Something went wrong. Try again later

Giant Bomb Review

275 Comments

Resident Evil 6 Review

2
  • X360

Resident Evil 6 may be the most lavishly produced bad game in history.

The heart of RE6's problems is action that just feels unrefined.
The heart of RE6's problems is action that just feels unrefined.

Resident Evil 6 is a big-budget disaster on the order of the Star Wars prequels, a sprawling production that clearly required so many individual talents to bring it into being, you can't help but wonder how the end result could have turned out so bad. Then again, the game tries to be so many things to so many different people, the image of a many-headed hydra thrashing violently beyond the control of its developers comes readily to mind. There are a few fleeting moments of greatness in Resident Evil 6, but you'll likely spend so much time with your head in your hands that you'll probably just miss them all.

Whatever else could be improved upon in this game is moot, since its fundamentals as a third-person action game are just plain badly implemented. After the great last couple of installments in the core Resident Evil franchise, it's astounding that the basic act of playing RE6 doesn't feel at least as good as it did in those games. On the surface, RE6 is made up of the same third-person shooting, button-prompt-driven melee combat, and inventory management, though it goes further in the direction of similar Western action games that focus on moving and shooting in tandem, largely at the expense of the series' traditionally deliberate style of gameplay. But it doesn't go far enough to produce a satisfying game of singular intent. In trying to have it both ways, clumsily mixing that more active style of shooter with vestigial elements of the series' survival-horror past, and peppering the entire thing with excessive Quick Time events and nearly hands-off action set pieces, RE6 takes a tremendous step backwards in terms of basic playability.

The reasons for this are too numerous for any one review, but here goes. The character movement is awkward, the aiming and shooting are stiff, and your basic interactions with enemies feel unresponsive and grossly unsatisfying. With a laser sight that swims around wildly within the targeting reticle and enemies that sometimes feel like bullets are passing right through them, the shooting makes a lousy first impression. And don't get me started on how clumsy the camera can get when you're trying to move around in tight spaces, or about the game's nasty habit of cutting back from a cinematic sequence with your camera angle pointed not only in a different direction than you left it, but also away from the thing you need to focus your attention on. The trusty old 180-degree turn from previous games sometimes turns only your character while leaving the camera stationary, exposing you to unnecessary risk as you then have to manually swivel the perspective around after you've wasted time expecting a basic game mechanic to work like it's supposed to. Playing RE6 is like suffering the death of a thousand cuts, as one minor annoyance and unavoidable death after another chip away at your enjoyment.

There's a little too much pushing the stick in one direction and holding A here.
There's a little too much pushing the stick in one direction and holding A here.

Most of Resident Evil 6 is marred by a glaring lack of that video game critic's old standby, polish. Every time you're killed instantly by an unavoidable scripted event, it feels like a good opportunity to turn the game off and never turn it back on. Seriously, there were multiple times in more than one level where I or someone I was playing co-op with was killed by some timed event--say, a truck hurtling into the area from offscreen--that you just couldn't avoid if you didn't know it was coming, and often don't even see coming if you don't happen to have the camera pointed randomly in the right direction. The game rarely communicates what it wants you to do, leaving you in many of the game's long, multi-phase boss fights to blindly waste ammo as you try to figure out whether you're effectively doing any damage to an enemy that barely reacts visibly to your attacks.

There are other basic design issues that make the game feel like a chore, like the inability to stop time even while you're trying to change your brightness or control scheme. You're never even alerted to the existence of a cover system or dodge mechanics outside of loading-screen tooltips that, at least on the Xbox version I played through, were typically onscreen for less than a second. But the game sure does make a point of driving home how Quick Time events work in its laughable tutorial segment. It never even attempts to explain the quirks of ducking and rolling, which require you to use the same button combo in different ways, but it goes out of its way to make sure you know to push the stick down and hold the A button every time you need to run toward the camera through a barely-interactive scripted chase scene. That's a telling example of the poor attention to detail here where basic playability is concerned.

To be fair, the more you play RE6, the more you'll adapt to the long list of quirks that initially conspire to make the combat in this game a miserable experience. Eventually it becomes less miserable, but it never clicks and feels satisfying and engaging the way the best action games do. Think about the brightest lights in the genre on this generation of consoles. For me, it's games like Infamous and Dead Space that give you immediate, absolute control over your abilities and impart the information for you to make split-second decisions about how to deal with any threat. Those games just feel right. Even at its best, playing RE6 feels like fumbling around blindly in the dark by comparison. The impression is of a game that underwent little to no playtesting, to see how actual human beings would respond to the mechanics and systems that make up the gameplay, and to refine and fix them in the places where they weren't working.

