↩ Accueil

Vue normale

Resident Evil Requiem PC Performance Analysis

26 février 2026 à 16:40

Capcom will release the highly anticipated Resident Evil Requiem tomorrow. Powered by the RE Engine, it’s time now to benchmark it and examine its performance on the PC. For our benchmarks, I used an AMD Ryzen 9 7950X3D, 32GB of DDR5 at 6000Mhz, AMD’s Radeon RX 6900XT, RX 7900XTX, RX 9070XT, as well as NVIDIA’s … Continue reading Resident Evil Requiem PC Performance Analysis

The post Resident Evil Requiem PC Performance Analysis appeared first on DSOGaming.

New Alan Wake Remastered PC Patch Adds HDR, 240FPS & New Camera, Improves DLSS, FOV & DX12 Rendering

26 février 2026 à 15:33

Now here is a pleasant surprise. Remedy has just released Title Update 1.33 for Alan Wake Remastered and shared its full patch notes. So, let’s see what this new update brings to the table. Patch 1.33 adds official support for HDR. This will please a lot of PC users who wanted to experience this game … Continue reading New Alan Wake Remastered PC Patch Adds HDR, 240FPS & New Camera, Improves DLSS, FOV & DX12 Rendering

The post New Alan Wake Remastered PC Patch Adds HDR, 240FPS & New Camera, Improves DLSS, FOV & DX12 Rendering appeared first on DSOGaming.

Mickey X F1 Racing to the Top! Aims to Capture the Creativity and Imagination of Disney and Excitement and Drama of Formula 1

26 février 2026 à 15:00

Disney and WEBTOON have teamed up to create 'Mickey X F1 Racing to the Top!,' an original vertical comics series launching in March that aims to combine the creativity and imagination of Mickey & Friends and the excitement and drama of Formula 1.

'Mickey X F1 Racing to the Top!' will launch on March 6 during the Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix, and it will be available on WEBTOON's global platforms throughout the entire Formula 1 race season.

New episodes will drop during each race weekend, and the original story the comic will tell is inspired by the "high-octane thrills and teamwork of elite racing," and will see "Mickey, Minnie, Donald, and Goofy come together to help support a racing team in crisis, demonstrating the power of friendship and collaboration to overcome adversity."

"The Duckburg F1 fan club, led by Mickey Mouse, is invited to shadow a racing team to create a behind-the-scenes documentary," the official synopsis reads. "But when that team suddenly collapses at the very beginning of the season, Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck and friends step up to keep the project alive, filling key roles themselves and recommending Jun, a talented taxi driver chasing his lifelong dream of winning Formula 1, only to discover his teammate is his sister Lia, his ultimate rival who left him in the dust years before.

"Will Jun, with the help of Mickey Mouse, be able to overcome the old grudge, make peace with his sister and finally play as a team? It will be a long journey, to be covered at full speed on the Grand Prix tracks!"

For more in the world of Disney, check out our experience attending the Goofy's Mystery Tour Cast Member event at Walt Disney World and the latest updates on Hollywood Studios' The Magic of Disney Animation.

Adam Bankhurst is a writer for IGN. You can follow him on X/Twitter @AdamBankhurst, Instagram, and TikTok, and listen to his show, Talking Disney Magic.

Scream: Ranking Every Ghostface So Far

26 février 2026 à 15:00

The Scream series differentiates itself from other slasher series in many ways, beginning with its meta approach, but one other notable aspect is its lack of an ongoing villain. In 2022’s Scream (AKA Scream 5), Amber Freeman, discussing the movie-within-a-movie franchise used for much of the self-referential comedy, Stab, directly brings this up. Says Amber, “You know what the biggest problem with the Stab movies is? There's no Michael Myers or Jason Voorhees. No bad guy to keep coming back!”

Of course, that’s never really been a problem for Scream as the concept is part of its baked-in formula. Rather than an ongoing killer, Scream has mostly stuck to the same ongoing heroine, Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell), along with other key characters like Dewey Riley (David Arquette) and Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox). Each movie is a whodunnit, with a new killer donning the familiar Ghostface persona, complete with mask and robe, until their identity is revealed in the final act. Almost all of these movies have multiple killers too, working in tandem together, meaning as we go into the new Scream 7, there’s already been plenty of Ghostfaces to go around.

But which of them has stood out the most and ranks as the best? We’re here to help!

