
Resident Evil HD Remaster
HD Remaster of the horror game Resident Evil (2002). Raccoon City Police Department elite team Jill Valentine and Chris Redfield are forced to flee into a mysterious mansion where they encounter zombies and mutated monsters.
- Rated
- M
- Released
- 2015
- Country
- Japan
Details
Release year: 2015
Storyline
HD Remaster of the horror game Resident Evil (2002). Raccoon City Police Department elite team Jill Valentine and Chris Redfield are forced to flee into a mysterious mansion where they encounter zombies and mutated monsters.
Top credits
Joe Whyte ā Chris Redfield, Richard Aiken
Heidi Anderson-Swan ā Jill Valentine, Female Newscaster- Ed Smaron ā Barry Burton, Kenneth J. Sullivan, Forest Speyer
Hope Levy ā Rebecca Chambers, Computer Voice 1
Did you know
⢠This is the 8th version of the first Resident Evil, after Resident Evil (1996), Resident Evil (Windows version) (1996), Resident Evil: Director's Cut (1997), Resident Evil (Sega Saturn version) (1997), Resident Evil (Dual Shock version) (1998), Resident Evil (2002) (GameCube version) and Resident Evil: Deadly Silence (2006). It would be the 9th version if one also counts the 2008 Wii version of Resident Evil (2002) (which technically was an unaltered port of the GameCube version). A Game Boy Color version was once nearing completion, but scrapped in 1999 because of disappointing quality with the GBC's hardware limitations.
⢠The game can be played at three starting difficulties, Very Easy, Easy, and Normal. Further modes can be unlocked by finishing the game. Beating it on Normal unlocks Hard mode and Real Survival, beating it on Real Survival unlocks Invisible Enemy. Beating the game with both Chris and Jill on Normal or Hard on the same save file unlocks One Dangerous Zombie. Only the Very Easy mode is new to this remaster.
⢠Features new 5.1 surround sound, a 1080p resolution and a new control scheme. Although it appears to have been rendered in the full 16:9 aspect ratio (widescreen), this is not exactly the case; the makers chose to keep the original 4:3 aspect ratio in order to maintain the limited width of the image, feeling that it was instrumental to the game's sense of immersion and danger. The image was actually blown up to fill a widescreen, so that 25% of the vertical portions of the screen fall out of frame. The screen will scroll either up or down to reveal these portions depending on the main character's movements.
User reviews
Amazing return to the classical place
A Great Remake!!!
Terrifying
Technical specs
- Sound mix
- Stereo
- Aspect ratio
- 16 : 9, 4:3
- Color
- Color


