Be prepared to fight this exact boss battle twice before the game is over.
Be prepared to fight this exact boss battle twice before the game is over.

As Resident Evil goes, this game's justification for its own existence is questionable in the first place. Resident Evil 4 went to admirable lengths to upend the series' longstanding fiction by bringing in new antagonists and a new location, and I felt like 5 was already pushing its luck by turning right around and going back to the well with Wesker and the Umbrella Corporation yet again. But at least that game was bold enough to resolve those longstanding story threads with finality, explaining and killing off pretty much everything there was to explain and kill off. Then along comes RE6 with... Neo-Umbrella and the son of Wesker. That's really the most inspired premise they could conceive? I'll grant that this game is awkwardly timed at the end of a console cycle, and it's too soon to go back to the drawing board and completely rebuild Resident Evil from the ground up, but couldn't Capcom have just put together a more modest side story to fill the necessary spot on the release calendar until then? (Actually, I guess they already did that.)

Whether RE6's premise strains plausibility or not, the series has had good luck in the past with multiple concurrent campaigns starring different characters, and here you get a whopping four of them. Dandy-haired Leon Kennedy's vignette feels the most like an old Resident Evil, with the highest concentration of cathedrals and rotting zombies in the game. Square-jawed Chris Redfield's campaign then goes and does a middling Gears of War impression, with an increased emphasis on taking cover and shooting at enemies who shoot back at you. Then son-of-Wesker Jake moves through a campaign with a disjointed mix of shooting, ill-conceived stealth sequences, and an indestructible Big Bad who chases you through every area like a modern-day Nemesis. Once you finish the three storylines, you unlock a hidden fourth campaign so top-secret it's mentioned on the back of the box, one that's meant to give some additional context to everything you've seen over the last 20 hours or so.

The idea of this many criss-crossing storylines is a great one, and you do get little nuggets of info in each campaign that expand on the events in the others. It's hard to get too excited about anything that happens in the game, though, revolving as it does around yet another iteration of the X-virus that's always been at the center of the whole zombie mess. Nothing of major importance to the Resident Evil continuity takes place here, as every character and story thread introduced at the outset has either been blandly resolved or summarily dismissed by the end, resulting in a conclusion that, as far as Chris and Leon are concerned, might as well never have happened. More damningly, as the game wears on, it becomes more and more disappointing how much content is flat-out recycled from previous campaigns. By the time I got to Jake's campaign and especially into that last one, I was replaying sequences and boss fights on a disturbingly regular basis that I'd already played before. Sometimes you at least get to take part from a different angle, but just as often you're literally fighting the exact same boss fight you already did a few hours ago. It's especially glaring that if you play the campaigns in the recommended order, the first last-boss encounter you face is identical to the very last one. That's a pretty anti-climactic way to end such a huge production, and it's emblematic of the many aspects of RE6 that just weren't thought all the way through.

Playable characters cross paths to mixed results through each campaign.
Playable characters cross paths to mixed results through each campaign.

The game at least earns a few points for sheer audacity. Its scope is enormous; the volume of huge, detailed environmental art crammed in here could fill two or three similar games of average length. And many of those areas are framed and lit to great dramatic effect, though others look like they had less attention given to them, and the frame rate is low enough across the board to diminish the effect of actually moving around in them. Many of the monster designs are creepy as hell (a human torso attached to spider legs and wielding an assault rifle seems like something that just should not exist), and the bosses are plenty big and menacing and impressive to watch, though that effect is often lost in the frustrating trial-and-error required to fight them. The production values in the cinematics are top-shelf, and the character performances are quite well done, with Troy Baker further cementing his status as the new Nolan North in a nicely snarky turn as the wisecracking, in-it-for-the-money merc Jake. And as flat as I found the broad story, there were a couple of honestly affecting human moments that got to me a little bit. But once the moment is over, they don't really go anywhere.

By the time I'd slogged through the two-dozen-plus hours of the four main campaigns, I couldn't find it in myself to care much about the return of The Mercenaries, the score-based time attack mode that I used to play obsessively in past games, or Agent Hunt, which lets you match your way into another player's game as a monster so you can give them some trouble. That's a great idea, though most of the monsters you end up with aren't very capable or much fun to control in practice. Mercs is the same as it ever was, which is fine, and by the time I was done with the game, I felt well enough attuned to the combat that I could have given it a pretty effective go, I just had no energy or desire left to do so. It's worth noting you can once again play the whole game in co-op if you like, though your ever-present, indestructible AI buddy is actually pretty effective in combat, except for the rare moment where they refuse to get themselves over to a tandem door you need to open. That doesn't happen often, but always seems to happen at the worst times.

