Resident.evil 8 -
On the surface, the pitch sounds like a Mad Libs gone wrong: Ethan Winters, a everyman dad, must rescue his baby from a 9-foot-tall vampire lady in a snowy Eastern European village while a boulder-punching Chris Redfield watches menacingly. And yet, Village isn't just a great Resident Evil game; it is a masterclass in genre-mashing that dares to ask: What if a survival horror game was also a tragic fairy tale?
Mother Miranda is the antithesis of Ethan. She is obsessed with her dead daughter, Eva, to the point of destroying an entire village and kidnapping Rose. Ethan, meanwhile, is literally falling apart to save his living daughter, Rose. The final act—the "Molded" reveal—recontextualizes the entire game. Ethan wasn't surviving the mold; he was the mold. He was a dead man walking for the entire duration of RE7 and RE8, held together only by sheer paternal will. resident.evil 8
But here’s the thing: Village is atmospheric dread. It is the feeling of walking through a foggy forest knowing a werewolf is tracking you. It is the unease of seeing a giant puppet move when you aren't looking. It balances action and anxiety perfectly. Final Thoughts Resident Evil Village is a bold, beautiful, and bizarre entry. It respects the past (RE4's inventory, RE1's puzzles) while bulldozing a path into the future (supernatural powers, full-on fantasy aesthetics). On the surface, the pitch sounds like a
He is the grounding force. After you barely survive the fetus in House Beneviento, returning to The Duke’s warm cart feels like coming home. He buys your lei, sells you a grenade launcher, and never asks why you smell like amniotic fluid. In a game about isolation, The Duke is your only friend—and that makes his mysterious nature even scarier. Ethan is still a piece of plywood in terms of charisma, but Village weaponizes his lack of personality. He is not Leon Kennedy (cool spy) or Chris Redfield (super soldier). He is a systems engineer. She is obsessed with her dead daughter, Eva,