Resident Evil 7 Teaser: Beginning Hour “Midnight” Version is Available Now

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As Capcom’s upcoming installment in the Resident Evil franchise nears us. Players have been preparing by uncovering as much as possible about Resident Evil 7 Biohazard by digging as much as they can into its teaser demo. The demo itself is a glimpse into what has sent the main character, Ethan Winters, into a mysterious plantation that has been abandoned for quite sometime, an why his search for his missing wife has lead him there.

The teaser shown earlier today at the PlayStation Experience hinted at the “Midnight” trailer, which opens up new paths for fans to enjoy, but also allows for users that have a PlayStation VR and or PlayStation Pro to see the game in all its power with the upgraded hardware. Will you brave the mansion again for this new “Midnight” demo on PlayStation 4 today? Xbox One users will get to experience the demo starting December 9th, 2016.

Stay tuned for our review of Resident Evil 7: Biohazard when it launches on PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and Windows PC (Steam and Windows 10 Store) starting January 24th, 2017.


About the Writer:

dustin_batgr_prof

Dustin is our native console gamer, PlayStation and Nintendo reviewer who has an appetite for anything that crosses the boarders from across the big pond. His interest in JRPG’s, Anime, Handheld Gaming, and Pizza is insatiable. His elitist attitude gives him direction, want, and a need for the hardest difficulties in games, which is fun to watch, and hilarity at its finest. You can find him over on TwitterGoogle+, and or you can find him on PSN with RaivynLyken.

Resident Evil VII: Beginning Hour is About to See More Content Starting Today

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Tokyo Game Show hasn’t been short of any large surprises. Among them came Capcom announcing that Resident Evil VII Teaser: Beginning Hour demo – exclusive to PlayStation Plus – fans will find themselves upf or another scare starting today. Having broken records as the most downloaded demo within a week in North America on PlayStation 4 – Capcom seeks to bring a bit more of the mystery to the forefront for players to enjoy. The new “Twilight” version will feature a bit more of the mysterious and decrepit mansion.

In the newest bit of the trailer and the demo, we’ll get to see what is going on within this disturbing feast we’ve seen from the Baker family, which will be the premise for our fight for survival. Additionally, the company has announced that those looking to pre-order the game can do so with either the Deluxe Edition or the Standard Edition starting now on PlayStation 4. The Deluxe Edition will run you a rough $89.99 USD and will contain the games Season Pass as well as the game.

The Season Pass will contain additional playable story episodes for fans to enjoy. Capcom has also confirmed that the Deluxe Edition will contain another playable story episode that will bringing the total amount of content to three episodes, and will run $89.99. Will you be buckling down to explore the Baker Mansion and find out what’s really going on there?


About the Writer:

dustin_batgr_prof

Dustin is our native console gamer, PlayStation and Nintendo reviewer who has an appetite for anything that crosses the boarders from across the big pond. His interest in JRPG’s, Anime, Handheld Gaming, and Pizza is insatiable. His elitist attitude gives him direction, want, and a need for the hardest difficulties in games, which is fun to watch, and hilarity at its finest. You can find him over on TwitterGoogle+, and or you can find him on PSN with RaivynLyken.

 

Sit-Rep: Umbrella Corps – Angry Gamers Inbound

In the past, Resident Evil is a series that would turn heads if a whisper of an announcement leaked out into the world – that was until Resident Evil 5 came into the scene and drove the series in a downward spiral. In recent years, the downward spiral has gotten worse with titles such as Resident Evil’s 5, 6, and Operation Raccoon City. While Operation Raccoon City is a personal favourite, it doesn’t mean the title was good or even great, but was still slightly enjoyable as a cooperative game.

I’d rather have a Resident Evil: Operation Raccoon City Remaster than this pile of rot.

A one would expect, Capcom has been renown for working on new IP’s to see what direction fans would like, and if Umbrella Corp’s is a sign of things to come – there’s no hope. Starting with its reveal last last September, Umbrella Corps began to draw attention thanks to the fandom that surrounded Resident Evil: Operation Raccoon Citys Player vs Player vs A.I. gameplay.

The idea behind players fighting against each other amidst each other, the battles got heated the moment tyrants fell onto the map, and players hunted each other’s objectives whether it was attack, defend or hold. Capcom’s oddest spin-off is also it’s worst, and it’s even worse than Operation Raccoon City. I’d rather have a Resident Evil: Operation Raccoon City Remaster than this pile of rot.