At a glance, Resident Evil 6 is built on the basic blueprint of a good action game, swaddled in what must have been one of the most expensive productions in video game history. You could offer a lot of ifs about how to make this game better: if the fat were trimmed out in service of a shorter, tighter campaign; if the designers had drilled down more intently on one style of gameplay rather than trying to cover all of them; if the player's core interactions with the game were simply as refined as they should have been. But in the real world, we're left with what's in the box. It's hard to fathom how Resident Evil, which almost singlehandedly redefined the action genre just two installments ago, has now become such a strange, mediocre pastiche of the better games this series once inspired. What a bitter irony that is.

Brad Shoemaker on Google+

275 Comments

Avatar image for andyace83
AndyAce83

137

Forum Posts

17

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 10

User Lists: 2

Edited By AndyAce83

Resident Evil 6 is an adrenaline ride of epic proportions. Its very hard! But so has all RE games been (at least in the beginning, then we get weapon upgrades etc). Negativ Nancies will not like this game, as at least four times the character cannot run, so that makes the entire game "bad". I have not had so much fun as playing this game, with its extremely long boss battles and frustratingly vague controls, and then we have co-op. Co-op is EFFING AMAZING! I can not brag enough about this game. Also loving the non PC story line.

Its clear that Brad doesnt know what he is talking about.

Avatar image for cptbedlam
CptBedlam

4612

Forum Posts

7

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By CptBedlam

@Grognard66 said:

It seems there's a game or two every year where the reviewers (who all tweet/email each other during pre-release gaming sessions for review) create a positive or negative vicious spiral in their small, insular community which skews the scores one way or the other. It's a shame, because some people will be dissuaded from even trying this game who probably would have liked it and developers/publishers will continue to shy away from creating lengthy, ambitious games because of these situations.

Great point, and therefore quoted.

Avatar image for warofart
artofwar420

6994

Forum Posts

290

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 7

Edited By artofwar420

Can't wait to read this after work, thanks Brad!

Avatar image for ntm
NTM

12222

Forum Posts

38

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By NTM

@Supertom11 said:

I played about 2 hours co-op last night. It's not nearly as bad as I expected after hearing Brad and Patrick's rants. Maybe my opinion will change 10-15 hours in but my friend and I both had a lot of fun as we did with RE5.

Trust me, it won't get any worse, but it probably won't get any better. If you enjoy it from the start to a few hours in, you'll most likely enjoy the entire thing. I really like the game, but I wish the minor problems it has were fixed, and yes, I said minor, because I think the things he stated are minor problems. There are quite a few of them, but with this game, it doesn't add up to something I don't want to play. I've already gone through it, and I'm going to do so again with the other characters, it's fun.

Avatar image for striderj8
StriderJ8

296

Forum Posts

464

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 4

Edited By StriderJ8

I respectfully disagree with this and all other negative reviews of this game. It has very minor issues in an otherwise very solid and enjoyable high production game. I am just not experiencing what these reviewers are saying is there. I've had nothing but fun with RE6.

Avatar image for advent_crash
advent_crash

73

Forum Posts

88

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 12

User Lists: 16

Edited By advent_crash

So I have played every Resident Evil game and have been a fan of the franchise and there have been games I loved, hated, or somewhere in between. I also write reviews for a website and while I'm not reviewing the game, I have played Resident Evil 6 from beginning to end and I must say this game is not in any way broken. There are as many problems as you would find in RE5. I experienced none of the problems mentioned in this review and I felt like some parts were flat out lies (such as the game teaching to heal partners is the first thing the game teaches you in the tutorial). I never had any kind of hit detection problems And I have finished all if the campaigns. Now the game isn't perfect, it does have problems but 2 stars seems like an extreme. The game should at least pull a 3 but my own personal taste is a 4. The Leon campaign and Jake campaign were both a lot of fun to me and we'll worth playing through as a RE fan. It's unfortunate where people are falling on this game but all I can say is I really enjoyed my time with it and experienced none of the problems mentioned in the review so I think for an RE fan (especially if you love 5) this game is worth playing.

