Mikami's Resident Evil revolution, originally a GameCube exclusive. Over-the-shoulder camera, measured and tense action, an unforgettable Spanish rural village. Almost every set piece has become iconic. A high point of 2000s action gaming.
Your verdict
Category
Action Adventure1 player16+
Description
Leon Kennedy battles the Los Illuminados cult in this Capcom GameCube Resident Evil 4, German version. Published by Capcom, released in Germany in March 2005. Revolutionary action-adventure with over-the-shoulder view, Leon rescuing Ashley and memorable parasite bosses.
Resident Evil 4 review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
4/5
Music
★★★★★
"Excellent"
4/5
Story
★★★★★
"Captivating"
The shift to an over-the-shoulder camera reinvents fear, plunged into a dusk-lit Spanish countryside of dirty ochres and heavy mists. The repulsive design of the Ganados and the cinematic lighting sign a tangible horror. This muscular, precise style redefined the genre and still inspires today's action games.
Gameplay
"Masterful"
With the camera set over the shoulder, survival horror reinvents itself as a ballet of tension: aiming precisely, managing space against grouped assaults, alternating gunfire and melee. That tempo where every bullet counts has lost none of its intelligence. The tank controls still divide, but the balance between action and dread remains a template countless games have copied.
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Managing your ammo, upgrading your arsenal at the merchant and pushing from tense corridor to open arena builds a suspense that always lures you "to the next save point." Tuning weapons, treasures to sell on and perfectly judged pacing string the rewards together. The very linear structure repeats a little, yet this calibrated tension remains a benchmark for the genre.
Difficulty
"Punishing"
Surviving the Ganados takes as much composure as reflexes: the hordes close in, ammo runs dry and every bullet matters. Juggling the inventory, facing parasitic bosses and shielding Ashley keep the tension constant. Demanding yet never cheap, it rewards anticipation and precision, which is why it remains a benchmark for tense action today.
The dedicated allemande edition of Resident Evil 4 is the PAL regional variant with full en allemand localisation, packaging and manual included. Collector value comes from that regional specificity in a segment where localised GameCube pressings stayed rare.
Memorable bosses
From the lake creature to the giant that tears buildings apart, the variety of encounters impresses as much as their sheer scale. A dynamic camera, contextual action sequences and arenas built like spectacles keep renewing the tension. Every clash, from the knife duel against Krauser to the colossal El Gigante, asserts its own identity and redefined the staging of the action boss.
A cult cover
On the Japanese edition, the same oppressive chiaroscuro surrounds Leon, but it is the "Biohazard" seal that crowns the artwork. Colder and more clinical than its Western counterpart, the logo plays up the contaminated-experiment angle dear to the series. A variant that keeps all the tension while asserting its original identity.
Is Resident Evil 4 still worth playing in 2026?
A revolution of survival horror and TPS action, Resident Evil 4 redefined the genre's standards with its over the shoulder camera, briefcase inventory and cinematic pacing. The Spanish village, Salazar, Krauser and Ada offer a string of unforgettable set pieces. The GameCube version remains the original and the purest despite the many later ports. For anyone who loves demanding TPS action with a unique atmosphere, the title remains one of the greatest works of modern gaming and a true reference point for everyone.