Resident Evil 4 reissued on Wii with Wiimote aiming. Survival-action tension intact, controls finally feel natural, full content. Arguably the best way to experience Resident Evil 4 at the time, still excellent today.
Your verdict
Category
Action Adventure1 player16+
Description
Action game by Capcom, Europe July 2007. Leon S. Kennedy is sent to Europe to rescue the kidnapped president's daughter from a Spanish cult village. Precise Wii Remote and Nunchuk aiming and contextual actions, revolutionary over-the-shoulder gameplay and impeccable pacing. The most acclaimed version of Resident Evil 4, one of the best action games of all time.
Resident Evil 4 - Wii Edition review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
4/5
Story
★★★★★
"Captivating"
On the Wii, the dusk-lit Spanish countryside regains all its menacing dampness, backed by dirty ochres and heavy mists. The grotesque design of the attackers and the over-the-shoulder camera sign a cinematic tension, now reinforced by the pointer. This nervy, precise style has lost none of its force.
Muffled and anxiety-inducing, the score by Shusaku Uchiyama and Misao Senbongi builds fear in small strokes, alternating heavy silences and orchestral blasts. The music reacts to the action, spiking the tension of the Ganados' assaults. This sound work of fearsome precision heightens every shiver of the game.
Gameplay
"Masterful"
Aiming with the Wii pointer turns the action into a pleasure of instant precision: placing your shots, going for the head and then chaining into the knife becomes a treat of fluidity. The relentless pace, the waves of enemies and the attaché-case inventory management have lost none of their genius. Slightly dated presentation aside, this version stays the most playable take on a timeless classic.
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
Aiming with the remote, dodging and slashing with a knife in one of the greatest horror adventures ever made: the Wii's pointing makes the action more instinctive and immersive than ever. The constant tension, breathless pace and gleeful arsenal grip you relentlessly. Brilliantly adapted, this survival-action masterpiece finds a second youth, pad in hand.
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Aiming with the Wiimote, managing your ammo and upgrading your arsenal at the merchant sets up a suspense that always pushes you "to the next save point." Treasures to resell, weapons to fine-tune and a perfectly measured pace chain rewards and tension together. The very linear structure repeats a little, but this calibrated tension, elevated by pointer aiming, remains a benchmark for the genre.
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Massive"
Escorting Leon from the village to the castle and on to the island chains together settings that never stop renewing themselves, and the long campaign plays out without a dull moment thanks to Wiimote aiming. Upgrading the arsenal, gathering treasures, chasing a better ranking and unlocking side modes like Mercenaries or Separate Ways invites endless replays. That replay value, paired with relentless pacing throughout, still upholds its standing as a timeless classic.
A Wii port of Capcom's action-horror masterpiece, whose pointer aiming was hailed as the best way to play this Leon-and-Ganados classic. Widely distributed in the West, its collecting interest stays measured and rests on this status as the ideal way to play a venerated title rather than scarcity. A prime piece for fans of action-horror on Wii.
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.
Is Resident Evil 4 - Wii Edition still worth playing in 2026?
Resident Evil 4 Wii Edition is often regarded as the best version of this absolute action-horror masterpiece, thanks to Wii Remote and Nunchuk controls of revelatory precision. Aiming by hand and performing contextual actions with a gesture brings a fluidity and immersion that transcend the original experience. The over-the-shoulder gameplay, which redefined the entire genre, has lost none of its power, and the pacing, alternating tension and grand spectacle, remains exemplary. The direction, the bestiary and the bosses stay unforgettable. For anyone discovering or revisiting this monument, this Wii version is quite simply essential.