Resident Evil Remake Trilogy
Three of the best horror remakes Capcom has ever made, bundled together with their deluxe and gold editions. RE2 and RE4 alone justify the purchase; RE3 is the honest weak link nobody should skip.
GamerScout Verdict
Two of the best horror remakes on PC plus a shorter companion piece, the right entry point for anyone new to modern Resident Evil.
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About Resident Evil Remake Trilogy
I've spent time across all three entries here and the clearest thing I can tell you is that this bundle is not three equal games wearing the same branding. What it actually is, is two near-flawless survival horror remakes propping up a shorter, patchier companion piece, and together they form the best consecutive run the franchise has ever had on PC. Start with RE2 Remake, which anchors the whole collection. Leon Kennedy and Claire Redfield each run dual campaigns through a Raccoon City police station that is brilliantly interconnected, puzzle-laden, and genuinely oppressive. Mr. X, the relentless Tyrant stalker, turns every resource-scavenging loop into a tense calculation: do I solve this now and risk the encounter, or circle back? The over-the-shoulder third-person controls are tight, ammo is scarce enough to matter without being punishing, and the RE Engine visuals hold up sharply. The Deluxe Edition included here adds bonus costumes and the original soundtrack swap, which is a small but appreciated touch for series veterans. RE3 Remake is where the honest conversation starts. Jill Valentine's escape from Raccoon City is faster and more cinematic than RE2, leaning harder on action set pieces and a dodge mechanic that rewards aggressive play. The opening street section with Nemesis is a genuine high point, and the Carlos sections break up the pacing well. But the community consensus is accurate: the game is short, puzzles were almost entirely removed compared to both the original RE3 and the RE2 Remake, and Nemesis's stalking behavior is scripted rather than organic, which drains the dread. Resistance, the 4v1 asymmetrical multiplayer mode bundled in, adds a Mastermind-versus-survivors dynamic that is clever on paper but has a thin player base at this point. RE3 is not bad. It just sits in RE2's shadow and knows it. RE4 Remake is the other anchor. Built around Leon's over-the-shoulder mission in a rural Spanish village, it is a different kind of game entirely: action-forward, with a merchant upgrade system for weapons covering damage, fire rate, and reload speed, a satisfying knife parry mechanic, and a Mercenaries mode for score-chasing post-credits. The Gold Edition included here bundles the Separate Ways DLC, which adds significant playtime from Ada Wong's perspective and fills in story gaps the base game deliberately left open. RE4 Remake is the trilogy's tonal outlier, funnier, broader, and more action-game than horror, but the execution is so clean it barely matters. Who is this for? Anyone who has been meaning to get into modern Resident Evil and kept bouncing off the individual pricing. New players get an ideal on-ramp through RE2 before landing on RE4's more forgiving combat loop. Returning fans who missed one of the three will find the deluxe and gold editions add genuine content, not just cosmetic fluff. Just go in knowing RE3 is the shortest ride, and budget your expectations accordingly.

Catch-all
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System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 10 (64 bit)
- Processor
- AMD Ryzen 3 1200 / Intel Core i5-7500
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- Graphics
- AMD Radeon RX 560 with 4GB VRAM / NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti with 4GB…
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Game Info
- Developer
- CAPCOM CO., LTD
- Publisher
- Capcom
- Release Date
- Jan 25, 2019