13. Jason Carvey (Scream VI)

Scream VI’s Jason kind of has to go last, if you include him at all, simply for accomplishing so little. Well, unless we also gave a ranking to his would-be partner, Greg, who never actually managed to fully become Ghostface, despite intending to.

Blackmore University student Jason (played by Tony Revolori) wanted to follow in the footsteps of previous Ghostface Richie Kirsch, with a new murder spree alongside his intended partner Greg that would “finish Richie’s movie” - as in commit new murders to inspire a crowd-pleasing new Stab movie. But on the very night Jason killed his first victim, both Jason and Greg found out the hard way that there were others with their own Ghostface plans who saw these two as an inconvenience to be quickly disposed of.

We didn’t learn much more about the full extent of Jason and Greg’s plans because they become the kind of pre-title fodder that any good Scream (and Stab) fan knows is usually there just to set the scene, not be the focus.

12. Ethan Landry (Scream VI)

You’re about to notice a logjam of Scream VI killers here at the bottom, which is funny, because Scream VI is a really good movie. And on top of that, the final showdown between that film’s heroines, Samantha (Melissa Barrera) and Tara Carpenter (Jenna Ortega), and these particular killers is awesome, with the Carpenter sisters taking out each of the Scream franchise’s first-ever Ghostface trio in satisfying and suitably intense ways.

But that makes it all the more glaring that the actual killer reveal is kind of a dud. Yes, it’s a fun idea to have it be the family of the previous film’s killer, Richie, but the characters chosen aren’t exactly the most exciting, particularly Ethan, played by Jack Champion. Though sorta-kinda part of the central friend group in the film, by virtue of being “Core Four” character Chad’s roommate, Ethan is kept at arm’s length, not interacting with the others as much except in a jokey manner. He’s the nerdy virgin and that’s about it. Though it is amusing how Chad’s sister Mindy continually suspects he’s Ghostface before it turns out she’s right, there’s not much more to him than that.

But man is it great when Tara literally twists the knife after she stabs him in the mouth…

11. Quinn Bailey (Scream VI)

Liana Liberato’s Quinn rates just above her brother for a handful of reasons, including her simultaneous moxie and restraint. First off, she’s just a likeable character. Introduced as the roommate to Sam and Tara Carpenter, she’s funny and quirky and the idea that she has a, ahem, healthy amount of sexual partners is treated in an amusing manner. As Quinn describes it, she’s not “the slutty roommate” - she’s just sex positive.

Also, kudos on her stellar dead-body acting when she needed to fake her own death. But most of all, she stands out for feeling like the only one of the family who has a more grounded (by Ghostface standards) attitude when she, her brother, and her dad are revealed as the killers. She genuinely seems angry and menacing and vengeance-minded the whole time, while her brother and father are going just a wee bit – okay a lot – bigger.

Quinn’s kill count is probably low, most likely limited only to franchise perennial Gale Weathers’ boyfriend, but her showdown with Gale is memorable, as she comes closer than anyone ever has to finally taking out the intrepid reporter. And on top of that, she’s the first-ever Ghostface to actually get Gale on the phone for a classic Ghostface phone call scene, and that’s something, dang it!

10. Wayne Bailey (Scream VI)

Take it down a notch, Wayne!

Dermot Mulroney is a good actor, but the decision to have him go so very big, performance-wise, when his character Wayne is revealed as the patriarch of a very twisted, homicidal family, briefly knocks the wind out of the sails in Scream VI. It doesn’t mesh with how Wayne had behaved up until that point and it also feels contradictory because Wayne doesn’t personally care about the Stab movies - he just wants revenge for Samantha Carpenter killing his son Richie. But he’s behaving like the wackiest Stab superfan we’ve ever seen.

Wayne rates above his kids though for being the mastermind of the New York City Ghostface killings and for how he used his position as a police detective to further all sorts of Ghostface shenanigans. This goes back even before the family began killing people to when he helped Richie buy artifacts connected to the previous Ghostface murders for his first born’s macabre shrine. He then was able to successfully fake his daughter’s death and cast doubt on Kirby Reed, implicating her as Ghostface (though we’re still not sure if the stuff about Kirby no longer being FBI was true or not?).

