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{{Infobox VG
{{Infobox VG
|title = Resident Evil Zero
|title = Resident Evil Zero
|image = [[Image:Rezerobox.jpg|256px|North American box cover art]]
|image = [[Image:Rezerobox.jpg|270px|North American box cover]]
|caption = North American cover art with protagonists Rebecca Chambers and Billy Coen.
|caption= American cover with protagonists Rebecca Chambers and Billy Coen.
|developer = [[Capcom Production Studio|Capcom Production Studio 3]]<br />[[TOSE Software]]<br />[[Flagship (company)|Flagship]] (scenario)
|developer = [[Capcom Production Studio|Capcom Production Studio 3]]<br />[[Flagship (company)|Flagship]] (scenario)
|publisher = [[Capcom]] <br> ([[Europe|EUR]]) [[Virgin Interactive]]
|publisher = [[Capcom]] <br> ([[Europe|EUR]]) [[Virgin Interactive]]
|designer =
|series = ''[[Resident Evil]]''
|series=[[Resident Evil (series)|''Resident Evil'' series]]
|released = {{collapsible list
|released = {{collapsible list
|title= November 12, 2002
|title= F/A November 12,2002
|1='''GameCube (Japanese version comes with a 59 block memory card, two Biohazard stickers for the memory card and a Capcom paper which advertises an URL from Capcom) (German release had cut and uncut versions)''':<br />November 12,2002<br />{{flagicon|Argentina}} [[Image:Flag of Brazil.svg|22px|Brazil]] [[Image:Flag of Canada.svg|22px|Canada]] [[Image:Flag of Mexico.svg|22px|Mexico]] [[Image:Flag of the United States.svg|22px|United States]]<br />[[Image:Flag of Japan.svg|22px|Japan]] November 21,2002<br />[[Image:Flag of Australia.svg|22px|Australia]] February 28,2003<br />[[Image:Flag of Aaland.svg|22px|Aaland]] [[Image:Flag of Denmark.svg|22px|Denmark]] [[Image:Flag of the Faroe Islands.svg|22px|Faroe Islands]] [[Image:Flag of Finland.svg|22px|Finland]] [[Image:Flag of France.svg|22px|France]] [[Image:Flag of Germany.svg|22px|Germany]] [[Image:Flag of Greenland.svg|22px|Greenland]] [[Image:Flag of Iceland.svg|22px|Iceland]] [[Image:Flag of Italy.svg|22px|Italy]] [[Image:Flag of the Netherlands.svg|22px|The Netherlands]] [[Image:Flag of Norway.svg|22px|Norway]] [[Image:Flag of Spain.svg|22px|Spain]] [[Image:Flag of Sweden.svg|22px|Sweden]] [[Image:Flag of United Kingdom.svg|22px|UK]] [[Image:Flag of Europe.svg|22px|Europe]] March 7,2003 or 2003<br />'''GameCube (Part of BioHazard: Collector's Box)''':<br />[[Image:Flag of Japan.svg|22px|Japan]] August 7,2003<br />'''GameCube [Player's Choice] (German release is uncut only)''':<br />[[Image:Flag of Argentina.svg|22px|Argentina]] [[Image:Flag of Brazil.svg|22px|Brazil]] [[Image:Flag of Canada.svg|22px|Canada]] [[Image:Flag of France.svg|22px|France]] [[Image:Flag of Germany.svg|22px|Germany]] [[Image:Flag of Mexico.svg|22px|Mexico]] [[Image:Flag of Spain.svg|22px|Spain]] [[Image:Flag of the United States.svg|22px|United States]] [[Image:Flag of United Kingdom.svg|22px|United Kingdom]] [[Image:Flag of Europe.svg|22px|Europe]] 2003<br />'''GameCube (Part of BioHazard: Double Feature/Pure Evil 2-Pack)''':<br />[[Image:Flag of Japan.svg|22px|Japan]] 2003 or December 17,2004<br />[[Image:Flag of the United States.svg|22px|United States]] December 22,2004<br />'''GameCube (Part of Resident Evil: 10th Anniversary Collection)''':<br />[[Image:Flag of the United States.svg|22px|United States]] October 24,2006<br />'''Wii (Part of the Resident Evil Classics series in Europe & North America)''':<br />[[Image:Flag of Japan.svg|22px|Japan]] July 10,2008<br />[[Image:Flag of the United States.svg|22px|United States]] [[Image:Flag of Canada.svg|22px|Canada]] [[Image:Flag of Europe.svg|22px|Europe]] TBA 2009<br />*Besides the game & game manual most pack-in extras included in the releases like obis,registration forms, ads, survey cards,cleaning products like sponges,safety guidelines manuals,stickers,demoes,videos,etc. are not mentioned here unless noted.}}
|'''GameCube'''<br />{{vgrelease|NA=November 12, 2002}}{{vgrelease|JP=November 21, 2002|AUS=February 28, 2003}}{{vgrelease|EU=March 7, 2003}}
'''Wii'''<br />{{vgrelease|JP=July 10, 2008|NA=2009}}}}
|genre = [[Survival horror]]
|genre = [[Survival horror]]
|modes = [[Single-player]]
|modes = [[Single player]]
|ratings = [[Entertainment Software Rating Board|ESRB]]: M (Mature)<br />[[British Board of Film Classification|BBFC]]: 15
|ratings = {{vgratings|ESRB=M|BBFC=15|PEGI=16+|CERO=15+|OFLCA=MA15+}}
|platforms = [[Nintendo GameCube|GameCube]], [[Wii]]
|platforms = [[Nintendo GameCube|GameCube]] & [[Wii]]
|media = 2 × [[Nintendo optical disc|GameCube Game Disc]]<br />1 × [[Nintendo optical disc|Wii Game Disc]]
|media = 2 × [[Nintendo optical discs|GameCube Game Disc]], 1 × [[Nintendo optical disc|Wii Game Disc]] (Wii)
|requirements =
|input = [[Game controller|Controller]]
|input = [[Game controller|Controller]]
|players = 1
}}
}}
'''''Resident Evil Zero''''', known in Japan as {{nihongo|'''''Biohazard 0'''''|バイオハザード0|Baiohazādo Zero}}, is a [[survival horror game]] that was [[video game developer|developed]] and [[video game publisher|published]] by [[Capcom]] for the [[Nintendo GameCube]] and released in {{vgy|2002}}. It is the fifth game in the main [[Resident Evil|''Resident Evil'' series]] by release order (not counting the GameCube version of the original ''[[Resident Evil (video game)|Resident Evil]]'' as a separate game) and was the last of the main titles to use the original ''Resident Evil'' gameplay system prior to the release of ''[[Resident Evil 4]]''.
'''''Resident Evil Zero''''', known in Japan as {{nihongo|'''''Biohazard 0'''''|バイオハザード0|Baiohazādo Zero}}, is a [[survival horror game]] that was [[video game developer|developed]] and [[video game publisher|published]] by [[Capcom]] for the [[Nintendo GameCube]] and released in [[2002 in video gaming|2002]]. It is the fifth game in the main [[Resident Evil|''Resident Evil'' series]] by release order (not counting the GameCube version of the original ''[[Resident Evil (video game)|Resident Evil]]'' as a separate game) and was the last of the main titles to use the original ''Resident Evil'' gameplay system prior to the release of ''[[Resident Evil 4]]''.


