Resident Evil Requiem
Developer Capcom
Publisher Capcom
Director Koshi Nakanishi
Producers
  • Masachika Kawata
  • Masato Kumazawa
Designers
  • Keiji Teranishi
  • Kenji Fukasawa
  • Isamu Hara
Programmers
  • Masaharu Kamo
  • Michiaki Masuda
  • Hiroto Makiyama
Artist Tomonori Takano
Writer Haris Orkin
Composers
  • Nao Sato
  • Masahiro Ohki
  • Shigeyuki Kameda
  • Joseph Holiday
Series Resident Evil
Engine RE Engine
Platforms
Release February 27, 2026
Genre Survival horror
Mode Single-player

Resident Evil Requiem[a] is a 2026 survival horror game developed and published by Capcom. It is the ninth main Resident Evil game, following Resident Evil Village (2021).[1] It features a new protagonist, FBI analyst Grace Ashcroft, who investigates a series of mysterious deaths involving the survivors of the Raccoon City incident with the help of the federal agent and returning protagonist Leon S. Kennedy.

Gameplay alternates between Grace and Leon. Grace's sections continue the survival horror gameplay of Resident Evil 7: Biohazard (2017) and Resident Evil Village as she evades zombies and monsters. Leon's sections are action-oriented, similar to games such as Resident Evil 4 (2005), as he often battles the same enemies head-on. Both characters can be played from a first-person or a third-person perspective.

Announced in July 2024 and unveiled at Summer Game Fest in June 2025, Requiem was directed by Koshi Nakanishi, the director of Resident Evil 7. It was conceived as an open-world online multiplayer game, but by 2021 it had shifted to a more conventional single-player game. Requiem was developed with the RE Engine and was the first Resident Evil game designed for ninth-generation consoles. It marked Leon's first major appearance since Resident Evil 6 (2012), and he was redesigned to appear older.

Requiem was released for Windows, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S and Nintendo Switch 2 on February 27, 2026, to acclaim. Critics praised the gameplay for its balance between survival horror and action, as well as its dark tone, story, and atmosphere, although they were divided on the pacing and consistency in some sections. Requiem sold five million copies in five days.[2]

Gameplay

Resident Evil Requiem is a single-player survival horror game in which the player controls FBI analyst Grace Ashcroft and DSO agent Leon S. Kennedy. The story alternates between characters, similar to Resident Evil: Revelations (2012) and Resident Evil: Revelations 2 (2015).[3]

Grace's sections focus on survival horror with limited resources that requires the player to be more cautious.[4] Grace is occasionally pursued by a monster, similar to Mr. X from Resident Evil 2 or Lady Dimitrescu from Resident Evil Village.[5] To avoid detection, the player can crouch and sneak and hide under objects such as tables. However, the monster can also stalk the player through walls and ceilings. Grace can distract it by collecting and throwing glass bottles found throughout the environment.[6] The player can use a lighter to illuminate dark areas, though this attracts the attention of the monster.[3]

Leon's sections focus on action, allowing him to use both firearms and melee moves to subdue zombie enemies.[3] In addition to his hatchet melee weapon with limited durability for parrying incoming enemy attacks, Leon can also pick up enemy weapons and use them against them.[7]

Requiem allows players to switch between first-person or third-person perspectives at any time, marking a departure from recent Resident Evil entries, which featured mostly first-person gameplay.[b][5] First-person perspective is the default for Grace's sections and third-person for Leon's sections. First-person offers "tense, realistic gameplay" according to Capcom, while third-person is "ideal for people who enjoy action-packed gameplay".[8]

