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Playing Leon in Resident Evil Requiem Is a Kickass Catharsis

Grace’s gameplay is enjoyably terrifying, but I loved cutting loose with RE’s still-quippy pretty boy.

Last year, I played through the Resident Evil Requiem demo, controlling the terrified Grace Ashford, weaponless and worried that this entry in the horror franchise would prioritize powerless fear over a zombie-killing power fantasy. But recently, I sat down to play the latest preview of the game, finally controlling the series’ beloved pretty boy Leon, and within minutes, I was cutting apart zombies with a chainsaw. 

«We are so back, baby,» I want to say, though there’s way too much of the game still to be seen. Yet my short time with Leon (less than an hour of gameplay) left me pumped for his return, including everything that made his Resident Evil 4 appearance so iconic, from the action hero antics to the sassy quips to the humble grid-based item box. 

In this preview, the two segments I played with Leon were sandwiched around an extended playthrough with Grace, which suggested how the game will flow, alternating between the two as distinct flavors of gameplay.

2 approaches, both satisfying

Let me put a popular fear to rest: Grace’s sections don’t resemble infamous segments from Resident Evil games past, where players must control helpless side characters who can only sneak around threats (like the maligned Ashley chapters from Resident Evil 4). 

Instead, Resident Evil Requiem seems to be showcasing two iconic gameplay styles of the franchise around each character: Grace’s sections resemble the spooky puzzle-laden atmosphere of the original Resident Evil, while Leon’s embody the horror action of Resident Evil 4. 

Requiem tailors each character’s experience to each gameplay style. Grace starts with a limited number of inventory slots requiring players to juggle items, and she has limited ammunition — sneaking past enemies is a harrowing necessity. She slowly creeps around, solving baroque puzzles and making the most out of a new crafting system that uses zombie blood (yuck) to make ammo and defensive weapons. 

After Grace’s tense and moody exploration segments, Leon’s sections are a cathartic release, letting players cut loose with a lot of ammo and intense enemies, as well as some satisfying executions with Leon’s new best friend — a carbon fiber hand ax.

This split is exemplified by a new feature in Requiem: the ability to switch between first- and third-person cameras on the fly. Capcom employees running my preview suggested I play through Grace’s sections in the former to ratchet up the tension, then switch to the latter for Leon’s action-oriented sections.

3 hours with Resident Evil Requiem

At Summer Game Fest 2025, CNET’s Sean Booker got to play the first snippet of Requiem gameplay that Capcom unleashed, in which Grace awoke from her abduction and snuck around a derelict hospital, evading a grotesque matronly mutant chasing her through an abandoned ward. This latest preview starts just after that moment, in which Leon arrives at the hospital to find zombie doctors and orderlies — easily dispatched by his gunplay and combat kicks.

When a zombie came crashing in with a chainsaw, I shot him down, picked up the tool, carved open other zombies and cut through a barred door. That’s when Leon ran into Grace, quite literally picking up right where my earlier preview ended. With a powerful revolver — named, I kid you not, Requiem — I gunned down the matronly mutant. Before our heroic duo could properly team up, a gate slammed down between them. The hospital’s tall, pale overseer Dr. Gideon, operating the building from a distant control room, has other plans for them. 

That’s where control shifted to Grace for a 2-hour gameplay segment, placing the wayward FBI agent in a setting familiar to Resident Evil veterans: a foyer between two staircases, with a door that can only be unlocked with three crystal gems. Echoes of the Spencer Mansion from the first Resident Evil manifested in arcane puzzles and ornate wooden furnishings, as well as evading zombies rather than shooting them to preserve scarce ammo. 

It’s a vibe of dangerous exploration, made manageable by another twist: for whatever reason (presumably explained in the full game), these particular undead retain their memories and wander around the set paths they patrolled in life. By sneaking around and not making noise, I was (mostly) fine. 

But as with the original Resident Evil that Grace’s sections evoke, I ended up having to run back and forth, retrieving key items from save rooms to solve puzzles across the map. The traversal became so tedious that I switched to the third-person over-the-shoulder camera to make it easier to weave around the undead.