The game's storyline serves as a prequel to ''Resident Evil'', covering [[List of characters in the Resident Evil series#Rebecca Chambers|Rebecca Chambers]]' ordeal a day prior. The game was released on November 10, 2002 in North America, November 21, 2002 in Japan, February 28, 2003 in Australia and March 7, 2003 in Europe.
The game's storyline serves as a prequel to the first ''Resident Evil'', covering [[List of characters in the Resident Evil series#Rebecca Chambers|Rebecca Chambers]]' ordeal a day prior to the Mansion incident. The game was originally released on Nintendo GameCube as a timed console-exclusive title on November 12, 2002 in North America, November 21, 2002 in Japan, February 28, 2003 in Australia and March 7, 2003 in Europe.


==Gameplay==
==Gameplay==
Line 34: Line 36:
As the train begins speeding out of control towards a cliff, the two manage to apply the brakes and divert its course towards an abandoned research and training centre. They investigate the underground facility, being forced to defeat the Umbrella Corporation's experiments: mutated insects, spiders and primates. During their navigation, Billy Coen reveals that his unit was forced to kill the innocent civilians of an African village in the midst of a civil war against his wishes, and he soon found that their actions were based on false information.
As the train begins speeding out of control towards a cliff, the two manage to apply the brakes and divert its course towards an abandoned research and training centre. They investigate the underground facility, being forced to defeat the Umbrella Corporation's experiments: mutated insects, spiders and primates. During their navigation, Billy Coen reveals that his unit was forced to kill the innocent civilians of an African village in the midst of a civil war against his wishes, and he soon found that their actions were based on false information.


