I refuse to let the Resident Evil Village VR dream die

Resident Evil Village screenshot with the main character, Ethan, being dragged
(Image credit: Capcom)

I've got an itch than Resident Evil Village can't scratch. Call it morbid curiosity, or simply a fascination with the macabre and vile world that Capcom has created, but I want to plonk myself into Ethan Winters' blood-soaked and battered shoes in virtual reality. I want to become the man with no plan, half a hand, and a shaky relationship with the Umbrella Corporation. I want to play that one bit, you might know it, where that thing happens (click the link for spoilers) and you want to close your eyes and curl up into a ball. But I want to do all that without all this regular reality getting in the way.

The missed opportunity for VR that is currently Resident Evil Village speaks for itself in many ways. It's a fantastic example of imminent and overtly in your face horror. Resident Evil Village is gory, slimy even. It's a game you can practically smell—a sensation that has spurred on the entire PC Gamer team to discuss history's stinkiest videogames. It's truly disgusting at times, and Ethan Winters experiences it all first-hand (pun intended).

There are claustrophobic hallways with creepy crawlspaces that put you face-to-face with unsettling objects. Even in the grand chambers of Castle Dimitrescu, every door, object, or event puts you face-first into the action, even when you'd rather not be. The player camera is sunk right into Ethan Winters' eye sockets—which conjures up a picture of a monster that could easily find a place among Resident Evil Village's gruesome cast.

Resident Evil Village pulls your attention to what's immediately in front of you. It's more than simply first person games making for obvious VR candidates: If ever there was a perfect vessel for virtual reality gore, it would be Ethan's poor hands.

Capcom has precedent in virtual reality, too, although sadly not when it comes to PC VR. Resident Evil 7: Biohazard was compatible with Sony's PlayStation VR headset, a pairing that created an often surprisingly terrifying and immersive experience. It wasn't flawless by any means, but it was more than an afterthought. That matters for VR, support for which remains sporadic among major developers.

Resident Evil Village boss scene screenshot

(Image credit: Capcom)
Virtual reality

(Image credit: Valve)

Best VR headset: which kit should you choose?
Best graphics card: you need serious GPU power for VR
Best gaming laptop: don't get tied to your desktop in VR

Sadly, Resident Evil 7 never made it over to our gaming rigs or high-end headsets, and none of the VR hacks present a satisfying experience, but damn if it wasn't one of the best horror games on any VR platform to date.

That wasn't a one-off, either. Capcom recently announced it was partnering with Facebook to deliver Resident Evil 4 on the Oculus Quest 2. Another success for the popular VR headset, Resident Evil 4 will be getting a first-person remaster for virtual reality.

Once again, there's no word of a wider release on PC. That's a shame all unto itself, but what it shows is Capcom's willingness to take a Resident Evil game, even a third-person one, and mould it into something suitable for VR. Or, at the very least, get someone else's help doing so—in Resident Evil 4's case that's studio, Armature.

So perhaps all hope isn't lost for a Resident Evil Village VR remake one day. At least that's what I'll keep telling myself. And don't be mistaken, Resident Evil Village is a superb, if acutely terrifying, videogame absolutely worth playing, VR or no. 

For further convincing, check out Andy's Resident Evil Village review.

Jacob Ridley
Senior Hardware Editor

Jacob earned his first byline writing for his own tech blog. From there, he graduated to professionally breaking things as hardware writer at PCGamesN, and would go on to run the team as hardware editor. Since then he's joined PC Gamer's top staff as senior hardware editor, where he spends his days reporting on the latest developments in the technology and gaming industries and testing the newest PC components.