dark horror game corridor atmospheric lighting resident evil beginner guide 2026

Which Resident Evil to Play First 2026 Guide

 

Alex "Redfield" Vane

A survival horror veteran who has been escaping Raccoon City since the 90s. With a PhD in "Inventory Management" and a record for the most herbs consumed in a single sitting, I specialize in helping modern gamers navigate the labyrinthine lore of Umbrella Corp without losing their minds or their ammo.

Published: March 10, 2026  |  10 min read  |  Last updated: March 10, 2026

Which Resident Evil Should I Play First? The 2026 Beginner's Guide

With Resident Evil Requiem cracking 5 million copies in its first five days the fastest launch in franchise history a whole new wave of players is asking the same question: which Resident Evil should I play first? The series spans 30 years, 10+ mainline entries, and more remakes than a Hollywood executive's fever dream. Getting the starting point wrong can mean bouncing off tank controls in 1996, or wandering into a convoluted mid-series mess without any context. You don't need to play them all. You just need to play the right one first. This guide gives you a clear, honest answer based on your playstyle  whether you crave pure horror, love action, or want to understand the lore before diving into Requiem.

⚡ Quick Answer

Start with the Resident Evil 2 Remake (2019). It's the best-selling game in the franchise with over 16.8 million copies sold, requires zero prior knowledge, uses modern controls, and delivers the definitive survival horror experience. If you hate horror and love action, start with RE4 Remake instead.

Why Does Your Entry Point Matter More Than You Think?

Resident Evil is not one game stretched across 30 years. It's at least three radically different series wearing the same lab coat. The early classics (RE1, RE2, RE3) use fixed camera angles, limited inventory, and what the community lovingly calls "tank controls." The mid-era titles (RE4, RE5) shifted to over-the-shoulder action. The modern era (RE7, RE Village, RE2 Remake onward) split into two camps first-person psychological horror and third-person action-horror remakes.

Starting with the wrong game doesn't just mean having a bad time  it means building a false impression of the whole franchise. I've watched friends try the original RE1 remaster first, bounce off the controls, and never return. That's a tragedy. The same person who'd love the RE2 Remake's tense corridor crawls or RE7's psychological terror gave up before they got there.

📊 Key Stat: The Resident Evil franchise has sold over 183 million units worldwide as of December 2025, making it the highest-grossing horror video game franchise of all time — and the proof that picking the right entry point leads to a long-term relationship with the series.

The Best Starting Point for Most Players: Resident Evil 2 Remake

If you only read one section of this guide, make it this one. For the vast majority of newcomers, Resident Evil 2 Remake (2019) is the single best first game in the franchise.

The atmospheric tension of a dark, claustrophobic corridor captures exactly what makes Resident Evil 2 Remake so compelling for new players. | Photo by Justin Clark
on slant

Here's why it works so well as an entry point. You play as either rookie cop Leon S. Kennedy or college student Claire Redfield during a zombie outbreak in Raccoon City. The story is completely self-contained  no prior game knowledge required. The gameplay uses a modern over-the-shoulder perspective with responsive controls that feel great in 2026. It has survival horror at its core: limited ammo, a terrifying indestructible pursuer (Mr. X), clever puzzles, and an atmosphere so thick you can almost smell the blood on the precinct floors.

My own first run with Leon took about nine hours on Standard difficulty. By the time I hit the sewers, I was keeping a mental tally of every bullet  two for the zombie blocking the east corridor, save the shotgun shells for anything that moves after I bring it down. That mental math, the constant calculation of "can I afford this fight?", is the heartbeat of classic Resident Evil. The remake delivers it without a second of clunkiness. When I replayed it on Hardcore, using the typewriter save system with limited ink ribbons, I genuinely felt my palms sweat in a way no horror film has managed in years.

"Resident Evil 2 is a gold-standard for how to do a remake, combining the original's nostalgia with modernized and fresh gameplay to bring an awesome experience for players old and new."

📊 Key Stat: By January 2026, RE2 Remake had sold 16.87 million copies, making it the best-selling entry in the entire franchise — outselling every original title and every other remake. The market has spoken.

Why RE2 Remake Works for Beginners

  • Zero prior knowledge needed. The story is a self-contained zombie outbreak. You will not be lost.
  • Modern controls. Over-the-shoulder perspective, fluid movement no tank controls, no fixed cameras.
  • Multiple difficulty options. "Assisted" mode auto-aims and regenerates health, making it genuinely accessible for first-timers.
  • Replayability built in. Two separate campaigns (Leon and Claire) with different routes and story beats.
  • Excellent pacing. Around 8–12 hours per campaign. Long enough to love it, short enough to finish it.
"Resident Evil 2 — Official Launch Trailer" by Capcom on YouTube. Used for informational purposes.