They discover that the former operator of the facility [[List of characters in the Resident Evil series#James Marcus|James Marcus]], along with Ozwell E. Spencer and Edward Ashford, discovered a virus (called the Progenitor or "mother virus") which, when combined with the [[ebola]] virus, created a strain that, despite being photosensitive, caused rapid mutations. Ashford originally wanted to use the virus to help the handicapped through its regenerative effects, but after his death Spencer and Marcus began research on its applications for bio-weapons, combining it with leech DNA which eventually led to the formation of the t-Virus. After a showdown with a gigantic bat inside a church outside the facility grounds, Billy is attacked by an t-virus infected primate and becomes lost inside an underground laboratory. While searching for him, Rebecca briefly meets Enrico Marini and then fights a released Tyrant before finally finding him washed up on a walkway. After fighting the Tyrant together, the two eventually meet Marcus. It is revealed that both Wesker and William Birkin were oblivious to the cause of the outbreak in both the Ecliptic Express and the Spencer Mansion, and that the real culprit was Marcus, an employee of Umbrella who operated the facility until his assassination by his two right-hand men, Wesker and Birkin, on the orders of Spencer. During his dying moments, his pet queen leech entered his body and reproduced exponentially over ten years to absorb his DNA and memories to bring him back to life. Marcus proceeds to split into a mass of leeches, before chasing Rebecca and Billy through the facility.
They discover that the former operator of the facility [[List of characters in the Resident Evil series#James Marcus|James Marcus]], along with Ozwell E. Spencer and Edward Ashford, discovered a virus (called the Progenitor or "mother virus") which, when combined with the [[ebola]] virus, created a strain that, despite being photosensitive, caused rapid mutations. Ashford originally wanted to use the virus to help the handicapped through its regenerative effects, but after his death Spencer and Marcus began research on its applications for bio-weapons, combining it with leech DNA which eventually led to the formation of the T-Virus. After a showdown with a gigantic bat inside a church outside the facility grounds, Billy is attacked by an infected primate and becomes lost inside an underground laboratory. While searching for him, Rebecca briefly meets Enrico Marini and then fights a released Tyrant before finally finding him washed up on a walkway. After fighting the Tyrant together, the two eventually meet Marcus. It is revealed that both Wesker and William Birkin were oblivious to the cause of the outbreak in both the Ecliptic Express and the Spencer Mansion, and that the real culprit was Marcus, an employee of Umbrella who operated the facility until his assassination by his two right-hand men, Wesker and Birkin, on the orders of Spencer. During his dying moments, his pet queen leech entered his body and reproduced exponentially over a few years to absorb his DNA and memories, giving him a new life. Marcus proceeds to split into a mass of leeches, before chasing Rebecca and Billy through the facility.


As was threatened earlier on, Birkin activates the self-destruct system as the Queen Leech, Rebecca, and Billy continue to fight. After being injured due to a brief exposure to sunlight, the monster is paralysed when the overhead entrance to the laboratory is opened just as the sun rises. Rebecca throws Billy a magnum revolver and he delivers the final shot to the Queen Leech.
As was threatened earlier on, Birkin activates the self-destruct system as Marcus, transformed into the Queen Leech, Rebecca and Billy continue to fight. After being injured due to a brief exposure to sunlight, Marcus is paralysed when the overhead entrance to the laboratory is opened just as the sun rises. Rebecca throws Billy her pistol and he delivers the final shot to the Queen Leech.


As the facility crumbles, the two escape into the forest and come to a halt on a hill overlooking the Spencer Estate. They salute one another after Rebecca declares Billy "officially dead". Each goes their own way, with Rebecca heading towards the mansion to investigate the whereabouts of Bravo team.
As the facility crumbles, the two escape into the forest and come to a halt on a hill overlooking the Spencer Estate. They salute one another after Rebecca declares Billy "officially dead". Each goes their own way, with Rebecca heading towards the mansion to investigate the whereabouts of Bravo team. The screen fades to black as a far-off gun shot is heard from Joseph Frost's auto-shotgun as he is being mauled to death by a pack of zombie dogs. And thus, the Spencer Estate incident is about to begin. The story continues in Resident Evil.(REmake)