Then the game sprung another surprise. Back from the 2002 Resident Evil 1 Remake are zombies that come back to un-life, crazier and deadlier. I whipped out the powerful Requiem revolver (which Leon had handed over to Grace through the gate separating them) and fired the single bullet I had to kill it — a precious resource, like a one-hit-kill safety blanket, that now put me more at the mercy of the hospital’s horrors.

It’s clear that Capcom wants players to feel vulnerable while controlling Grace, but not hopeless. During the preview, Capcom employees impressed on me that the FBI agent will grow in capability throughout the game. Mechanically, this was represented by her somewhat shaky aim, which took a second or two of focus to calm her enough for accurate shooting (i.e., the crosshairs shrinking after readying her gun) — which can be improved by finding or crafting injectable reflex boosters. Despite collecting resources and tools, including an offensive lab-made drug I could jab into zombies to make them literally explode, the shambling dead are still dangerous in the face of Grace’s unsure gunplay, and there are worse things haunting the halls.

One of these was a horrifyingly large mutant baby (distinct from the horrifyingly large mutant baby in Resident Evil 8), which chased Grace around one of the hospital wards. I switched to Leon, who escaped from the clutches of Dr. Gideon only to have to take on the grotesque infant the only way he knows how: lots of guns and chops from his ax. 

After dispatching the horror-child, Leon runs around some of the same hospital areas I’d snuck around as Grace — but this time guns a-blazing. Even an ambush of several reanimated, deadlier zombies was a thrilling piece of cake for our hero and his trusty shotgun. 

If the preview is representative of the game’s overall flow, players will survive through Grace’s vulnerable, tense gameplay stretches, while following chapters with Leon will act as release valves of action and gory gunplay. That’s a fun combination…when done right. Resident Evil Requiem seems like an attempt by Capcom to cram two flavors of its franchise into the same game. Independently, either is a joy to play, but how they’ll feel together will prove whether the game can sink or swim. 

And yet, what little I saw (including a handful of things I was asked not to reveal) showcased a game that felt like an intriguing combination of familiar and new. After the saga of Ethan Winters in Resident Evil 7 and 8, it’s a relief to return to fan-favorite Leon and discover Grace’s story. 

Running around a strange hospital ward overrun by its undead residents, locked in the purgatory of their old routines, is delightfully bizarre. So is peering into a microscope to research a way to craft bullets out of scrap metal and blood. Resident Evil’s blend of surreal horror has always been better when it’s trying out new elements to add to its beloved melody — and this duet of novice and veteran, survival and action, feels like we might just be back, (non-mutant) baby.

Technologies

Today’s NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Wednesday, Jan. 28

Here are the answers for The New York Times Mini Crossword for Jan. 28.

Looking for the most recent Mini Crossword answer? Click here for today’s Mini Crossword hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Wordle, Strands, Connections and Connections: Sports Edition puzzles.


Need some help with today’s Mini Crossword? Read on for all the answers. And if you could use some hints and guidance for daily solving, check out our Mini Crossword tips.

If you’re looking for today’s Wordle, Connections, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands answers, you can visit CNET’s NYT puzzle hints page.

Read more: Tips and Tricks for Solving The New York Times Mini Crossword

Let’s get to those Mini Crossword clues and answers.

Mini across clues and answers

1A clue: Remove from a position of power
Answer: OUST

5A clue: Not cool
Answer: UNHIP

7A clue: «Fine, see if ___!»
Answer: ICARE

8A clue: Kind of bored
Answer: JADED

9A clue: Primatologist’s subjects
Answer: APES

Mini down clues and answers

1D clue: Kind of board
Answer: OUIJA

2D clue: Prepare to use, as a pen
Answer: UNCAP

3D clue: Desirable place to sit on a hot day
Answer: SHADE

4D clue: Pair on a bicycle
Answer: TIRES

6D clue: ___ Xing (street sign)
Answer: PED


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Technologies

Today’s NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for Jan. 28, #492

Here are hints and the answers for the NYT Connections: Sports Edition puzzle for Jan. 28, No. 492.