On the kill-count front, it seems likely he was the Ghostface who stalked Sam and Tara in that bodega, taking out three different victims back-to-back-to-back in an intense and uncharacteristic group-kill scene unlike any in the series. This included him using a gun, in what’s become a debated fan topic, since that makes him the only Ghostface to use a firearm while in their full masked persona.

So yeah, Wayne did a lot during his Ghostface stint, but did he need to be so Crazy with a capital C about it?!

9. Charlie Walker (Scream 4)

Among Scream’s many murderous partners, there’s pretty much always a Ghostface hierarchy where you can tell who’s the one who’s coming up with most of the plans and calling the shots. And in a couple of cases, that hierarchy gets underlined in a big way by an outright betrayal as it turns out one Ghostface was just the pawn of another. Such is the case with Scream 4’s Charlie, who found out the hard way that his partner Jill had no intention of sharing the falsified “We’re the only survivors!” spotlight with him when she stabbed and killed him.

Up until then, Rory Culkin’s Charlie had been a decent Ghostface. With Jill needing to play her pre-determined role as the seeming main target of this killing spree, it was up to Charlie to carry out most of the actual murders, which he embraced wholeheartedly. And there was a clever hiding-in-plain-sight aspect to making him part of a nerdy movie-loving duo alongside his pal (until he murdered him) Robbie, which gave him more cover than he might have otherwise.

Oh, and though it’s delivered through the ol’ Ghostface voice changer (as said by the ever-great Roger L. Jackson, who’s been the Ghostface alter-ego voice from the start), it’s technically Charlie who has one of the funniest Ghostface lines in the franchise’s history as he gets outright pissed off about being misidentified on the phone as Jill’s ex-boyfriend and yells “This isn’t fucking Trevor!” in exasperation.

8. Mickey Altieri (Scream 2)

Obviously Timothy Olyphant rules, and kudos to Scream 2 for giving one of Hollywood’s greatest modern cowboy types his first high-profile role. But as a Ghostface, Olyphant’s Mickey isn’t exactly a standout.

First and foremost is that he just isn’t in enough of the movie. He’s established early on as one of Sidney’s college friends, but his appearances are rather scattershot, and he rarely gets a moment to stand out - except for voicing his false (in retrospect, of course) suspicions about Sid’s boyfriend, Derek. When he takes off the Ghostface mask, there really isn’t much excitement behind it because of how the movie has sidelined him so much.

That being said, once he is revealed as Ghostface, he gets a couple of strong moments, including his diabolical treatment of Derek, who he pretends is his partner in front of Sid, only to then shoot and kill him. The fact that he made Derek’s last moments extra emotionally agonizing is pretty dang cruel, which gets him some points, because remember, Ghostfaces are bad people!

Also, he’s interesting as the only Ghostface in Scream movie history who wants to be caught as part of his endgame, excited by the prospect of a big televised trial where he’s going to blame the movies for corrupting him. It’s a nice change-up from the norm of wanting to frame someone, which helps him briefly stand out… Except that he was always a pawn in someone else’s game, as proven when he’s oh-so-casually betrayed by fellow Ghostface Nancy Loomis, who guns him down.

7. Roman Bridger (Scream 3)

Played by Scott Foley, Roman’s a tricky one because he’s got some clear trouble spots, starting with the fact that he’s Ghostface in the weakest Scream movie, Scream 3. Also, the big reveal about his identity and his role in past events is a massive retcon that is not always embraced by the fanbase. And on top of that, that reveal is predicated on him telling Sidney who he really is in a movie that never had these two characters meet a single time before he takes off his mask, so from her point of view, he’s just some random guy suddenly showing up to take the spotlight.

Of course, that random guy then quickly explains he’s the brother she never knew she had, the most recent Ghostface who’s been killing his way through Los Angeles, and the guy behind everything in this series, given he’s the one who first pushed Billy Loomis to kill Roman and Sidney’s mother prior to the events of the first film. That last point may be divisive, but it positions him as a key player in the entire series, like it or not.

And then there’s the fact that you have to give Roman some extra credit because he’s the only solo Ghostface in the entire series. He had no partner to rely on or to help cover for him, and was doing it on his own with even greater danger of being caught. That takes initiative!

And jeez, he killed the entire main cast of Stab 3, the movie he was the director of! Think about how crazy that is and how much that would be talked about for the rest of time among infamous Hollywood scandals.