==Reception==
{{Expand|date=June 2007}}
The game has sold 1.25 million copies worldwide.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://ir.capcom.co.jp/english/data/million.html |title=CAPCOM Platinum Titles |accessdate=2007-07-05 |format=HTML}}</ref>

* [[Famitsu]] 38/40
* [[GameSpot]] 8.0/10
* [[IGN]] 8.2/10
* [[GameInformer]] 9.25/10
* [[Gamepro]] 4.5/5
* [[Rotten Tomatoes]] 8/10
* [[X-Play]] 3/5


==Development==
==Development==
''Zero'' was first unveiled during the [[Tokyo Game Show]] in 2000. The game was originally slated for the [[Nintendo 64]], as it was believed by the developers that the platform's [[cartridge (electronics)|cartridge]]-based media would be more capable in handling the item dropping and 'partner zapping' systems proposed for the game than the disc-based media used by the [[PlayStation]] and [[Dreamcast]], due to the lack of loading times. However, production of the game shifted from the Nintendo 64 to the GameCube as a result of the transition to [[History of video games (Sixth generation era)|sixth generation consoles]]. Since the GameCube made use of a disc-based media, the programmers were forced to rely on clever programming methods to shorten the loading times.
''Zero'' was first unveiled during the [[Tokyo Game Show]] in 2000. The game was originally slated for the [[Nintendo 64]], as it was believed by the developers that the platform's [[cartridge (electronics)|cartridge]]-based media would be more capable in handling the item dropping and ''partner zapping'' systems proposed for the game than the disc-based media used by the [[PlayStation]] and [[Dreamcast]], due to the lack of loading times. However, production of the game shifted from the Nintendo 64 to the GameCube as a result of the transition to [[History of video games (Sixth generation era)|sixth generation consoles]]. Since the GameCube made use of a disc-based media, the programmers were forced to rely on clever programming methods to shorten the loading times. The graphics were improved dramatically due to the platform change.


In contrast to other ''Resident Evil'' prototypes, which have been known to go through massive changes during production, the story and settings remained mostly unchanged in the released version. Rebecca's original character design featured her wearing a beret instead of the red bandanna she wears in the original game. In the released GameCube version, she uses the same design from the previously released GameCube remake of ''Resident Evil''.
In contrast to other known ''Resident Evil'' prototypes, which have been known to go through massive changes during production, the story and settings remained mostly unchanged in the released version. Rebecca's original character design featured her wearing a beret instead of the red bandanna she wears in the original game. In the released GameCube version, she uses the same design from the previously released GameCube remake of ''Resident Evil''.


==Reception and legacy==
==Reception and legacy==
Line 68: Line 82:
The game has sold 1.25 million copies worldwide.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ir.capcom.co.jp/english/data/million.html |title=CAPCOM Platinum Titles|accessdate=2007-07-05}}</ref>
The game has sold 1.25 million copies worldwide.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ir.capcom.co.jp/english/data/million.html |title=CAPCOM Platinum Titles|accessdate=2007-07-05}}</ref>


===Novelization===
==Novelization==
''Zero Hour'' is a [[novelization]] of the game written by [[S. D. Perry]]. It is the seventh and final ''Resident Evil'' novel written by Perry, but precedes the others in chronological order. It follows the same continuity as Perry's previous novels based on the series.
''Zero Hour'' is a [[novelization]] of the game written by [[S. D. Perry]]. It is the seventh and final ''Resident Evil'' novel written by Perry, but precedes the others in chronological order. It follows the same continuity as Perry's previous novels based on the series.


===Wii version===
===Wii version===
A port of ''Zero'' was announced for the [[Wii]], it was released on July 10, 2008.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://kotaku.com/361238/capcom-porting-another-gamecube-resident-evil-to-bc-wii|title=Capcom porting another GameCube Resident Evil to BC Wii |last=Ashcraft|first=Brian|publisher=[[Kotaku]]|date=2008-02-27|accessdate=2008-02-27}}</ref> According to ''[[Famitsu]]'', the Wii version is a direct port of the GameCube version with no changes other than the option to switch between using the Wii Remote and Nunchuk, Classic Controller, or the GameCube Controller.
A port of ''Zero'' was announced for the [[Wii]], it was originally released in Japan on July 10, 2008.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://kotaku.com/361238/capcom-porting-another-gamecube-resident-evil-to-bc-wii|title=Capcom porting another GameCube Resident Evil to BC Wii |last=Ashcraft|first=Brian|publisher=[[Kotaku]]|date=2008-02-27|accessdate=2008-02-27}}</ref> According to ''[[Famitsu]]'', the Wii version is a direct port of the GameCube version with no changes other than the option to switch between using the Wii Remote and Nunchuk, Classic Controller, or the GameCube Controller.