Avatar image for mikkaq
MikkaQ

10296

Forum Posts

52

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 2

Edited By MikkaQ

@Grognard66 said:

I think Brad and too many other reviewers have fallen into the trap of reviewing a game based on their expectations rather than what the game actually is. While it's fair to point out in the review if a game in a series is a serious departure in style/story/gameplay from previous entries, it should not result in a score deduction. Every game should be reviewed on it's own individual merits.

Well it would seem a lot of the praise these very same reviewers gave RE4 would indicate that a serious departure can lead to a massive bump in scores too, so it seem very fair to me. The difference was RE4 was different in a good way, while this is just different in a bad way. RE4 was a trailblazer, RE6 is stumbling in the shadows of better games that do the same things.

Avatar image for metal_mills
metal_mills

3604

Forum Posts

4049

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 10

User Lists: 3

Edited By metal_mills
@britxmenyuan said:

I think ppl in Japan think otherwise, Famitsu just gave the game a 39, nearly perfect score.

Hahahaha. Famitsu gets paid to give high reviews, flat out paid. They gave Dead or Alive Xtreme Beach Volleyball 2 nearly the same score.
Avatar image for bfz
BFZ

67

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By BFZ

Oh man this hurts so much being that my wife and I are such big RE fans. I'll probably wind up playing when it hits the bargain bin, which might not be too far off....

Avatar image for jost1
Jost1

2226

Forum Posts

1275

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 10

User Lists: 17

Edited By Jost1

I don't understand the criticism. I haven't experienced any of the issues that Brad has. None. Controls are fine, aiming is fine. I don't get it?

Avatar image for supertom11
supertom11

70

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By supertom11

@NTM: Well, I finished the Leon Campaign last night with the same friend. After the cable climb and the 7th incarnation of the "final" boss, we were both about to throw our controllers out the window.

Avatar image for liquidprince
LiquidPrince

17073

Forum Posts

-1

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 5

Edited By LiquidPrince

@Supertom11 said:

@NTM: Well, I finished the Leon Campaign last night with the same friend. After the cable climb and the 7th incarnation of the "final" boss, we were both about to throw our controllers out the window.

I think it's flat out insanity that anyone had any issues whatsoever with the rope climb. It literally took like 10 seconds, and I didn't fail even once... R1, L1, R1, L1... I mean what? Hasn't anyone held a controller before, or played the myriad of other games that did this exact same thing? Also, who cares if the final boss shows up a bunch...? It's not like he is in the same form every time... He shows up as a different form, with different locations and different strategies to beat him. Just imagine it's like 7 different bosses.

Avatar image for AxleBro
AxleBro

810

Forum Posts

2

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By AxleBro

@JDW519 said:

This game is getting trashed by almost every person that plays, I don't understand how sites like IGN have given it decent reviews, definitely need to play it now just to see how bad it is

It's called paying for scores, it's why Jeff was fired from gamespot. anyone who thinks this doesn't really happen is naive as fuck.

Avatar image for arestice
Arestice

478

Forum Posts

100

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 1

Edited By Arestice

Brad is bad at video games, I attribute his difficulty to adapt to the game to that. I am enjoy it thoroughly, there is a lot more shooting going on this game which I think most people don't like but I don't really mind. Never had any time where scripted chase scenes didn't already reverse my camera as he says in, " it goes out of its way to make sure you know to push the stick down and hold the A button every time you need to run toward the camera through a barely-interactive scripted chase scene."

I do find the sprint mechanic to be strange, I have a hard time controlling my character during that, I don't push exactly forward on my analog stick so I end up running into things which left me not using sprint most of the time.

Avatar image for capthavic
capthavic

164

Forum Posts

5

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 1

Edited By capthavic

@Grognard66 said:

I think Brad and too many other reviewers have fallen into the trap of reviewing a game based on their expectations rather than what the game actually is. While it's fair to point out in the review if a game in a series is a serious departure in style/story/gameplay from previous entries, it should not result in a score deduction. Every game should be reviewed on it's own individual merits.

I have always found that to be one of those cop-out arguments that people make. When a game is (supposed) to be part of an established franchise then it's pretty much impossible to NOT have some kind of expectations. If Capcom wanted to make an action third person shooter that's fine, but don't shoehorn it into a series well known for survival horror.

