Resident Evil Producer says “Maybe” to Code: Veronica Remake

Claire and Chris Redfield pose in a promo image of Resident Evil Code: Veronica.

picture: Capcom/Kotaku

This is the season of the spooky video game remake –Alan Wake has been remasteredKonami is working on Silent Hill 2, and Capcom is preparing one Resident Evil 4 make new, among many other things. But you will not find Resident Evil Code: Veronica in the latter developer’s pending batch of projects, at least not yet.

This revelation comes from a new interview Resident Evil 4 Producer Yoshiaki Hirabayashi admitted game page Loud pixel. When asked about the possibility of a refresher Code: VeronicaHirabayashi said that’s what he’s currently focusing on Resident Evil 4 However, he left the door open to a possible future remake, saying: “[if the] Opportunity will come, maybe.”

Continue reading: All the changes we spotted in the new Resident Evil 4 remake trailer

The original resident Evil 1996 got a critically acclaimed remake in 2002, 1998 Resident Evil 2 was remade in 2019 (also with great success) and 1999 Resident Evil 3 have a similar revision 2020. Here we are today Resident Evil 4 on the horizon, but no Code: Veronica Insight. Fans are not surprised.

Resident Evil Code: Veronicaforgotten but still canon, first came out in 2000 for Sega’s Dreamcast, and my box Contributor Zack Zwiezen notes, “For some fans of the series, this is the right thing to do real continued to Resident Evil 2.”

The classic survival horror adventure divides players’ time between Claire Redfield, who is stuck on a prison island, and her brother Chris, who is trying to find her. The Dreamcast game was enchanting and spooky, with lots of stately gray halls, checkerboard floors, and beautiful brick-red blood splatters. in 2000, IGN gushed in a review that “the game’s superb graphics combine with the series’ signature music and audio to create a scene so vivid and frightening that it’s easier than ever to be sucked into this nightmare.” will.”

It was an impressive game but was called a spin-off for “political reasons between Capcom and the console maker,” said game designer Shinji Mikami a job interview 2020 with the YouTube channel Archipel. “Personally, I wanted it to be a numbered track,” he said.

Continue reading: Everything we saw in the big resident Evil Showcase

And so many fans, some of whom are currently dedicated to creating one Code: Veronica make new itself. It doesn’t have a set release date yet.

Until Hirabayashi’s opportunity knocks, the fans’ passion has to be enough to keep it going Code: Veronica.

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