6. Nancy Loomis (Scream 2)

There’s nothing like the love of a mother, which was proven once more when original Ghostface Billy Loomis’ mom Nancy took up her baby boy’s mantle and set out to get revenge on Sidney for killing her son.

As it turned out, Billy must have gotten all of his own natural diabolical serial killer prowess from Momma, because Nancy took to her new mission like a pro. She gave herself a makeover and a new identity as seemingly awkward, small-town reporter Debbie Salt, while simultaneously recruiting her accomplice Mickey on the internet and getting him inserted at Windsor College alongside Sidney. And Mickey was the perfect dupe for her, not realizing she never intended to let him get arrested and have the showy trial he dreamed of.

It seems likely Nancy let Mickey take on most of the actual killings at Windsor, but look, as much as it hurts when fan favorite characters are taken out, Nancy was the one who managed to get the drop on Scream’s first movie geek extraordinaire, Randy Meeks, after he dared disparage her Billy. And when you’re accomplishing that, and bringing the audience that much pain, it’s a notch on your bloody belt.

Plus, Nancy gave us Laurie Metcalf as a Ghostface, and who doesn’t enjoy seeing Roseanne’s Aunt Jackie get homicidal?

5. Amber Freeman (Scream 2022)

There’s an argument to be made for putting Amber above her partner, given that she committed most of the murders in the fifth Scream movie, one of which was an incredibly notable character, and that Scream 5 filmmakers Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett have speculated she was likely the one really “leading from behind,” despite how it might have appeared. However, that latter bit of pondering was never made canon, and she does suffer a bit from just feeling like part of the friend group for much of the film without a lot of moments of her own (an excised plot point about her and Tara Carpenter actually being ex-girlfriends might have both alleviated that but also made her too obvious a suspect).

Still, by the end of the film, we realize Amber is a particularly passionate and cruel Ghostface. And this includes the revelation that she’s the one who pulled off the fan-agonizing move of finally taking out the beloved Dewey Riley after he managed to survive so many other near-fatal attacks before. “It’s an honor” she declared while slicing Dewey open, underlining the significance of what she’s doing.

When she’s revealed as Ghostface, she also stands out for how much future Academy Award-winner Mikey Madison absolutely goes for it as this demented teenager, who mocks Gale and Sidney – though she’ll come to regret that – to their faces with how she killed Dewey, while prematurely declaring “Your story’s over!”

4. Richie Kirsch (Scream 2022)

In a film series that’s always been oh-so meta and self-aware both about the movie tropes it’s trafficking in and how the audience perceives them, along with how that changes through the years, Scream 5’s Richie got to be the avatar for the ugly side of modern fandom in a notably witty and wicked way.

Richie’s motivation for going on a murder spree, along with tricking a woman into thinking he loved her when he really intended to frame her for his crimes? Well, there was a sequel to a movie he loved that he really hated! Who could blame him after that!?

Richie’s plan is to orchestrate a new Ghostface murder spree built around a “story” he thinks will make for a great Stab movie. Then the producers of the franchise will base the next Stab movie on these murders, course-correcting after the loathed Stab 8 dared to stray too far from the formula.

We’re all familiar with how nasty things can quickly get these days when fans feel “betrayed” by a new installment of a franchise they love failing to meet expectations, with some of the most intense folks sounding particularly… heated. From earnestly asking how fandom can possibly be perceived as toxic to the fact that the fictional movie that set him and Amber off was a sequel to a long-running franchise directed by freaking Rian Johnson, the commentary Richie embodies regarding where things can go with overly “enthusiastic” fans in the modern era is very on the nose, and also very funny and perfect for a Scream movie. Richie plotted an intricate murder spree because he's the biggest, most loyal Stab fan ever, and this is how he’ll fix the movies he loves so very much.

Another reason Richie works so well as a Ghostface is that Jack Quaid makes for the perfect seemingly sweet, dorky boyfriend type you hope truly has his girlfriend Sam’s best interests at heart, making it all the worse when he stabs her and reveals the truth. “I know, it’s a bummer it’s me!” he tells her. Which it is, which is also why it’s great.

3. Stu Macher (Scream)

Stu’s just the best! He’s so fun and goofy and likeable in that manner we’ve come to expect from the man portraying him, Matthew Lillard. Well, okay, he is an awful murderer too, but nobody’s perfect.