If You Want to Be Genuinely Scared: Resident Evil 7 Biohazard

If your goal is to have the lights-off, genuinely terrifying experience  the kind where you pause the game to remind yourself you're safe  then skip ahead to Resident Evil 7: Biohazard (2017).

RE7 is a soft reboot. It ditches the familiar characters from previous games (mostly), introduces brand-new protagonist Ethan Winters, and drops you into a decaying Louisiana plantation run by the deeply disturbing Baker family. The shift to first-person perspective  a franchise first for a mainline entry  makes every encounter hit harder. There's no avatar between you and the monster. As of June 2025, RE7 had sold 15.4 million units, making it the second best-selling game in the franchise, behind only RE2 Remake.

Because RE7 functions as a standalone story with only background references to earlier lore, it's a legitimate starting point for players who don't mind skipping the third-person action of RE2 Remake. Capcom deliberately designed it as a new jumping-on point and it shows. The mechanics are straightforward enough that genre newcomers won't feel lost.

💡 Pro Tip: If you want the absolute peak horror experience, RE7 supports PlayStation VR. Reviewers consistently called it one of the most frightening gaming experiences ever made in VR mode. Play it docked in a dark room at minimum.

⚠️ Important: RE7 is genuinely, seriously scary. If you have a low tolerance for sustained dread or graphic body horror, start with RE2 Remake instead. RE7 draws explicit inspiration from The Texas Chain Saw Massacre and Saw — the first two hours especially don't hold back.

If You Want Action Over Horror: Resident Evil 4 Remake

If the word "survival horror" makes you nervous but you still want to experience what the hype is about, the Resident Evil 4 Remake (2023) is built for you. It's the most action-forward entry in the modern lineup  more Leon Kennedy shooting cults in rural Spain than Leon Kennedy trembling in a broom closet.

The original RE4 from 2005 practically invented the over-the-shoulder third-person shooter genre, and the 2023 remake recaptures that energy with modern production values and over 10 million copies sold by early 2025. It received a perfect 10/10 from IGN and sits as the third highest-reviewed game in franchise history. The horror elements are present  there are definitely moments that'll get you  but the ratio of action to terror tips firmly toward action. You'll feel like a capable operative more often than a terrified civilian.

A word of honesty from experience: RE4 Remake is set a few years after the Raccoon City disaster, so a few references will fly over your head without prior knowledge. None of them break the story  it's entirely playable cold  but if you later circle back to RE2 Remake, there's a genuine emotional reward in understanding how Leon ended up where he is.

Dark, oppressive environments are a hallmark of every entry in the franchise — from the police precinct of RE2 to the Spanish village of RE4.| Photo by Liam Croft on pushsquare

If You Want the Full Story: Where to Begin with Lore

Maybe you're gearing up for Resident Evil Requiem and want to understand what's actually happening when Leon shows up. Maybe you're the type who reads every in-game document and lore note. If story continuity matters to you, here's the honest minimum you need.

The Lore-Aware Starting Path (Efficient Edition)

  1. Resident Evil HD Remaster (RE1): Introduces the T-Virus, Umbrella Corporation, Spencer Mansion, and the characters who anchor the whole mythology. The HD Remaster is available on current-gen platforms and is the most accessible version.
  2. Resident Evil 2 Remake: Leon's debut. The Raccoon City outbreak. The context for almost every event in the series going forward. Play this second  or first if you want to start modern and work backward.
  3. Resident Evil 3 Remake (optional): Shows the final destruction of Raccoon City. Lean toward playing it  it's shorter than RE2R (around 6 hours) and fills in critical gaps before Requiem.
  4. Resident Evil 4 Remake: Leon six years later. Shows how the Raccoon City incident shaped him. Essential for understanding the character you'll follow into Requiem.

💡 Pro Tip: You do NOT need to play RE5, RE6, or RE Village to understand Resident Evil Requiem. Requiem focuses on the Raccoon City legacy and Leon's arc. Those titles add texture but aren't on the critical path — save them for after you're already hooked.

Which Resident Evil Games Should Beginners Skip?

Not every Resident Evil is worth your time as a newcomer. Here's the honest list of entries you can safely deprioritize, with reasons.