Synopsis

Setting

The story of Requiem is set in October 2026, 28 years[9] after the destruction of Raccoon City.[c] It follows FBI intelligence analyst Grace Ashcroft (Angela Sant'Albano / Shihori Kanjiya),[11] the daughter of Resident Evil Outbreak (2003) protagonist Alyssa Ashcroft (Jane Perry / Kikuko Fujimoto),[12] and Division of Security Operations (DSO) agent Leon S. Kennedy (Nick Apostolides / Toshiyuki Morikawa), a recurring series protagonist first introduced in Resident Evil 2 (1998).[13] Capcom has described Grace as an introverted bookworm who feels powerless due to not being proficient in combat like other Resident Evil protagonists such as Claire Redfield or Jill Valentine.[5][14] Leon is supported by Sherry Birkin (Eden Riegel / Maaya Sakamoto), a fellow DSO agent whom he rescued from Raccoon City's destruction when she was a child.[d][15] Grace also encounters Emily (Emma Rose Creaner / Misa Segawa), a young blind girl who was taken captive and experimented on.[15] Grace and Leon are opposed by Victor Gideon (Antony Byrne / Yutaka Aoyama), a former Umbrella Corporation scientist seeking to carry out the will of its deceased founder Oswell E. Spencer (James Clyde / Ryūsei Nakao),[16] and Zeno (Craig Burnatowski / Shunsuke Takeuchi), an agent of the Connections crime syndicate that physically resembles Albert Wesker.[17] Major locations featured in the story include the condemned Wrenwood Hotel, the Rhodes Hill Chronic Care Center, and the ruins of Raccoon City.[18]

Plot

FBI analyst Grace Ashcroft is tasked to investigate the mysterious deaths of Raccoon City survivors due to some form of late onset T-Virus infection. Her superiors assign her to inspect the site of the latest death in the long-abandoned Wrenwood Hotel, where her mother Alyssa was killed eight years prior. Upon arriving at the hotel, Grace comes across evidence that somebody had been stalking her for years. She recovers a data disk left behind by her mother prior to her death, before she is attacked and abducted by ex-Umbrella scientist Victor Gideon. Meanwhile, DSO agents Leon Kennedy and Sherry Birkin are also investigating the string of deaths, as they too are exhibiting symptoms. Leon is directed to investigate the Wrenwood Hotel, and arrives just in time to see Gideon kidnapping Grace. Gideon manages to escape by causing a small T-Virus outbreak as a distraction, but Sherry is able to track him to his clinic, the Rhodes Hill Chronic Care Center.

Grace regains consciousness and escapes captivity just as Leon arrives. They both discover that all of the hospital's staff and patients have been infected with a mutated strain of the T-Virus and turned into zombies. Gideon locks down the building, separating Leon and Grace while sealing off all escape routes. As Leon fights through the creatures infesting the building, Grace is forced to sneak her way through the hospital, eventually encountering and freeing a young blind girl named Emily from her confinement cell. Grace and Leon each learn that Gideon is obsessed with completing the Elpis project, an alleged method of using the T-Virus to transfer a person's consciousness into other bodies, with Grace being the key. Leon, Grace, and Emily try to escape Rhodes Hill together, but Emily is mortally wounded in the process, triggering her T-Virus infection and mutating her into a monster. Leon is forced to subdue Emily, and a distraught Grace abandons Leon and leaves the facility with Gideon and his benefactor, a Connections representative named Zeno.

Zeno uses his government connections to end the DSO's investigation, but Leon and Sherry go rogue, with Leon following Grace, Gideon, and Zeno to the ruins of Raccoon City. Gideon attempts to intercept Leon, but is apparently killed when he falls into a ravine. Zeno takes Grace to ARK, a secret Umbrella facility beneath the Raccoon City Orphanage, which the Connections took control of. He explains that Umbrella's founder, Oswell Spencer, spearheaded the creation of Elpis as Umbrella's ultimate weapon but locked it behind a password that only Grace knows, though she has no memory of it. Leon rescues Grace, but they become separated as Leon's infection worsens. Grace finds a terminal and views the contents of her mother's disk. Inside are interviews Alyssa held with Spencer, who expresses regret for creating the T-Virus and reveals he adopted an infant Grace, later leaving her in Alyssa's care. Through the videos, Grace realizes the password to Elpis is "Hope". Leon and Grace reunite in the control chamber. From this point, two endings are possible:

  • If Grace deliberately enters the wrong password, ARK's self-destruct sequence activates. Zeno kills Leon, but is buried in ARK's destruction while Grace escapes.
  • If Grace enters the correct password, she realizes Elpis is not a weapon, but a universal antiviral that would nullify all viruses, including the T-Virus. Unaware, Zeno injects himself with Elpis, inadvertently neutralizing his viral enhancements, while Grace cures Leon's infection. Gideon arrives and kills Zeno, intending to hoard Elpis for his own research. Gideon mutates into a Nemesis-type monster, forcing Leon to kill him. Leon and Grace are then rescued by the BSAA Hound Wolf Unit, dispatched by Chris Redfield. In the aftermath, ARK's existence causes a major scandal, triggering new investigations into Umbrella, The Connections and the US government. Emily is found alive, and Elpis is used to cure her mutations.

