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IMDbPro

Resident Evil: Code: Veronica

  • Video Game
  • 2000
  • 16
IMDb RATING
8.1/10
3.6K
YOUR RATING
Alyson Court in Resident Evil: Code: Veronica (2000)
Resident Evil Code: Veronica
Play trailer2:23
2 Videos
21 Photos
Zombie HorrorActionAdventureHorrorMysterySci-FiThriller

Claire Redfield infiltrates an Umbrella facility in Paris, but is captured and imprisoned on Rockfort Island. She teams up with inmate Steve Burnside to escape after an outbreak of the T-Vir... Read allClaire Redfield infiltrates an Umbrella facility in Paris, but is captured and imprisoned on Rockfort Island. She teams up with inmate Steve Burnside to escape after an outbreak of the T-Virus on the island.Claire Redfield infiltrates an Umbrella facility in Paris, but is captured and imprisoned on Rockfort Island. She teams up with inmate Steve Burnside to escape after an outbreak of the T-Virus on the island.

  • Directors
    • Hiroki Katô
    • Shimako Sato
    • Toshiyuki Aoyama
  • Writers
    • Noboru Sugimura
    • Hirohisa Soda
    • Junichi Miyashita
  • Stars
    • Alyson Court
    • Bill Houston
    • Peter Oldring
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.1/10
    3.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Hiroki Katô
      • Shimako Sato
      • Toshiyuki Aoyama
    • Writers
      • Noboru Sugimura
      • Hirohisa Soda
      • Junichi Miyashita
    • Stars
      • Alyson Court
      • Bill Houston
      • Peter Oldring
    • 20User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Videos2

    Resident Evil Code: Veronica
    Trailer 2:23
    Resident Evil Code: Veronica
    Resident Evil Code: Veronica X
    Trailer 0:36
    Resident Evil Code: Veronica X
    Resident Evil Code: Veronica X
    Trailer 0:36
    Resident Evil Code: Veronica X

    Photos21

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    Top cast9

    Edit
    Alyson Court
    Alyson Court
    • Claire
    • (voice)
    Bill Houston
    • Steve
    • (voice)
    Peter Oldring
    Peter Oldring
    • Alfred
    • (voice)
    Leila Johnson
    Leila Johnson
    • Alexia
    • (voice)
    Conrad Coates
    Conrad Coates
    • Narrator
    • (voice)
    Michael Filipowich
    Michael Filipowich
    • Chris
    • (voice)
    • (as Michael Fipowich)
    Richard Waugh
    Richard Waugh
    • Wesker
    • (voice)
    Martin Roach
    Martin Roach
    • Rodrigo
    • (voice)
    Geneviève Steele
    • Announcer
    • (voice)
    • (as Genevieve Steels)
    • Directors
      • Hiroki Katô
      • Shimako Sato
      • Toshiyuki Aoyama
    • Writers
      • Noboru Sugimura
      • Hirohisa Soda
      • Junichi Miyashita
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    8.13.6K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    9shadowolf2k

    It'll keep you up all night...half in fun, half in fear...

    One of the most frightening game experiences ever that will make you keep the lights on next to your bed. Great storyline with a romantic, horrific, and ironic plot. Fans of the original Resident Evil will be in for a surprise of a returning character! Not to mention that the voice-acting have drastically improved over the previous of the series. Don't miss out on the best of the series.
    10eke826s

    Another gem from the RE team.

    I just can't believe that these games can get so much better, but they do. Unfortunately I had to rent a Dreamcast to play it, but even though I did beat it I can't wait to buy it for PS2. This is the only series of games that I must own all of them even if I have beaten them many times over. I hope they never stop making this type of game even if the series must come to an end.
    10TERMINATOR180

    Great Biohazard (Resident Evil) Game

    This is one of the best of the series, ranking up there with Resident Evil 3: Nemesis (Or Biohazard: Last Escape) The game has a very good storyline in which you play as Claire Redfield in the search for her brother,Chris Redfield (Whom you probably know from the original Resident Evil) It is as scary as the other Resident Evil, and contains alot more cutscenes.

    My Rating: **** out of ***** Stars (Rating based on comparison to other videogames)
    christy-30

    Excellent!

