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    Resident Evil 4

    Game » consists of 39 releases. Released Jan 11, 2005

    Special agent Leon S. Kennedy travels to rural Spain to rescue the U.S. President's kidnapped daughter in Resident Evil's sixth canonical installment. It is notable for a lengthy development cycle which involved a complete overhaul of the series' established gameplay mechanics.

    philosoma's Biohazard 4: Wii edition (Wii) review

    Avatar image for philosoma

    RE 4

    Resident Evil IV puts you back into the shoes of Leon "Don't shoot, I'm a human!" Kennedy and sweeps you off to Spain for a seriously nasty trip. Many times throughout this 20-25 hour adventure you'll be up against hordes of enemies, interactive life or death cutscenes, and hassle-free puzzles.

    So, you're probably thinking, "Damn, another Resident Evil game... it will have save rooms with boxes, limited carrying capacity, and final boss that has 3 forms and says "...stars..." over and over again". Wrong!

    It's a new Resident Evil, so get ready for an inventory screen that works better than most RPGs, tons of weapons, tons of ways to buy upgrades for those weapons, plenty of shops, and hours of extra games that you'll actually play! And if you didn't play this on the Gamecube, make sure to get it on PS2, and if you don't have either of these systems you should jump off of a bridge. But before you do that, make sure you play Resident Evil IV on PC.

    The story is pretty simple; rescue the US president's thick daughter. Actually, the real story is that Leon loses his awesome suede jacket at about 1 hour into the game and you have to get it back. No, seriously, this game is about plot twists involving an ancient parasitic disease, Ada Wong, and Wesker! Does it even matter? The voice acting is great and the characters are just as good Code Veronica's. And you speak Spanish, the game will be even more fun because you'll be able to hear all of the nasty things that the many Spanish-speaking enemies yell at you.

    The graphics are the best that the series has ever seen. From the grimy atmosphere of a mountain forest village to the polished and an elegant look of a 15th century castle, this game is eye candy. The gore and blood are top-notch as well. Players will be satisfied at how cinematic Leon's death can be in and out of cutscenes. Do yourself a favor and let the chainsaw or claw-hand guy kill you, it's awesome.

    And don't even worry about dying because this game has a very precise checkpoint and continue system. When playing Resident Evil IV, you will die many times but you'll never feel that you are being penalized.

    The game also has virtually zero loading time and never loses the smooth framerate, even when you are fighting 10 enemies at one time. During action, you will be switching to your inventory screen quite frequently to change weapons and use healing items, which kind of slows down the combat but never becomes too tedious.

    The boss fights and interactive cutscenes make the game memorable in the best possible way. The boss fights and mini-boss fights are intense, and because the control scheme is so good (goodbye tank movement) you'll find moving around the enormous enemies to be easy. However, some of the most intense moments of the game are in the interactive cutscenes. Basically, the game shows you some life or death situation and flashes a button for you to press. If you press the correct button at the right time, you will get a good ending and resume playing. If you don't press the button on time or press the wrong button, you will probably get hurt or die in a brutal way. And since the required buttons are random, it never gets old.

    Resident Evil IV is an amazing experience that anyone can enjoy (except maybe small children). The game isn't very scary, but it is creepy and full of the violence that we all love. Also, the game is very long and so satisfying, you will probably go through the game a second time to collect everything. Resident Evil IV is on multiple systems too, so make sure you give this great game a shot.

    -Philosoma-

    Other reviews for Biohazard 4: Wii edition (Wii)

      Resident Evil 4 (Wii) 0

      I Have been playing Resident Evil 4 since the release year of 2005. It is in "My Top 10 Favorite Games of All Time" And well deserved! I originally bought it on the Gamecube and beat the game easily 10 times (Obtaining every Secret). When I bought My Wii and heard that they were Re-Releasing Resident Evil 4, I had to go and get it. When I popped the game in for the first time, I didn't expect what I got. That game that I came to love only got BETTER! With increased Graphics, All the exclusives f...

      0 out of 0 found this review helpful.

      Resident Evil at its absolute best 0

       There's not much that can be said about this game that hasn't already been said in the GC/PS2 versions, but it's just simply put, THE best version of this game to date. And if you don't own RE4 for any other system already, then buy this. Even if u have beaten it. The entire premise of this version is for mainly the GC owners that got SHAFTED of the extra features that the PS2 version was given. Now the Nintendo fans get the extra features, which although not overwhelming, put a nice tou...

      0 out of 0 found this review helpful.

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