Ultimately, Stu is clearly the follower in his Ghostface partnership with Billy, who’s calling the shots and personally motivated when it comes to why the first-ever Woodsboro murder spree happens. But you can’t deny Stu didn’t embrace his role with gusto. He was all in, serving as both a perfect sidekick and partner, fully immersed in all of the murder, manipulation, and movie trivia phone calls that came with the territory. Lillard makes Stu a funny, quirky presence throughout the film, but it's his performance in the film’s big reveal sequence and ensuing showdown with Sid where he really gets to shine, as we see just how gleefully deranged and nearly Joker-esque he can be. It’s the kind of Big Crazy Killer vibe that other Ghostfaces are often living in the shadow of.

Oh, and he allowed himself to get grievously injured by Billy as part of their plan to look like the survivors at the end. Of course, Stu didn’t end up reacting so well after Billy stabbed him, which is where that whole likeable/disarmingly funny thing takes center stage again (including some healthy improv-ing from the intrepid Mr. Lillard). Because yes, Stu has other memorable lines like “It’s a scream baby!” and “It was fun!” but his most relatable moment is probably yelling “You hit me with the phone, you dick!” at Billy, along with becoming a blubbering mess and crying “My mom and dad are gonna be so mad at me!” when he believes Sidney is going to be able to successfully get them arrested. That might not make for a scary Ghostface moment, but it sure is an entertaining one.

2. Jill Roberts (Scream 4)

We know, we know, how can Stu not be number two when he’s so funny and Matthew Lillard is so great!? All of which is absolutely true, but we’re ranking Ghostfaces here and in the Ghostface realm, Stu wasn’t a mastermind. And when it comes to those who took the reins in the Ghostface dynamic, Emma Roberts’ Jill stands tall, despite her short stature.

Jill is as demented a Ghostface as you’ll find, coldly willing to kill all of her high school friends, her cousin Sidney Prescott, and even her own mother in order to achieve her ultimate goal. And that particular goal, to be famous for the sake of being famous, is another time Scream has stood out for shrewdly parodying a particularly online mindset. In fact, Scream 4 feels somewhat ahead of its time in this regard, because Jill’s motivations already worked in 2011, but eerily feel even more part of our zeitgeist these days as we’ve seen so many more people attract huge followings for the most random or inexplicable of reasons.

Jill has one of the best Ghostface reveal sequences ever, both because of her proclamation of why she’s doing what she’s doing – “I don’t need friends, I need fans!” standing out as her most iconic and oft-quoted line – and for how she goes about setting the scene to look like the only survivor of another massacre. Jill may be “remaking” what Billy and Stu did, but she’d doing it in her own impressive manner, from how coldly she kills both her ex-boyfriend Trevor and her partner and secret lover Charlie in order to frame them, to brutally stabbing Sidney. Frankly, she was so close to getting away with it too if she’d just made sure Sid was dead.

But the biggest feat of all is seeing her on her own go about causing all the brutal damage she needs to sell her lone-survivor scenario. From using Trevor’s dead hand to scratch her face and yank out her hair, to bracing a knife against a wall to deeply stab herself, to throwing her entire body through a glass table, Jill is fully committed, just not in the way she should have been if she’d gotten proper psychological testing.

1. Billy Loomis (Scream)

Let’s face it: Billy’s got to be number one. He was the first! Sure, Roman was the one who pushed him into killing Maureen Prescott, but Billy kept going after that with a much larger murder spree thanks to his own psychotic initiative. And presumably he was the one who came up with the whole “let’s wear this cool mask and call people with horror movie trivia questions” thing when the Ghostface murders really kicked in, though perhaps Stu helped with some brainstorming.

In so many ways, Billy really set the template for a Ghostface, which included his cruelly close relationship to Sidney prior to the murders and how diabolical it was that he was pretending to be a loving boyfriend while also the one killing her mother, her friends, and ultimately planning to kill her. And he took it to the next level of manipulation, leaning into and using that he knew he’d be seen as an obvious suspect before getting Stu to fake it so it seemed he himself was attacked, stabbed (and, for a moment it appeared, even killed) right in front of Sidney, both briefly making it seem like there was no way he could be the killer – and make her feel terrible for ever suspecting him – and then making it all the worse when he revealed he actually was the killer moments later.

