Capcom has been doing something special with the way it revives Resident Evil. Resident Evil 2 was a total revolution. RE3 was polarizing but polished. RE4 was almost flawless. But in all these bold attempts, one essential part of the puzzle remains missing: a remake of Resident Evil 1, the one that began it all.
The 2002 GameCube remake was a classic, it was still of its time with tank controls, locked camera angles, and pre-rendered backgrounds. And nobody is denying that. But to say it is definitive by 2025, well, that is just disregarding the way games have evolved. Yes, it was atmospheric, but today, it’s more likely to frustrate new players than frighten them.

Why RE1 Still Deserves a True Remake
Capcom’s remakes work because they preserve the narrative spirit while evolving form and function. That’s exactly what RE1 needs, not a remaster, but a complete reimagining.

There’s an argument that RE1 has already been done “perfectly.” But if perfection were static, we’d never have seen the RE4 Remake. Players today crave more than just a preserved experience, they want it reborn. RE1 was the blueprint for survival horror: claustrophobia, dread, inventory panic, and that eerie silence interrupted by creaking wood or groaning undead. But we’ve never seen that blueprint interpreted using today’s technological and design standards.
Imagine it would look like this. Spencer Mansion in the RE Engine. Not only improved graphics, but on-the-fly lighting, shadows that advance with your torch, and monsters listening rather than lurching out in time. Take, for e.g., you hear some footsteps that are not part of a scene block; these are stalking you, because they heard you. That is how a RE1 remake should be.
The Franchise’s Future Starts at Its Beginning

We’ve revisited Raccoon City, battled Los Ganados in the village, and suffered in Dimitrescu’s castle. But the mansion, the mansion, is still waiting. Not as a curiosity for purists, but as a terrifying single-location showcase of what survival horror can still be.
In case RE9 pursues a more psychological horror feel, as Capcom is claiming it will, then the mansion found in RE1 would fit excellently. Tight quarters, gradual pace, horror as a process rather than as a jump-scare. Not action but fear. Spencer Mansion may be an exhibit, a claustrophobic bad dream that moviemakers got right in terms of modern equipment. It is worth it.

Why RE1’s Design Was Always Ahead of Its Time
Let’s not forget: RE1 wasn’t just the first, it was one of the smartest. Limited saves, fragile health, puzzle integration, and that constant sense of tension made every decision matter. In a gaming landscape where horror games often lean on jump scares or gunplay, RE1 thrived on psychological weight and meaningful friction.
If you’ve ever felt the dread of checking your item box and realizing you have two ink ribbons left and three rooms unexplored, you know. The mansion didn’t just test your aim, it tested your planning, your courage, your restraint.

What This Remake Needs to Offer
But this new RE1 can’t just be pretty. It needs to dig deeper into how fear works in a game. Here’s what I think it needs to bring it to life again:
- Zombies that react to sound or smell. So now you gotta sneak or risk a fight.
- Flashbacks, hallucinations, and character breaks, adding psychological layers to Chris and Jill. So it’s not just how it’s affecting you, but rather affecting both of you.
- An option for fixed camera mode, just for those who loved the original’s tension.
- More backstory on Umbrella, the mansion’s creepy design, and what it was built for.
- Two campaigns that feel very different depending on who you play.
Code Veronica & RE0? Great, But Not Foundational
Word is that Code: Veronica and Resident Evil Zero are up next to get remade. And they are due for it, to be honest. CV, in especially, has narrative significance, and RE0 had some mechanics that could sparkle with a bit of sheen. But neither possesses the symbolic or emotional significance of RE1. Spencer Mansion is the heart of the series. Its mood, its rhythm, its legend, nothing else in the series holds a candle.
Final Thought: Bring Fear Home

This isn’t fan service. It’s not about paying homage to horror design that still hasn’t been topped. It’s about going back to a game that didn’t hold your hand because horror isn’t meant for that.
In 2025, I don’t want a good horror game. With an entirely new generation of players in mind, I would like a reminder of where the journey started. Resident Evil 1 is not a faded memory of the past; it’s a masterpiece that needs to be re-colored. And with the resources Capcom possesses today, it could be one of the greatest remakes of all time.