The port was originally meant to be a Japanese exclusive, but on March 12,2009 Capcom later announced that they decided to bring it to North America sometime in 2009, along with the Wii port of the ''Resident Evil'' remake, under the title "Resident Evil Classics".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ww2.capcom.com/BBS/showthread.php?t=26375&page=6 |title=Reply to "Is the Famitsu report about Resident Evil Zero Wiimake true?"|author=Christian Svensson, Vice-President of Strategic Planning & Business Development|publisher=[[Capcom]]|date=2008-02-27|accessdate=2008-02-27}}{{cite web|url=http://www.mcvuk.com/press-releases/45312/CAPCOMreg-BRINGS-RESIDENT-EVILreg-BACK-TO-THE-WIItrade-WITH-RESIDENT-EVILreg-THE-DARKSIDE-CHRONICLES-AND-TWO-TITLES-IN-THE-RESIDENT-EVILldquoCLASSICSrdquo-LINE|title= "Capcom brings 'Resident Evil' back to the Wii with 'Resident Evil: The Darkside Chronicles' and two titles in the 'Resident Evil Classics' line.|date= 2009-03-12}} </ref>


The port was originally meant to be a Japanese exclusive, but Capcom later decided to bring it to North America in 2009, along with the Wii port of the ''Resident Evil'' remake, under the title "Resident Evil Classics".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ww2.capcom.com/BBS/showthread.php?t=26375&page=6 |title=Reply to "Is the Famitsu report about Resident Evil Zero Wiimake true?"|author=Christian Svensson, Vice-President of Strategic Planning & Business Development|publisher=[[Capcom]]|date=2008-02-27|accessdate=2008-02-27}}{{cite web|url=http://www.mcvuk.com/press-releases/45312/CAPCOMreg-BRINGS-RESIDENT-EVILreg-BACK-TO-THE-WIItrade-WITH-RESIDENT-EVILreg-THE-DARKSIDE-CHRONICLES-AND-TWO-TITLES-IN-THE-RESIDENT-EVILldquoCLASSICSrdquo-LINE|title= "Capcom brings 'Resident Evil' back to the Wii with 'Resident Evil: The Darkside Chronicles' and two titles in the 'Resident Evil Classics' line.|date= 2009-03-12}} </ref>


==References==
==References==
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[[ar:ريزدنت إيفل زيرو]]
[[ar:ريزدنت إيفل زيرو]]
[[es:Resident Evil 0]]
[[es:Resident Evil 0]]
[[fa:رزیدنت ایول زیرو (بازی‌های رایانه‌ای)]]
[[fr:Resident Evil Zero]]
[[fr:Resident Evil Zero]]
[[it:Resident Evil Zero]]
[[it:Resident Evil Zero]]
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[[fi:Resident Evil 0]]
[[fi:Resident Evil 0]]
[[sv:Resident Evil 0]]
[[sv:Resident Evil 0]]
[[zh:生化危機0]]

Revision as of 07:04, 20 March 2009

Resident Evil Zero
North American box cover
American cover with protagonists Rebecca Chambers and Billy Coen.
Developer(s)Capcom Production Studio 3
Flagship (scenario)
Publisher(s)Capcom
(EUR) Virgin Interactive
SeriesResident Evil series
Platform(s)GameCube & Wii
Release
F/A November 12,2002
  • GameCube (Japanese version comes with a 59 block memory card, two Biohazard stickers for the memory card and a Capcom paper which advertises an URL from Capcom) (German release had cut and uncut versions):
    November 12,2002
    Argentina Brazil Canada Mexico United States
    Japan November 21,2002
    Australia February 28,2003
    Aaland Denmark Faroe Islands Finland France Germany Greenland Iceland Italy The Netherlands Norway Spain Sweden UK Europe March 7,2003 or 2003
    GameCube (Part of BioHazard: Collector's Box):
    Japan August 7,2003
    GameCube [Player's Choice] (German release is uncut only):
    Argentina Brazil Canada France Germany Mexico Spain United States United Kingdom Europe 2003
    GameCube (Part of BioHazard: Double Feature/Pure Evil 2-Pack):
    Japan 2003 or December 17,2004
    United States December 22,2004
    GameCube (Part of Resident Evil: 10th Anniversary Collection):
    United States October 24,2006
    Wii (Part of the Resident Evil Classics series in Europe & North America):
    Japan July 10,2008
    United States Canada Europe TBA 2009
    *Besides the game & game manual most pack-in extras included in the releases like obis,registration forms, ads, survey cards,cleaning products like sponges,safety guidelines manuals,stickers,demoes,videos,etc. are not mentioned here unless noted.
Genre(s)Survival horror
Mode(s)Single player