In a post-credits scene after the second ending, Grace informs Leon that she has adopted Emily, who has regained her eyesight, and learns from Leon that Sherry has been cured. In the wreckage of ARK, two unknown soldiers comment that they've neutralized the remaining BSAA forces and will retrieve their "objective".

Development

On July 1, 2024, a Capcom Showcase presentation revealed that the next main Resident Evil entry was in development and would be directed by Koshi Nakanishi.[19] Over the course of its six-year development, Resident Evil Requiem changed dramatically.[20] According to Nakanishi, it was initially conceived as an online open world multiplayer game, but the concept was scrapped when the project went through a reboot in 2021 in favor of a creating more traditional single-player Resident Evil game.[21] The development team felt that "it wasn't what the fans wanted".[22] The team also experimented with making a "genuine horror game with Leon" like Resident Evil 2 but felt that "people wouldn't want to see a timid Leon".[23] In February 2026, writer Haris Orkin revealed that he had worked on the game for two and a half years.[24]

At the 2025 Tokyo Game Show, producer Masato Kumazawa revealed that a Nintendo Switch 2 version was not originally considered because the system had not been officially revealed yet. Following the team's acquisition of Switch 2 development kits, they tested the hardware by prototyping a port of Resident Evil Village (2021).[25] The porting process went smoothly, giving the team confidence to attempt to bring the in-development Requiem to the system as well, which was met with similar success. Capcom were initially skeptical that the Switch 2 could handle Requiem but was surprised by how well it was running.[26][27] The developers experimented with implementing the mouse control function of the Switch 2's Joy-Con 2 controllers for aiming and camera manipulation, but Kumazawa said this "confused the gameplay". They settled on using the Switch 2's gyroscope feature.[28]

Design

With 14 years having passed since his last appearance in Resident Evil 6 (2012), excluding the remakes, Requiem reintroduces an older Leon S. Kennedy. His design changed over the course of development. Capcom's female staff members were involved in designing the older Leon.[29] Game director Koshi Nakanishi said that Capcom's female team members "would point out and comment on even the finest details like the wrinkles on his neck" and felt that they had created a design "that would make anyone's heart throb".[30] The older Leon has been characterized by the Japanese slang term "ikeoji" that roughly translates to "an attractive or cool older man" and as a "hot uncle".[31]

Capcom were "looking for a car that fit Leon" according to producer Masato Kumazawa.[32] They collaborated with Porsche to include a custom third-generation Cayenne Turbo GT as Leon's car.[33][34][35] Capcom worked with the watchmaker Hamilton to create custom timepieces worn by Leon and Grace inspired by their characters. The collaboration was announced on January 15, 2026.[36] Leon wears a Khaki Field Auto Chrono, an all-black chronograph inspired by tactical special ops.[37] The crown imitates the knurled adjustment knob of a sniper scope and the chronograph pusher knobs take the form of bullet casings.[38] An engraved wing at the nine o'clock position on the watch dial and on the case back embodies "prayers for the fallen".[38] Grace wears an American Classic Pan Europ in a 42mm black case with a gold-and-black dial and unidirectional bezel.[39]

Casting

On February 19, 2026, Angela Sant'Albano was revealed as the English voice and motion capture actor for Grace Ashcroft.[40] Resident Evil Requiem was Sant'Albano's first performance in a video game, including the first time working with motion capture.[41] Nick Apostolides reprises the role of Leon S. Kennedy in English after portraying him in the Resident Evil 2 and Resident Evil 4 remakes.[11]

Technology

Graphics

As with all Resident Evil games since Resident Evil 7: Biohazard (2017), Resident Evil Requiem was developed using the RE Engine.[18] The first Resident Evil game developed exclusively for ninth generation consoles, it was built with ray tracing in mind, unlike the cross-generation Village. On PC, Resident Evil Requiem features path traced lighting, including ray traced global illumination (RTGI) for multi-bounce indirect lighting, ray traced reflections, ray traced shadows, and ray traced ambient occlusion.[42] It is the first Resident Evil game to natively support path tracing as Village only included more limited RTGI and ray traced reflections.[43] Shading on character skin makes use of subsurface scattering. The inclusion of both tighter first-person and wider view third-person perspectives impacted elements like LOD thresholds and shadow cascades relative to the camera.[44]