His impact on the series has been profound, with later killers like Nancy and Roman turning out to be either related to him or directly connected to him. And then things went even further when the fifth and sixth movie introduced a new heroine, Samantha, who was his secret daughter, setting the stage for Skeet Ulrich’s Billy to become the first Ghostface to ever return onscreen in later installments of this supernatural-free series, albeit through Sam’s visions of him.

In Scream VI, when the shrine to all of the Ghostfaces is revealed, it’s Billy’s robe and mask that stands at the center, given an extra bit of reverence above the others. Which is fitting for the guy who first reminded us that we all go a little mad sometimes.

But who do you think is the greatest Ghostface of all time? Vote in our poll, and let’s discuss in the comments!

Returnal for PS5 Is Over 50% Off Right Now at Amazon

26 février 2026 à 14:53

With Housemarque's new game Saros on the horizon, now is a great time to boot up the developer's previous release, Returnal. If you haven't added this one to your library yet but have been waiting for a good time to grab it, this is your chance: Amazon's dropped its price to $29.83 (see it here).

Considering it usually comes with a price tag of $69.99, this deal saves you 57% on the game overall. It's also just a few dollars away from its lowest price point at the retailer of $24.70. That's not too bad at all. Plus, there's still plenty of time before Saros is released, so the timing of jumping into Returnal couldn't be better. You've plenty of time to get a feel for Housemarque's style of roguelike shooter before jumping into the studio's new take on that formula.

Returnal for $29.83

It's not just the discounted price that makes Returnal worth adding to your library, though. We're very big fans of it, regardless of price. IGN's Mitchell Saltzman said in his review back when it was initially released that the "moment-to-moment gameplay of Returnal is sublime, with a great selection of weapons that each have a wide variety of interesting possible traits, meaningful strategic decisions that can either keep a run afloat or doom it to sink, and punishingly challenging yet rewarding gunplay that is consistently exhilarating."

If you've decided to pick up Returnal and are curious what other deals are out there right now, you're in luck: PlayStation has recently kicked off a big sale at PlayStation Direct, which a few other retailers have joined in on, that features even more great game deals (and some nice accessory deals).

There's even a selection of PS5 games on sale for $30 or less right now, if you want to see even more game deals in Returnal's discounted price range. And lastly, if you're hoping to play Saros this year, check out our Saros preorder guide to secure a copy so you're ready to start it up on release day.

Hannah Hoolihan is a freelancer who writes with the guides and commerce teams here at IGN.

Resident Evil Requiem's Umbrella Corp Escalates Fake Lawsuit Against the Real-Life Nissin Noodles — Complete With Over-the-Top Ad Campaign

26 février 2026 à 14:27

In the run-up to Resident Evil Requiem’s release this week, the official Japanese X account for Resident Evil has come up with a quirky way to promote the game. On Tuesday, it made a joke post that Resident Evil’s nefarious pharmaceutical company Umbrella Corp. was filing a lawsuit against the real-life Nissin Noodles over their similarity to Umbrella Noodles.

Umbrella Noodles have appeared in several Resident Evil games. They were an item in 2003’s Resident Evil Outbreak and, more recently, showed up on posters around Raccoon City in the Resident Evil 3 remake. Umbrella Noodles’ packaging is a spoof on the red and white lettering of Nissin’s Cup Noodles, a cheeky Easter Egg for players who noticed. Real-life Japanese food company Nissin was founded by instant noodle inventor Momofuku Ando in 1948. After putting the world’s first instant ramen on the market in 1958, Nissin has been selling their Cup Noodles ever since 1971.

However, on February 24, Resident Evil’s official X account posted an announcement that Umbrella Corp. had submitted a complaint to the Raccoon City District Court, alleging that Nissin’s noodles significantly infringe upon Umbrella Corp.’s intellectual property rights regarding Umbrella Noodles. It’s worth noting that even if Umbrella Corp. were a real company, it set up shop in 1968 with an initial focus on biological weaponry, meaning that it’s unlikely it developed Umbrella Noodles before Nissin’s offering!

However, if there’s one thing S.T.A.R.S members can attest to, it’s that Umbrella Corp. does not give up easily. The official Japanese Resident Evil account then escalated the drama by posting a video featuring an Umbrella Corp. scientist apologizing to those who accidentally purchased “imposer” Nissin Noodles instead of Umbrella Noodles, and explaining how Nissin "copied" the recipe.

