay, Requiem earns a confident recommendation as a must-buy for fans and newcomers alike.
Resident Evil Requiem pulls you back to Raccoon City with two strong routes. Grace’s chapters bring slower, nervous survival horror, while Leon’s side sticks to harder-hitting combat. You sneak through hotels and clinics with a flashlight, juggling blood injector choices and limited ammo. Then you swap to over-the-shoulder fights where kicks, axe swings, and quick weapon swaps clear the room. The story spends a lot of time on old Umbrella lore and gives Leon more of the focus by the end. If you are already into Resident Evil, this stands up as one of the strongest modern games in the series.
Resident Evil Requiem is a masterful alchemy of classic horror and modern action. By expertly balancing tension and adrenaline, Capcom has delivered one of the most complete and polished experiences in the entire franchise.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
Capcom's venerable series makes its move with an installment that brings together and blends its past, present, and possible future, more alive (or undead) than ever.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
What Capcom has built here is a confident, frequently terrifying, occasionally overstuffed piece of survival horror that earns its place near the top of a very good franchise.
Resident Evil Requiem stands out for its precise balance between survival horror and action, blending tension and combat with remarkable cohesion. Backed by a compelling narrative that dives deep into Umbrella’s origins, the game expands the franchise’s legacy with confidence. Grace delivers a strong and memorable debut, while Leon returns sharper than ever, reaffirming his place as one of the series’ most iconic heroes.
Review in Portuguese | Read full review
Capcom has delivered the first big AAA title of 2026 and what feels like an evolution of the franchise
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Resident Evil Requiem blends classic survival horror with modern action through two playable characters, strong atmosphere, refined mechanics, and satisfying combat and puzzles for fans and newcomers alike.
Review in Turkish | Read full review
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Review in German | Read full review
Resident Evil Requiem is a conscious exercise in reconciliation that brings two fundamental concepts of the series face-to-face: vulnerability and competence. Capcom recovers the traumatic memory of Raccoon City and attempts to tie up loose ends that, for decades, seemed scattered across the shoulders of two dichotomous protagonists. Grace represents fear, scarcity, and psychological weight. Leon symbolizes legacy, experience, and the inevitable erosion of terror in someone who has already seen too much. The game delivers two distinct rhythms and an alternation between tension and action within a cycle cemented in the franchise's history. Featuring an intelligent design evolution and a succession of striking moments—though not always providing the player agency that horror needs to truly assert itself—it keeps one foot firmly planted in its legacy and the other in the future.
Review in Portuguese | Read full review
The ninth entry in the long running main series doesn't quite live up to the perhaps overly grandiose promises of the ultimate Resident Evil experience. The hybrid between survival horror and more straightforward action is still a definite success by the standards of the series.
Review in Finnish | Read full review
Leon’s latest adventure features some of the coolest moments in the franchise, some terrific scares with Grace’s sections, and an interesting story that opens up many exciting possibilities for the franchise going forward.
Despite its hits and misses, Resident Evil Requiem stands as a true love letter to fans of the franchise, offering a dark campaign that lets players take control of Leon Scott Kennedy and Grace Ashcroft. Even with certain narrative limitations and a lack of depth regarding its enemies, the game makes it clear that its gameplay is a steady evolution compared to previous titles, blending dynamic combat, a frenetic pace, and an extremely fluid experience.
Review in Portuguese | Read full review
Resident Evil Requiem is a confident return to the horror roots that defined the series' identity through Grace's levels. Yet at the same time, it isn't afraid to also redefine its action gameplay, which is arguably more enjoyable than ever through Leon’s segments. Requiem isn't just a sequel to the Resident Evil Series, but a love letter to the series evolution, and proof that horror can still thrive without losing its soul. All of these elements combined made this game, quite simply, the best Resident Evil title since Resident Evil 4.
Review in Arabic | Read full review