Looking for the most recent regular Connections answers? Click here for today’s Connections hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Wordle and Strands puzzles.


Today’s Connections: Sports Edition is a tough one. If you’re struggling with today’s puzzle but still want to solve it, read on for hints and the answers.

Connections: Sports Edition is published by The Athletic, the subscription-based sports journalism site owned by The Times. It doesn’t appear in the NYT Games app, but it does in The Athletic’s own app. Or you can play it for free online.

Read more: NYT Connections: Sports Edition Puzzle Comes Out of Beta

Hints for today’s Connections: Sports Edition groups

Here are four hints for the groupings in today’s Connections: Sports Edition puzzle, ranked from the easiest yellow group to the tough (and sometimes bizarre) purple group.

Yellow group hint: Stats about an athlete.

Green group hint: Where to watch games.

Blue group hint: There used to be a ballpark.

Purple group hint: Names are hidden in these words.

Answers for today’s Connections: Sports Edition groups

Yellow group: Player bio information.

Green group: Sports streamers.

Blue group: Former MLB ballparks.

Purple group: Ends in a Hall of Fame QB.

Read more: Wordle Cheat Sheet: Here Are the Most Popular Letters Used in English Words

What are today’s Connections: Sports Edition answers?

The yellow words in today’s Connections

The theme is player bio information. The four answers are alma mater, height, number and position.

The green words in today’s Connections

The theme is sports streamers. The four answers are Netflix, Paramount, Peacock and Prime.

The blue words in today’s Connections

The theme is former MLB ballparks. The four answers are Ebbets, Kingdome, Three Rivers and Tiger.

The purple words in today’s Connections

The theme is ends in a Hall of Fame QB. The four answers are forewarner, Harbaugh, honeymoon and outmanning.


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Technologies

Google Rolls Out Expanded Theft Protection Features for Android Devices

The latest Android security update makes it harder for thieves to break into stolen phones, with stronger biometric requirements and smarter lockouts.

Google on Tuesday announced a significant update to its Android theft-protection arsenal, introducing new tools and settings aimed at making stolen smartphones harder for criminals to access and exploit. The updates, detailed on Google’s official security blog, build on Android’s existing protections and add both stronger defenses and more flexible user controls. 

Smartphones carry your most sensitive data, from banking apps to personal photos, and losing your device to theft can quickly escalate into identity and financial fraud. To counter that threat, Google is layering multiple protective features that work before, during and after a theft.


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At the center of the update is a revamped Failed Authentication Lock. Previously introduced in Android 15, this feature now gets its own toggle in Android 16 settings, letting you decide whether your phone should automatically lock itself after repeated incorrect PIN or biometric attempts. This gives you more control over how aggressively your phone defends against brute-force guessing without weakening security.

Google is also beefing up biometric security across the platform. A feature called Identity Check, originally rolled out in earlier Android versions, has been broadened to apply to all apps and services that use Android’s Biometric Prompt — the pop-up that asks for your fingerprint or face to confirm it’s really you — including third-party banking apps and password managers. This means that even if a thief somehow bypasses your lock screen, they’ll face an additional biometric barrier before accessing sensitive apps.

On the recovery side, Google improved Remote Lock, a tool that allows you to lock a lost or stolen device from a web browser by entering a verified phone number. The company added an optional security challenge to ensure only the legitimate owner can initiate a remote lock, an important safeguard against misuse.

And finally, in a notable regional rollout, Google said it is now enabling both Theft Detection Lock and Remote Lock by default on new Android device activations in Brazil, a market where phone theft rates are comparatively high. Theft Detection Lock uses on-device AI to detect sudden movements consistent with a snatch-and-run theft, automatically locking the screen to block immediate access to data.

With stolen phones often used to access bank accounts and personal data, Google says these updates are meant to keep a single theft from turning into a much bigger problem.

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