Resident Evil 4 Remake Has Sold Over 7 Million Units to Date

Mar 13, 2024 at 04:52am EDT
Resident Evil 4

Today, CAPCOM has announced another sales milestone for the Resident Evil 4 remake. The game launched nearly a year ago has now surpassed seven million units sold across all platforms. Previous milestones included three million sold in two days and four in a little more than a week.

In late January, as part of the quarterly report, we heard the game had reached 6.8 million sold. Some of those might have come from Apple users since the Resident Evil 4 remake was launched for the iPhone 15 Pro and compatible iPad and Mac models in late 2023.

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In the press release, the Japanese developer and publisher also noted that the Resident Evil franchise as a whole has sold over 154 million units as of December 31, 2023.

The Resident Evil 4 remake was arguably the most successful of CAPCOM's remakes in the series. It wasn't easy to improve on such an all-time classic, and yet the game garnered critical acclaim and many awards. Here on Wccftech, though, Nathan Birch wished the developers had dared to change a bit more and also said Resident Evil Village made for a tough comparison.

I may be a bit disappointed by the scope and ambition of Capcom’s reimagining, but Resident Evil 4 is still one of the most inventive and engaging action-horror games ever made, and this is a competent, technically-impressive new version of the game. The village battle may be largely the same, but it still gets your blood pumping. Same goes for the cabin defense sequence, your showdown with the village chief, or your first encounter with a Regenerator. The RE4 remake is still a fun, bombastic dose of mayhem, I just feel like it had the potential to be even better. It also suffers from the fact that Resident Evil Village was, in some ways, the bigger, crazier take on RE4 that this remake could have been.

Nathan was a bit more excited about the Separate Ways DLC starring Ada Wong.

Ultimately, perhaps the most striking thing about Separate Ways is how much it diverges from the original. One of my criticisms of the new Resident Evil 4 was that, while it captured the feel of the original game, it didn’t reinvent or elevate its big moments often enough. That isn’t the case with Separate Ways, as it seems like Capcom felt more free to experiment here, serving up plenty of completely new sequences and challenges.

About the author: With over two decades of experience in gaming journalism, Alessio Palumbo has led the gaming vertical at Wccftech since August 2015. He started working at a young age for Italian websites like Everyeye.it, Gamestar.it, Nextgame.it, and Multiplayer.it before kickstarting the indie English-language publication Worlds Factory as its founder and Editor in Chief. In the last decade, he has coordinated the overall output of Wccftech's gaming section, managed PR relations, assigned reviews, produced daily news coverage, edited gaming content as needed, and delivered game reviews. Arguably, his trademark content is the long series of exclusive developer interviews that have been cited by Wikipedia and by the biggest news media and gaming publications. His passion for technology also makes him knowledgeable when it comes to gaming hardware and tech. His favorite genres include RPGs, MMORPGs, and action/adventure games.

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