As evidence, they allege that they were able to recreate Umbrella Noodles from Nissin Cup Noodles with a 99.9% success rate, simply by adding entrails and a herby, mostly basil-based sauce to Nissin’s product (although it made Umbrella employees who ate it a little itchy... probably best not to ask where those entrails are from). Sharing the video, Nissin clapped back with, "However you look at it, you're the ones doing the copying!"

どうみてもパクリはそちらです。 https://t.co/7VvG8kqWQX

— カップヌードル (@cupnoodle_jp) February 25, 2026

Adding even more hot water to the situation, Japanese shoppertainment company Yume Group (who last week released a bizarre ultra-limited edition of Resident Evil Requiem bundled with exercise equipment, which sold out almost instantly), launched the over-the-top Umbrella Noodles/Resident Evil Requiem ad below. A terrified Grace Ashcroft comes across the Japanese infomercial duo casually munching on and singing the praises of Umbrella Noodles (the ad notes that Umbrella Noodles are not a real product, although Resident Evil Requiem is a real game).

夢グループの石田です。

今日は、『アンブレラヌードル』のご紹介です。
びっくりの美味しさ!
いったい何でできてるのかなぁ・・・?
みなさん、ぜひお試しください。

『バイオハザード レクイエム』はこちらからお買い求めください。https://t.co/pSdtjNwJ0S#バイオレクイエム pic.twitter.com/zfEBhiAy5G

— 夢グループ (@yumegroup) February 26, 2026

Soon after, the official account for Nissin Cup Noodles reacted, sharing the ad with a, “What the hell is this?”

The fake lawsuit and sudden focus on Umbrella Noodles sparked much amusement from Japanese-speaking commenters. “No way can Umbrella beat Nissin. You think a Tyrant can stop a cheese alien?” joked one fan, referencing the mascot that sometimes appears in Nissin Cup Noodle commercials (like this one from 2001). “Umbrella Noodles are delicious, yeah? Although a huge eye’ll appear on your shoulder the day after you eat them,” quipped another.

Given all this sudden focus on Umbrella Noodles, it seems likely that they will pop up in Resident Evil Requiem too. Perhaps Leon and Grace will be able to find Umbrella Noodles in Resident Evil Requiem and chow down on them as they explore the ruins of Raccoon City.

We've got plenty more on Resident Evil Requiem, including how long Resident Evil Requiem takes to beat, and we've tracked Resident Evil Requiem's global release times.

"Like the result of an experiment conducted in an underground Umbrella Corporation lab, Resident Evil Requiem successfully splices two separate strains of survival horror together into the one highly infectious new mutation," IGN wrote in our full Resident Evil Requiem review, which returned a 9/10 score.

Verity Townsend is a Japan-based freelance writer who previously served as editor, contributor and translator for the game news site Automaton West. She has also written about Japanese culture and movies for various publications.

Terrifier Creator Issues Update on Terrifier 4 Addressing 'Speculation and False Information,' Confirms It's the Final Film in the Franchise

26 février 2026 à 13:09

Writer and director Damien Leone has issued an update on horror movie sequel Terrifier 4, addressing what he called “speculation and false information” doing the rounds online.

In a post on Facebook, Leone confirmed that the Terrifier 4 script is “very close” to completion, and that pre-production is set for this spring. However, there’s still no official release date.

“This is the most precious script I’ve written for many reasons, but it’s also the most challenging,” Leone explained. “There’s a lot of material to tackle and a lot riding on this one, not just creatively but emotionally.

“We’ve built something special together over the years. The cast and crew who have been here since the beginning deserve a finale that honors their dedication, and the fans who’ve championed this franchise deserve something unforgettable.

“In all honesty, I’m thrilled with the way it’s turning out and confident it will deliver. I will officially announce when the script is complete on my social media pages which also means we’ll be moving into pre-production. If you don’t see it coming from or confirmed by me, then it’s not official.

“Thank you for your patience. I promise it will be worth the wait!”

It’s worth noting that Leone calls Terrifier 4 the “finale” here, confirming plans to end the franchise with the fourth entry.

Terrifier began life in full-blown movie form in 2016, and revolves around demonic serial killer Art the Clown. 2022’s Terrifier 2 was a box office success (check out IGN's Terrifier 2 review here), and Terrifier 3 followed in 2024, bringing in even more money from theaters (here's our Terrifier 3 review).

Wesley is Director, News at IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

❌