Compare Resident Evil Origins / Biohazard Origins Collection Key prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Capcom. Published by CAPCOM Co., Ltd.. Released on 1/20/2015. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Single Player, Multiplayer, Third Person, First Person, Horror, FPS / TPS.

Two HD remasters in one key: the original Resident Evil remake and its prequel Zero. Classic survival horror, tank controls optional, zero netcode to worry about.

Look, I review shooters for a living, so when Capcom hands me a fixed-camera survival horror collection from 2002 and asks me to assess it, I'm going to be straight with you: this is not a reflex test. There are no headshot multipliers, no ranked queues, and your mouse polling rate is completely irrelevant. What this collection is, is two slow-burn horror games that demand patience, resource management, and the willingness to get genuinely lost in a mansion. The first game - the HD remaster of the GameCube Resident Evil remake - gives you a choice of Chris Redfield or Jill Valentine, sends you into Spencer Mansion, and then methodically starves you of ammo and save ribbons until the tension becomes real. Widescreen support is included, and you can swap between classic tank controls and a modernized analogue scheme. For what it is, it runs clean on PC. Resident Evil 0 HD is the more divisive half. It introduced the "partner zapping" system - manually switching between Rebecca Chambers and Billy Coen mid-game, each with distinct roles: Billy pushes heavy objects and absorbs punishment, Rebecca mixes herbs and handles chemistry. The dual-character puzzles are the best thing about it. The worst thing is the item system. Gone are the series' signature item boxes. Instead you drop gear on the floor and pray you remember which dingy corridor you left the shotgun shells in. Community reception has always been split on this: some players find it adds genuine inventory tension, plenty of others find it artificially extends an already compact game through tedious backtracking. Both camps are right. On top of that, the AI partner will stand around getting chewed on by the weakest zombie in the room if you leave them unattended, so babysitting is a real tax on your attention. The RE1 remaster is clearly the stronger game - tighter pacing, more iconic setpieces, multiple playthrough incentives including Invisible Enemies Mode and One Dangerous Zombie mode for people who want punishment. RE0 gets Wesker Mode after you finish the story, which swaps Billy for an overpowered Albert Wesker complete with superhuman abilities - a fun arcade-style bonus run that the game honestly needs to justify a second playthrough. Both titles support 1080p, 5.1 surround, and that optional control scheme for players who never want to see tank controls again. Who is this actually for? Series newcomers who want to understand where Resident Evil came from before RE4 changed everything. Survival horror fans who grew up on the GameCube era and want the cleanest modern version. People who have already played RE2 Remake and RE3 Remake and want to go further back in the lore. It is not for players expecting action-game pacing or co-op in the live-service sense - the "multiplayer" tag on the store listing is misleading, these are both single-player campaigns. If you go in expecting a slow, methodical horror game that will occasionally punish you hard for a careless save or a bad item drop, you will find something that still works on its own terms. Fred, Scout Team

Resident Evil Origins / Biohazard Origins Collection Key
ActionSingle PlayerMultiplayerThird PersonFirst PersonHorrorFPS / TPS

Resident Evil Origins / Biohazard Origins Collection Key

Jan 20, 2015CapcomCAPCOM Co., Ltd.
GamerScout Says

Two HD remasters in one key: the original Resident Evil remake and its prequel Zero. Classic survival horror, tank controls optional, zero netcode to worry about.

PC
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €6.08

GamerScout Verdict

Solid entry point into classic Resident Evil - RE1 remaster is the real prize, RE0 is worth it if the backtracking doesn't break you.

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Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Resident Evil Origins / Biohazard Origins Collection Key

Look, I review shooters for a living, so when Capcom hands me a fixed-camera survival horror collection from 2002 and asks me to assess it, I'm going to be straight with you: this is not a reflex test. There are no headshot multipliers, no ranked queues, and your mouse polling rate is completely irrelevant. What this collection is, is two slow-burn horror games that demand patience, resource management, and the willingness to get genuinely lost in a mansion. The first game - the HD remaster of the GameCube Resident Evil remake - gives you a choice of Chris Redfield or Jill Valentine, sends you into Spencer Mansion, and then methodically starves you of ammo and save ribbons until the tension becomes real. Widescreen support is included, and you can swap between classic tank controls and a modernized analogue scheme. For what it is, it runs clean on PC. Resident Evil 0 HD is the more divisive half. It introduced the "partner zapping" system - manually switching between Rebecca Chambers and Billy Coen mid-game, each with distinct roles: Billy pushes heavy objects and absorbs punishment, Rebecca mixes herbs and handles chemistry. The dual-character puzzles are the best thing about it. The worst thing is the item system. Gone are the series' signature item boxes. Instead you drop gear on the floor and pray you remember which dingy corridor you left the shotgun shells in. Community reception has always been split on this: some players find it adds genuine inventory tension, plenty of others find it artificially extends an already compact game through tedious backtracking. Both camps are right. On top of that, the AI partner will stand around getting chewed on by the weakest zombie in the room if you leave them unattended, so babysitting is a real tax on your attention. The RE1 remaster is clearly the stronger game - tighter pacing, more iconic setpieces, multiple playthrough incentives including Invisible Enemies Mode and One Dangerous Zombie mode for people who want punishment. RE0 gets Wesker Mode after you finish the story, which swaps Billy for an overpowered Albert Wesker complete with superhuman abilities - a fun arcade-style bonus run that the game honestly needs to justify a second playthrough. Both titles support 1080p, 5.1 surround, and that optional control scheme for players who never want to see tank controls again. Who is this actually for? Series newcomers who want to understand where Resident Evil came from before RE4 changed everything. Survival horror fans who grew up on the GameCube era and want the cleanest modern version. People who have already played RE2 Remake and RE3 Remake and want to go further back in the lore. It is not for players expecting action-game pacing or co-op in the live-service sense - the "multiplayer" tag on the store listing is misleading, these are both single-player campaigns. If you go in expecting a slow, methodical horror game that will occasionally punish you hard for a careless save or a bad item drop, you will find something that still works on its own terms.

Fred
Fred · Scout Team

Shooters

Tags

steamFixed Camera HorrorPartner ZappingInk Ribbon Save SystemTank Controls OptionalWesker ModeResource ManagementLore Entry PointRemaster

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
4 GB RAM
Storage
13 GB
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX460
Processor
Intel Core i3-4160 @ 3.6GHz
System requirements
Windows 7 SP1 / Windows 8.1 / Windows 10

Recommended

Memory
4 GB RAM
Storage
23 GB
Graphics
GeForce GTX 560
Processor
Core 2 Quad Q6700 2.66GHz
System requirements
Windows 7 64bit

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Game Info

Developer
Capcom
Publisher
CAPCOM Co., Ltd.
Release Date
Jan 20, 2015

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Frequently asked questions about Resident Evil Origins / Biohazard Origins Collection Key

How much does Resident Evil Origins / Biohazard Origins Collection Key cost?

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What platforms is Resident Evil Origins / Biohazard Origins Collection Key available on?

Resident Evil Origins / Biohazard Origins Collection Key is available on PC.

When was Resident Evil Origins / Biohazard Origins Collection Key released?

Resident Evil Origins / Biohazard Origins Collection Key was released on 20 January 2015.

Who developed Resident Evil Origins / Biohazard Origins Collection Key?

Resident Evil Origins / Biohazard Origins Collection Key was developed by Capcom and published by CAPCOM Co., Ltd..