For its hair rendering, Resident Evil Requiem uses RE Engine's hair strand system, a physics-based hair simulation system that aims to make hair look more natural and realistic by individually rendering strands of hair compared to the traditional rasterized hair cards technique. It previously debuted on shorter hair in Resident Evil 4 (2023). The Requiem team had been working on improving Grace's hair rendering, but they could not achieve their desired visual quality. Development on the hair strand system for longer hair was led by the team working on Pragmata for that game's android character Diana alongside the RE Engine development team.[45] This work on Diana's hair rendering in Pragmata was later transferred to Requiem for Grace's hair.[46] The strand system allows luminescence to realistically shine through Grace's hair and her hair properly reacts in scenes where she is suspended upside down while strapped to a gurney.[46]

On PlayStation 5, Resident Evil Requiem runs at 1080p internally with a spatial upscale to a 4K output resolution at 60 frames per second.[47] Requiem is enhanced on PlayStation 5 Pro, running at 1080p upscaled to a 4K output at 60 frames per second with ray traced global illumination and ray traced reflections.[citation needed] If ray tracing is turned off and the console is connected to a VRR display, it can run at a dynamic frame rate between 90 and 120 frames per second.[48] Capcom were impressed by the PS5 Pro's ability to run at high frame rates.[48] Graphically, the PS5 Pro's high frame-rate mode is a match for the base PlayStation 5.[47] Sony's second generation PlayStation Spectral Super Resolution (PSSR) upscaler debuted with Requiem on PS5 Pro with improved image stability. The first iteration of PSSR struggled with noise and artifacting when upscaling ray traced content in games such as Silent Hill f and Silent Hill 2.[49] Xbox Series X uses the same graphical settings and techniques as the base PlayStation 5. The weaker Xbox Series S is more cut back, being rendered at 720p internally with spatial upscaling at 60 frames per second. The strand hair system is removed and replaced by a simple hair mesh.[47]

On Nintendo Switch 2, Resident Evil Requiem is rendered at an internal resolution of 360p in handheld mode and 540p in docked mode with Deep Learning Super Sampling (DLSS) upscaling and anti-aliasing to a respective 720p and 1080p output resolution.[50][51] The lower 540p base resolution with DLSS upscaling bests Series S's spatial upscaling from 720p.[50] It aims for a 60 frames per second target on Switch 2.[52] RTGI is included but ray traced reflections are removed and replaced with screen-space reflections instead. It has notable downgrades in geometry and hair rendering quality, using hair cards that give hair a rougher look rather than the RE Engine's more natural strand system.[53][50]

Animation

Facial animations for Requiem were captured using motion capture.[54] Imaginarium Studios provided motion capture services with Kate Saxon serving as performance director.[55] Motion capture shooting began in 2023 and ran until 2025.[56] The inclusion of both first and third-person camera options necessitated additional animation for all actions. Exclusive animations had to be created for a wider third-person perspective that would not ordinarily be seen in first-person.[57] When being pursued by a stalking monster, Grace will visibly stumble in third-person.[58] Reflecting her timid and fearful nature, Grace has animations such as shaking hands when handling and aiming firearms.[59] These panicked character animations for Grace align with the "final girl" trope in horror films.[57]

Release

Capcom announced Resident Evil Requiem at Summer Game Fest on June 6, 2025, with a release date of February 27, 2026.[60][61][8] The trailer was the show's concluding reveal.[62] The trailer featured the devastated Raccoon City, including the police station of Resident Evil 2 and Resident Evil 3.[63][8] Requiem was added to over 1 million wishlists across all the platforms it is set for release on.[64] 3 weeks before the release, it reached 5 million wishlists.[65] A playable demo was made available at the 2025 Gamescom and PAX West conventions in August 2025.[66]

On August 20, 2025, a new trailer was released, showing more of Grace's backstory with a cutscene segment of her and Alyssa, as well as gameplay sequences.[67] A third trailer premiered at the Game Awards 2025, revealing Leon as a second playable character who has more action-based gameplay sections.[13]