    The Resident Evil series just keeps getting better and better! As a long-time Resident Evil fan, I bought a Dreamcast only to play Code Veronica, because I couldn't bear not playing my beloved RE. And let me tell you, it was well worth the money. It has more gore, more scares and the acting has gotten A LOT better than the previous games, with the exception of Steve Burnside. The gameplay and graphics are awesome! If your an Resident Evil fan, then this game is a must for you!
    mentalcritic

    A good, but somewhat overextended, entry in the series

    Resident Evil is one of the most popular video game series of all time for a number of reasons, not least among which is the somewhat non-linear structure of play. Although certain items have to be found before other areas can be explored, that's literally the extent of linearity in this game. As a result, the replay value, while not as great as some other games, is incredible. Another contributing factor to the replay value is that Capcom, in their infinite wisdom, decided that between a shorter game and one that makes the player feel as if there is no way to win, the shorter game is preferable. Not that this is much of a factor where Code Veronica is concerned. This game is long. Longer than Titanic, longer than The Godfather Part II, this is one piece of televisual entertainment that you cannot easily get tired of. It is also of substantially better quality than just about anything that the rest of the video game industry has cranked out lately. That, in and of itself, does not make it a perfect game, but it is oh so very close.

    Unlike previous entries in the series, the game only offers one path through the myriad of mazes. This limits the replay factor somewhat compared to Resident Evil 1 and 2, but this is an aside. Compared to some other video games that lose all their thrill as soon as one completes them, Code Veronica is like the classics of old, such as Jumpman or Impossible Mission. Flawed in their own ways, but still the preferred choice. Unlike Jumpman or Impossible Mission, however, Code Veronica grips the player in this almost unshakable manner because of its storyline. Indeed, once one has grown tired of fighting the nth zombie or Hunter, the thing that keeps the player going is anticipation of the next cutscene. Indeed, it is this anticipation that keeps the player playing in spite of some flawed moments such as a trap that can instantly kill your character and send you right back to the start, or programmers getting a little too enthusiastic with the mutant spawn.

    The voice acting is, as you might expect, terrible. Half the lines sound as if they were recorded through a public address system. I don't know who delivered Steve Burnside's dialogue, but he alternates between sounding seventeen and seven years old, often within the same line. Richard Waugh, on the other hand, absolutely shines as the voice of Albert Wesker. Bringing to mind images of a not-so-friendly David Bowie, the voice-over is totally consistent with the character - smooth, calm, totally in control. It's just a shame that the character models in the game do not even come close to being in sync with their voiceovers. Not that this is terribly important in a video game, but it does distract at times. Nonetheless, a quick listen to all the cutscenes will leave one in little doubt as to why Waugh is one of the few alumni of the Resident Evil series to have attained any work outside of video games.

    The gameplay, aside from the aforementioned moments when the programmers got carried away with traps or icky blob monsters, is fairly smooth. Getting used to the way characters in the Resident Evil games move is a little time-consuming, but the investment of time is well worth it. The real meat of a Resident Evil game, as any player will tell you, is inventory management. Throughout the game, one only has a small number of spaces to put items in, and one must constantly balance between two elements. These being pieces of the puzzle and weapons. Yes, the monsters encountered often resemble a cavalcade of B-movie escapees, but often the fun comes from discovering their origins. I don't think it is really revealing anything to say that the games wear their Night Of The Living Dead influence on their sleeve, anyway. Counting all the B-movie influences to be found in this Resident Evil is almost as much fun as playing the game.

    If I were giving Resident Evil: Code Veronica X a score out of ten, it would be nine. Some of it is less fun than the player has a right to expect, while most of it is so much more than the competition has delivered in the past ten years. Those new to the series might be better off getting an old copy of the PlayStation or PC versions of the original, but for those who are somewhat familiar with the Resident Evil universe, this is pure gold.

    More like this

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    8.6
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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This was last of the canonical Resident Evil titles to use the names of actual gun manufacturers (excluding Magnum) and firearms within the game. All the subsequent Resident Evil titles (Resident Evil remake, Resident Evil 0 and Resident Evil 4) used generic or made-up names for their weapons (i.e: Silver Serpent, Broken Butterfly, Blacktail).
    • Goofs
      When Steve saves Claire from the Bandersnatch, he fires over 30 bullets with his two Luger pistols without reloading. Lugers can only hold up to 8 bullets per clip. Steve shouldn't have been able to fire more than 16 rounds at most.
    • Quotes

      Alexia Ashford: You want it? You aren't worthy of its power.

    • Alternate versions
      Although the US and Japanese versions of the game are exactly the same, there are two known differences. First, the US version's main menu does not have a difficulty setting like the Japanese version which lets you choose Very Easy, Easy, or Normal gameplay. Second, in the US version, Wesker's Battle Game can be obtained by simply completing Chris' Battle Game, unlike the Japanese version, which in order to get Wesker's Battle Game you must find his sunglasses somewhere inside the normal game.
    • Connections
      Featured in Troldspejlet: Episode #23.9 (2000)

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    FAQ2

    • When does the story take place?
    • What is the T-Veronica virus?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 3, 2000 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Official site
      • Capcom's Official Japanese page (in Japanese)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Resident Evil - Code: Veronica
    • Production companies
      • Capcom Company
      • Nextech Production
      • Sega
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 4:3

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