Resident Evil 0

A prequel to RE1 with a partner-switching mechanic that splits your inventory between two characters. It creates frustrating item management that even veterans find annoying, and the story is widely considered one of the weakest in the series. Skip it until you're already a fan who wants more.

Resident Evil 5 and 6

These represent the franchise at its most action-heavy and least survival horror. RE6 in particular was the first mainline entry to receive a negative consensus from critics and is widely viewed as the nadir that forced Capcom to completely reinvent the series with RE7. Both can be fun  RE5 especially shines in co-op but neither represents the series at its best, and RE6's story is genuinely difficult to follow without deep series knowledge.

Resident Evil: Code Veronica

A legitimate classic but one of the most punishing games in the franchise, with multiple open areas that make navigation genuinely confusing, enemies you can accidentally lock out for good, and boss fights designed around perfect item management. It's beloved for a reason  but not as an introduction.

Quick Reference: Best Entry Points by Playstyle

Your Vibe Start With Then Play
I want the best overall intro RE2 Remake (2019) RE4 Remake → RE7
I want maximum scares RE7 Biohazard (2017) RE2 Remake → RE Village
I prefer action, less horror RE4 Remake (2023) RE2 Remake → RE5 co-op
I want to understand the full lore RE1 HD Remaster RE2R → RE3R → RE4R
I want to prep for Requiem (2026) RE2 Remake RE3R → RE4R → Requiem

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to play Resident Evil games in order?

No. Each modern entry works as a standalone. The remakes (RE2, RE3, RE4) share lore but don't require you to have played the originals. RE7 is an explicit soft reboot designed as a new jumping-on point. Playing in release order is an option for completionists, not a requirement for enjoyment.

Is Resident Evil 2 Remake good for beginners?

Yes  it's the best starting point for most players. It has an "Assisted" difficulty that includes auto-aim and health regeneration, making it accessible even for survival horror newcomers. The story is self-contained, controls are modern, and it's widely considered the gold standard for what a Resident Evil game should be.

Is Resident Evil 7 a good starting point for the series?

Yes, especially if you want maximum scares. RE7 was specifically designed as a reboot entry point and features a standalone story requiring no prior knowledge. It's sold over 15 million copies and is critically considered one of the best horror games ever made. Note: it is significantly scarier than RE2 Remake.

Should I play the originals or the remakes first?

Start with the remakes. The originals use fixed camera angles and tank controls that feel dated to modern audiences. The remakes preserve all the story and improve almost everything else. If you fall in love with the franchise, going back to the originals becomes an interesting historical exercise  but it's not the right first move.

How many Resident Evil games are there?

There are 10 mainline entries and around 20 additional spinoffs, remakes, and re-releases  roughly 30 games total across the franchise's 30-year history. For newcomers, only 4–5 of those are genuinely essential. The rest are for die-hard fans who need every detail of Umbrella Corp's corporate wrongdoing in their lives.

Which Resident Evil games should I play before Resident Evil Requiem?

The essential trio before Requiem is RE2 Remake, RE3 Remake, and RE4 Remake  all set in or around Raccoon City and following Leon's arc. RE1 HD Remaster adds helpful backstory. RE7 and Village are optional unless you want full universe context. RE5 and RE6 are skippable for Requiem preparation.

The Bottom Line

The answer to "which Resident Evil should I play first?" is almost always the same: RE2 Remake. It's the best-selling, best-reviewed, most accessible, and most representative entry in a franchise that has spent 30 years refining the art of making you feel like you might not survive the next hallway.

If you're a horror addict who wants the scariest possible cold start, go RE7. If you find horror exhausting but love action games with just enough tension to keep your palms damp, go RE4 Remake. And if you're a completionist who won't sleep until you understand every Umbrella document ever written, fire up RE1 HD Remaster and work forward.

Whatever you choose  turn off the lights, put on headphones, and welcome to Raccoon City. You're going to need more herbs.

📚 Sources & References

  1. Resident Evil 2 (2019 video game) — Wikipedia, March 2026
  2. Resident Evil 7: Biohazard — Wikipedia, March 2026
  3. Resident Evil Requiem Franchise Sales — Windows Central, March 2026
  4. Resident Evil Requiem: Capcom's Fastest-Selling Horror Hit — GameSpot, March 2026
  5. The Ultimate Guide to Getting Into the Resident Evil Games — PC Gamer
  6. A Beginner's Guide to the Resident Evil Series — KeenGamer, April 2025
  7. Multiple Resident Evil Titles Hit New Sales Milestones — KitGuru, April 2025
  8. Every Mainline Resident Evil Game Ranked by Metacritic Score — The Tab
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