Resident Evil Zero, known in Japan as Biohazard 0 (バイオハザード0, Baiohazādo Zero), is a survival horror game that was developed and published by Capcom for the Nintendo GameCube and released in 2002. It is the fifth game in the main Resident Evil series by release order (not counting the GameCube version of the original Resident Evil as a separate game) and was the last of the main titles to use the original Resident Evil gameplay system prior to the release of Resident Evil 4.

The game's storyline serves as a prequel to the first Resident Evil, covering Rebecca Chambers' ordeal a day prior to the Mansion incident. The game was originally released on Nintendo GameCube as a timed console-exclusive title on November 12, 2002 in North America, November 21, 2002 in Japan, February 28, 2003 in Australia and March 7, 2003 in Europe.

Gameplay

The main gameplay feature of Resident Evil Zero, dubbed the "partner zapping" system, is unique in the series in that instead of choosing a single character to play through the whole game, the player controls both the main characters, Rebecca Chambers (STARS Bravo team's medic, from Resident Evil) and Billy Coen, an escaped ex-military convict, simultaneously through the entire game. Both characters can travel together, with one character being controlled by the player and other by the computer, or split up and search separate areas each at the same time. This dual control is central to solving some of the puzzles in the game. The difference between the characters is that Rebecca can acquire chemicals with her mixing kit and can get into tight spaces, but has less health. In contrast, Billy can handle heavy objects, has a lighter and can sustain more damage than Rebecca, but cannot mix herbs.

The game also does away with the use of boxes placed in fixed locations for the player to store items in. Instead, the player can now drop items on the floor to make room for new ones, which they can later retrieve for future use. The locations of dropped items are displayed on the player's map.

Plot

On July 23, 1998, STARS Bravo team is sent in to investigate a series of grisly murders in the Arklay Mountains region outside of Raccoon City. On the way to the scene, Bravo's helicopter malfunctions and is forced to crash land in the forest. Luckily, there are no fatalities. The team soon discovers an overturned military police transport truck, along with the mutilated corpses of two officers. The team soon splits up and Bravo team's field medic, rookie member Rebecca Chambers, stumbles upon a train suspiciously stopped in the middle of the forest; the Ecliptic Express.

Soon thereafter, she discovers that it is infested with zombies. Rebecca begins to wonder what she has got herself into. After a little exploration, she teams up with the man the military police were escorting to his execution; former Marine Billy Coen and the two explore the remaining train compartments whilst combating the now-zombified passengers, swarms of strange leeches, and a mutated scorpion.

As the train begins speeding out of control towards a cliff, the two manage to apply the brakes and divert its course towards an abandoned research and training centre. They investigate the underground facility, being forced to defeat the Umbrella Corporation's experiments: mutated insects, spiders and primates. During their navigation, Billy Coen reveals that his unit was forced to kill the innocent civilians of an African village in the midst of a civil war against his wishes, and he soon found that their actions were based on false information.

They discover that the former operator of the facility James Marcus, along with Ozwell E. Spencer and Edward Ashford, discovered a virus (called the Progenitor or "mother virus") which, when combined with the ebola virus, created a strain that, despite being photosensitive, caused rapid mutations. Ashford originally wanted to use the virus to help the handicapped through its regenerative effects, but after his death Spencer and Marcus began research on its applications for bio-weapons, combining it with leech DNA which eventually led to the formation of the T-Virus. After a showdown with a gigantic bat inside a church outside the facility grounds, Billy is attacked by an infected primate and becomes lost inside an underground laboratory. While searching for him, Rebecca briefly meets Enrico Marini and then fights a released Tyrant before finally finding him washed up on a walkway. After fighting the Tyrant together, the two eventually meet Marcus. It is revealed that both Wesker and William Birkin were oblivious to the cause of the outbreak in both the Ecliptic Express and the Spencer Mansion, and that the real culprit was Marcus, an employee of Umbrella who operated the facility until his assassination by his two right-hand men, Wesker and Birkin, on the orders of Spencer. During his dying moments, his pet queen leech entered his body and reproduced exponentially over a few years to absorb his DNA and memories, giving him a new life. Marcus proceeds to split into a mass of leeches, before chasing Rebecca and Billy through the facility.

