Skip to content
City PM
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • DE
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • DE
Wednesday 25 January 2017 6:54 pm

Resident Evil 7 review: A gruesome return to form for the horror series

By: Steve Hogarty

Add as a preferred source on Google

Were it physically possible for a human skeleton to crawl out of a body through the mouth so that all the flesh peeled down to form a bloody skirt made of guts, and for that skeleton to run around the room getting tangled up in bunting and pulling bookshelves down on itself, then Resident Evil 7 would have ejected my panicking bones in a matter of minutes.

This is a very scary game about a creepy old house, and a surprising return to form for an increasingly diluted horror series. With too few exceptions along the way, the Resident Evil games had devolved into mindless, action-focused zombie blasters, high on thrills but low on subtlety, oddly obsessed with cooperative play and too bogged down in overblown lore.

With Resident Evil 7, Capcom hits the reset button and drags the decades-old series back to its single-player fundamentals. You’re alone and barely armed in a spooky mansion in the woods, you’re being hunted by a family of hillbilly psychopaths with bad hygiene, and behind every creaking wooden door loom threats both imagined and real. This is first-person survival horror in the purest sense, an homage to the original Resident Evil that draws inspiration from cinema’s greatest hits. Blair Witch lends the game some found-footage moments, whereas the dirt and bloodstained grime of the mansion itself owes a debt to grindhouse classics like The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.

You spend much of your time creeping between badly lit rooms in search of the various keys and emblems that will unlock the path forward, deeper into the labyrinthine house in which you’ve been trapped. The deranged Baker family forms an almost supernatural threat, appearing at random moments to howl and chase you around with shovels, occasionally bursting through the walls of their own home with scant regard for the property value. Even when you’re not playing hide and seek with these toothless menaces, their presence is still felt and heard in the distant creaking of floorboards, and in the rattling of door handles in previously explored rooms.

It’s a pervasive and exhausting sense of tension, and one that follows some well-observed pacing tropes: at times rescue seems tantalisingly close, only to be violently denied.

Things get a little flabby in the latter half of the game, marred by some less interesting encounters with more “gamesy” enemies, but the early hours of this game represent the Resident Evil series at its forgotten best. An authentic and genuinely terriying survival horror experience.

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Sections

  • Life&Style
  • News

Categories

  • Culture
  • Life&Style
  • Tech

Trending Articles

  • Citroën 2CV returns as a £13,000 electric car, and the timing is no accident

  • James Watt offers to buy back Brewdog

  • Bank of England warns Burnham of UK economy’s ‘big issue’

  • The former African gold miner taking on the billionaire Issa brothers

  • Rachel Reeves to unveil next steps for ring-fencing reform at Mansion House

More from City PM

  • Why World Cup players could pay tax in five different countries

    Sport Business
    Breaking news event with business professionals discussing important financial updates in a modern conference room.
  • Exclusive: O2 Arena bosses open to hosting another Formula 1 launch event

    Sport Business
    Breaking news event coverage with journalists and cameras capturing a live press conference in a bustling city environment
  • Wimbledon: HMRC set to slap Sinner and Noskova with £1.6m tax bill

    Sport Business
    Getty Images logo on a sleek black background, symbolizing reliable sources for high-quality stock photography and media c...
  • Ben Stokes bombshell shows how power has swung to sport’s players and coaches

    Sport Business
    Business professionals discussing strategy in a modern office setting with laptops and documents on a wooden conference ta...
  • R|Elan™ Circular Design Challenge Celebrates Its 8th Season with a Landmark Global Edition Under the India–France Year of Innovation 2026

    Business Wire
  • Modon’s Hudayriyat Golf Estates Sets UAE Record With More Than AED 13 Billion in Sales Within Days of Launch

    Business Wire
  • Uber slams £340m London cabbie case as ‘completely unfounded’

    Tech
    Shares in Uber tumbled more than five per cent in pre-market trading as earnings missed analyst expectations.
  • Under the Shadow at Almeida: Psychological horror set against Tehran’s 1988 bombing

    Life&Style
    Mysterious urban landscape with tall buildings cast in shadow, highlighting architectural contrasts and atmospheric mood.

City PM — European politics, business and analysis.

Europe

  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • UK & Ireland

Topics

  • Business
  • Markets
  • AI
  • Technology
  • Opinion
  • Energy

More

  • Politics
  • Economics
  • Fintech
  • Legal
  • Sport
  • Life

Company

  • About City PM
  • Editorial Policy
  • Corrections
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
© 2026 City PM · Published by CityPM Media, Bahnhofstrasse 65, 8001 Zürich, Switzerland
About · Editorial Policy · Corrections · Contact · Privacy · Facebook