But the big problem is even if you can ignore the title and look at is as just another action game, it's still pretty crap. It tries to appeal to everyone by having every modern gaming trope, every over the top action cliche, that it fails to do any of them well at the cost of any identity of it's own...becoming this sub par, unpolished grey sludge of mediocrity. If it weren't for the title this would be just another generic "me too!" game you'd find in the bargain bin.

You can try to excuse it's faults and say that it's good if you look at it on its own, but you can't. We live in a world where you can name anything RE6 does and I can name at least a half dozen current or even older games that do it better! There is simply no reason to play RE6 when there are so much better choices and probably cheaper too.

Avatar image for supertom11
supertom11

70

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By supertom11

@LiquidPrince: I didn't have much trouble with the rope climb but I attribute that to Brad and Patrick detailing out how exactly to do it. Most people, like my friend, tried to simply push R1, L1, R1, L1 as the prompt shows. But in actuality you need to hold down both shoulder buttons and alternate releasing them.

And it's one thing for a boss to take multiple forms in one grand battle, it's another for it to repeatedly come back over and over with basically the same strategy every time (except for the final, final, final battle) which basically boils down to, shoot it in the face. When something comes back from being shot, blown up, run over (by a train!), drowned, stabbed, and falling from a high-rise it's just plain stupid that it can be finally killed by, *SPOILERS*, a big spike. Every time it came back it made the previous battle seem utterly pointless.

So aside from all that nonsense, the poor item management, and bad online components (not being able to invite someone mid game), for some strange reason the game is still fun.

Avatar image for shellbelle2
shellbelle2

14

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By shellbelle2

This game isnt as bad as the guys from GB played it out to be on the podcast..I have actually enjoyed it...EXCEPT.....FOR FUCKS SAKE....i agree...WORST FUCKING CLIMBING puzzle IN GAMING HISTORY...PERIOD...my god...im about to give up....

Avatar image for curufinwe
Curufinwe

1723

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 3

Edited By Curufinwe

I've played 12 chapters now and can say that this is very misleading. The aiming and shooting are fluid, especially if you get the cheap Lock On skill, the laser sight works as well as it did in RE 4 and RE 5, and projectile and melee attacks both do obvious and satisfying damage to the enemies.

"The character movement is awkward, the aiming and shooting are stiff, and your basic interactions with enemies feel unresponsive and grossly unsatisfying. With a laser sight that swims around wildly within the targeting reticle and enemies that sometimes feel like bullets are passing right through them, the shooting makes a lousy first impression."

Avatar image for ezio_auditore
ezio_auditore

5

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By ezio_auditore

in my opinion this is a good game, better than RE5, more horror, more characters, better IA and better gameplay.

Avatar image for snakepond
Snakepond

101

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By Snakepond

I know I am going against the grain over here, but I just finished the game and I kind of liked it. There are some problems here and there and yes the horror aspect of the game is gone, but it is still a fun game. I think 2 out 5 is a little tough, but that's my opinion. Peace.

Avatar image for snakeking
snakeking

8

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 3

User Lists: 0

Edited By snakeking

What the hell happen, how could they possibly fawk this up??? This game was more of a chore to complete than fun, I couldn't continue playing this garbage so I returned it without finishing the third campaign or the secret campaign.. I'm a big fan of the series and I didn't really mind if it no longer had that survival horror, puzzle gameplay, I'm fine with that. My biggest problem was the gameplay mechanics and story, Here's my pros and cons:

Pros: cool dodging/moving/positioning shooting techniques they implanted.

Cons: The QTE was frustrating. story was boring and uninteresting. A Game that was suppose to feel like a shooter didn't quite execute well when your constanly low on ammo and basically force to melee all the time. The lighting was horrible. Not knowing if ur damaging an enemy. Too long of a chapter/level. The skill sytem replacing upgrades and buying equipment.

Avatar image for fincher7
Fincher7

2

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By Fincher7

The controls are awful, regardless of what camera settings you change.

Avatar image for draxyle
Draxyle

2021

Forum Posts

2

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

Edited By Draxyle

Finally finished this game three years late and decided to come back to re-read this review, yep. I enjoyed my time with it for sure, but you can't deny that it's messy product.

Kinda sad that RE7 seems to be totally different though, there was nothing wrong with the formula, just the execution.

Avatar image for porjos
porjos

286

Forum Posts

320

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 8

It's January 2017, and I bought this game for $10. I'd rather have bought a pooper scooper and picked up acorns for 16 hours than actually finish this steaming pile of garbage.

I've played every major iteration, and even enjoyed the middling Res Evil 5 more than I should. This game is just pure garbage.