As was threatened earlier on, Birkin activates the self-destruct system as Marcus, transformed into the Queen Leech, Rebecca and Billy continue to fight. After being injured due to a brief exposure to sunlight, Marcus is paralysed when the overhead entrance to the laboratory is opened just as the sun rises. Rebecca throws Billy her pistol and he delivers the final shot to the Queen Leech.

As the facility crumbles, the two escape into the forest and come to a halt on a hill overlooking the Spencer Estate. They salute one another after Rebecca declares Billy "officially dead". Each goes their own way, with Rebecca heading towards the mansion to investigate the whereabouts of Bravo team. The screen fades to black as a far-off gun shot is heard from Joseph Frost's auto-shotgun as he is being mauled to death by a pack of zombie dogs. And thus, the Spencer Estate incident is about to begin. The story continues in Resident Evil.(REmake)

Reception

The game has sold 1.25 million copies worldwide.[1]

Development

Zero was first unveiled during the Tokyo Game Show in 2000. The game was originally slated for the Nintendo 64, as it was believed by the developers that the platform's cartridge-based media would be more capable in handling the item dropping and partner zapping systems proposed for the game than the disc-based media used by the PlayStation and Dreamcast, due to the lack of loading times. However, production of the game shifted from the Nintendo 64 to the GameCube as a result of the transition to sixth generation consoles. Since the GameCube made use of a disc-based media, the programmers were forced to rely on clever programming methods to shorten the loading times. The graphics were improved dramatically due to the platform change.

In contrast to other known Resident Evil prototypes, which have been known to go through massive changes during production, the story and settings remained mostly unchanged in the released version. Rebecca's original character design featured her wearing a beret instead of the red bandanna she wears in the original game. In the released GameCube version, she uses the same design from the previously released GameCube remake of Resident Evil.

Reception and legacy

The game has sold 1.25 million copies worldwide.[15]

Novelization

Zero Hour is a novelization of the game written by S. D. Perry. It is the seventh and final Resident Evil novel written by Perry, but precedes the others in chronological order. It follows the same continuity as Perry's previous novels based on the series.

Wii version

A port of Zero was announced for the Wii, it was originally released in Japan on July 10, 2008.[16] According to Famitsu, the Wii version is a direct port of the GameCube version with no changes other than the option to switch between using the Wii Remote and Nunchuk, Classic Controller, or the GameCube Controller.

The port was originally meant to be a Japanese exclusive, but on March 12,2009 Capcom later announced that they decided to bring it to North America sometime in 2009, along with the Wii port of the Resident Evil remake, under the title "Resident Evil Classics".[17]


References

  1. ^ "CAPCOM Platinum Titles" (HTML). Retrieved 2007-07-05.
  2. ^ MacDonald, Mark. "Reviews: Resident Evil Zero". 1UP. Retrieved on 2009-02-08.
  3. ^ Resident Evil 0 Overview, Allgame. Retrieved on 2009-02-08.
  4. ^ Reed, Kristan (2003-03-03). "Resident Evil Zero Review". Eurogamer. Retrieved on 2009-02-08.
  5. ^ "Resident Evil: Zero video game review for the GAMECUBE". Game Revolution. Retrieved on 2009-02-08.
  6. ^ Varanini, Giancarlo (2002-11-12). "Resident Evil 0 for GameCube Review". GameSpot. Retrieved on 2009-02-06.
  7. ^ "GameSpy: Resident Evil Zero Review". GameSpy. Retrieved on 2009-02-08.
  8. ^ Bedigian, Louis (2002-12-01). "Resident Evil Zero Review". GameZone. Retrieved on 2009-02-08.
  9. ^ Casamassina, Matt (2002-11-11). "Resident Evil Zero Review". IGN. Retrieved on 2009-02-06.
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