A Nintendo Switch 2 version was announced during a Nintendo Direct presentation in September 2025, for release alongside the other platforms, in addition to Switch 2 versions of its predecessors Resident Evil 7: Biohazard (2017) and Resident Evil Village (2021).[68] A themed Nintendo Switch 2 Pro Controller themed was also revealed, with amiibo figures based on Grace and Leon releasing in 2026.[69] Themed Fortnite cosmetics will be granted to people who have pre-purchased through the Epic Games Store.[70] In February 2026, Capcom released a live-action trailer that features Maika Monroe as a mother experiencing the initial Raccoon City outbreak in 1998.[71] On February 12, 2026, a fourth trailer was shown at Sony's State of Play showcase.[72]

On February 20, 2026, Capcom announced a collaboration with Yume Group to market a special game bundle with hanging fitness equipment. S. Ride used ten taxis with game promotion livery from February 23 until March 1, 2026, with the taxis located at Tokyo, Musashino, and Mitaka.[73]

Leaks

On February 17, 2026, IGN reported that some had gained early access to Requiem through obtaining physical copies from retailers early.[74] On February 20, a week before the release date, Capcom issued a statement imploring people to not spread spoilers online and that it would be issuing takedown notices on leaked footage.[75]

Reception

Critical reception

Resident Evil Requiem received "universal acclaim" from critics for most platforms, according to review aggregator website Metacritic.[77][78][79][80]

Reviewers considered Requiem to be a worthy celebration of the franchise's 30th anniversary. In a five-star review for Eurogamer, Matt Wales called the game a "masterful bit of suffocating horror and a nostalgic, fan-thrilling victory lap for the legendary series".[81] Dave Aubrey of Video Games Chronicle wrote that it can feel like "a remastered greatest hits album".[89] Jasmine Gould-Wilson for GamesRadar+ disagreed that it was "nostalgia bait", and instead it is "tying up the many loose ends" from previous entries to create the "most cinematic, bloody, surprisingly emotional moment for the franchise to date".[83] For Elie Gould of PC Gamer, the return to Raccoon City is a "worthwhile venture" that does not denigrate what came before it.[86]

On its dual protagonists with their own gameplay, reviews commended its representation of both horror and action. Game Informer wrote that "Capcom masterfully weaves Leon and Grace's stories together to ensure her horrors never persist for too long and that Leon's ditzy drive never overextends its enjoyment".[82] GameSpot said Capcom had combined "two distinct experiences that each capture the best parts of Resident Evil", comparing Grace's sections to the horror of Resident Evil 7: Biohazard and Leon's to the action-oriented Resident Evil 4.[84]

Some reviews criticized the pacing and consistency. IGN criticized the first half for being heavily loaded with horror and action in its second half rather than striking a more consistent balance throughout.[16] Dave Aubrey of Video Games Chronicle praised the Rhodes Hill Care Center as a "genuinely fantastic environment" among the best in Resident Evil, but noted that its parallels to Resident Evil 2's Raccoon Police Department makes the entry a "retread that does not live up to its inspirations".[89] Kotaku felt that Leon's playtime ultimately overtook Grace's rather than being equally split, as she "takes a backseat in the latter half of the game".[90] Nic Reuben of The Guardian criticized a "run of damp squib boss fights" towards the game's end, but did praise the performances of Angela Sant'Albano and Nick Apostolides as Grace and Leon for doing "some heroic heavy lifting".[88]

Sales

On Steam, Resident Evil Requiem set a record for the best-performing Resident Evil game, reaching 344,214 players during its launch weekend, double that of the 2023 Resident Evil 4 remake.[91] In the United Kingdom, it topped the physical sales charts with a bigger launch than the previous two games, Resident Evil Village and Resident Evil 4.[92] 54% of Requiem's UK sales were on PlayStation 5, with 36% on PC, 6% on Xbox Series X|S and 4% on Nintendo Switch 2.[93] On March 4, Capcom announced that global sales had surpassed five million copies after five days.[94]

Notes

  1. ^ Known in Japan as Biohazard Requiem (Japanese: バイオハザード レクイエム, Hepburn: Baiohazādo Rekuiemu) and commonly referred to as Resident Evil 9 or Resident Evil 9: Requiem
  2. ^ Resident Evil Village (2021) added the option to play in a third-person perspective in a post-launch update.
  3. ^ As depicted in Resident Evil 3: Nemesis (1999) and Resident Evil 3 (2020)[10]
  4. ^ As depicted in Resident Evil 2 (1998) and Resident Evil 2 (2019)

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