Pros:
+Character and class edits offer plenty of variety for players to enjoy
+Memorable maps offer a sense of nostalgia momentarily
+Multiplayer can actually be enjoyable in short doses if players find a good lobby

Cons:
-The use of jammer packs for infected A.I is unique, its poorly implemented
-Single-player is simply a tutorial for the multiplayer and it can be easily neglected
-Lag can be rather problematic between matches and continually appeared
-Character editing is locked behind the ranked mode
-Claustrophobic closeness to player character causing major U.I. clutter

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While the idea of a competitive title following a long the lines of Resident Evil: Operation Raccoon City; Umbrella Corps fails miserably, and its entirety suffers due to this. Dropping the Resident Evil moniker, Umbrella Corps. Among the many little nuances that can be problematic, the deeper troubles lie within the deeper waters, and the ones that are close to being ripped apart here momentarily.

As one would expect, Umbrella Corps is a 3v3 title, one that pits two teams of Umbrella Agents against each other amidst a zombie infested arena that takes place among familiar maps such as Raccoon City’s famed “Raccoon City Police Department”, Resident Evil 5‘s “Village”, and various other locales such as Operation Raccoon City’s “Umbrella Lab’s”.

Carrying these battles takes place in two modes that run distinctly different from one another: One-life Team Death Match and Multi-Mission Mode. While enjoyable, One-life TDM offers a minor bit of enjoyment as players will find themselves quickly disposed of by infected if not by players running around with brutal melee weapons being brandished. Much as one would expect, Single-Life TDM wears out its welcome faster than it allows for players to enter the fray – if anything, this mode should have been scrapped quicker than it was implemented.

“The lag, frame rate drops, and repetitiveness can be fixed with new content and hot fixing.”

Where the game truly shines is in its Multi-Mission Mode where players will undergo multiple scenarios in a single match. These missions consist of a king-of-the hill style capture point’s of a satellite dish, collecting briefcases for your handler, eliminating enemies in a respawn based Team Death Match, and even a virus sample based collection mission that requires players to kill infected.

While this is enjoyable for the short run, the missions can cause players to grow bored and quite possibly irritated within the hour. If Capcom wants or even wanted to save this title; they’re running out of time as the game is starving for new content among its flawed design execution. The lag, frame rate drops, and repetitiveness can be fixed with new content and some hot fixing.

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Among its many problematic designs, Umbrella Corps is a troubled spin-off for the Resident Evil franchise, which comes deeply flawed in many aspects. From poor design decisions such as a lack of modes, character design options, load-out optimizations, and even a real threat from zombies: Umbrella Corps is good as a dead the moment it launched.

However, I’d be lying if I stated that I didn’t enjoy my moments of nostalgia while gunning down enemy agents in-front of a revamped Raccoon City Police department from Resident Evil 2. Sadly my enjoyment was killed when my disappointment resurfaced when trying to enjoy the view through the games painfully cluttered U.I. that focused more on the back of my agents head. The strangest of designs comes from the games flawed map, which highlights nearby movement in buildings as sound spikes. This can be misleading to players as both infected and players can trigger a nearby sound spike.

Among these small mechanics, I found myself a bit pained when my “Zombie Jammer” was broken only to find myself being attacked by zombies, Uroboros Infected, zombie dogs, and even the infamous crows. Among the battle it’s mildly easy to notice bio weapons that have been missing across the battlefield. Unlike the critical failure Operation Raccoon City; O.R.C.‘s multiplayer offered more variety as players could find themselves teaming up to down a Hunter Alpha among other bio weapons. The one thing this title does manage to pull off that none has so far? Weapon customization that allows for players to pick their weapon’s from a large variety such as SMG’s, pistols, shotguns, the attachments for the guns, and even the color pallet each gun has. Luckily the game will pull players in from each play style since the game has that amount of variety in its player load-out arsenal.

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While I’ve played many of competitive shooters that players could be sucked into, Umbrella Corps is a travesty, one that could die out even quicker than Resident Evil: Operation Raccoon City, which only managed to stay alive a few months after launch. Unlike Operation Raccoon City, the chances of Umbrella Corps. lasting even that long comes out pretty slim as the game is already almost dead on Steam according to Twinfinite.

If anything? This is a sign of bad things to come for this title as franchise spin-off titles already have a bad reputation. It’s time for Capcom to take notes on what has made other online competitive shooters good, or, y’know – ask the players for help. While Capcom’s Osaka studio has their work cut out for them for a new title, this is one to avoid at all costs. There’s plenty of titles out there for fans to enjoy if they are looking for a competitive team-based shooter to enjoy.


Our review is based on a copy that Blast Away the Game Review purchased.  For information about our ethics policy please click here.


 Final Score: 3 out of 10


About the Writer:

dustin_batgr_prof

Dustin is our native console gamer, PlayStation and Nintendo reviewer who has an appetite for anything that crosses the boarders from across the big pond. His interest in JRPG’s, Anime, Handheld Gaming, and Pizza is insatiable. His elitist attitude gives him direction, want, and a need for the hardest difficulties in games, which is fun to watch, and hilarity at its finest. You can find him over on TwitterGoogle+, and or you can find him on PSN with RaivynLyken.