Resident Evil Requiem / Survival Horror
Resident Evil Requiem First-person vs Third-person: How to Choose Your Opening Camera
If you are worried about fear level, shaky aim, or simply getting through the opening cleanly, choose your camera by goal first, then switch around Grace and Leon's different pressures.
walkthrough Jun 15, 2026 Resident Evil Requiemvideofirst-personthird-person
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Quick Answer
For a first run, use third-person first if your main problem is navigation, panic, or keeping enemy spacing readable. Switch into first-person when you specifically want stronger sound cues, tighter corridor pressure, and a more oppressive horror feel. Resident Evil Requiem does not treat the two cameras like a permanent identity test. Capcom built both in from the start so you can swap according to what Grace and Leon are actually asking from you.
Start with this choice table
| Your situation | Better starting camera | Why it is safer |
|---|
| You get tense easily and want to learn routes first | Third-person | Easier to read hallways, door positions, enemy spacing, and retreat routes |
| You want maximum dread and sound-led awareness | First-person | Better for footstep tracking, breathing cues, and close-range threat pressure |
| Grace’s opening feels resource-starved | Third-person first, then switch situationally | Grace is built around evasion, puzzles, and resource management, so spatial control matters first |
| Leon combat sections are your main concern | Third-person first | Leon leans harder into crowd control and melee flow, so wider visual awareness pays off immediately |
Grace and Leon should change how you switch
| Character | Core pressure | Camera recommendation | Why |
|---|
| Grace | Evasion, puzzles, low-ammo stress, survival routing | Start in third-person, then swap to first-person when sound matters | Grace’s sections reward clean movement and route reading before deep immersion |
| Leon | Clearing enemies, melee timing, crowd management, weapon upgrades | Prefer third-person first, then experiment | Leon’s sections are more combat-forward, so visibility and spacing are more useful early |
Quick steps
- Open the first run in third-person and learn room layout, safe door lines, and escape loops.
- Swap into first-person for dark hallways, chase pressure, or scenes where audio matters more than spacing.
- If Grace keeps running dry on ammo, prioritize the camera that helps you survive and route cleanly, not the one that feels “hardcore.”
- In Leon sections, use third-person first for melee range, parry reads, and group positioning.
- Save the opposite camera for a second run instead of forcing discomfort into the opening hours.
Before you try it
- Capcom explicitly added both views because different Resident Evil players naturally prefer different styles.
- The developers also said some players found first-person too intense, while others gained a new kind of surprise from seeing Grace panic on-screen in third-person.
- Swapping cameras is not avoiding the game. It is using the system exactly as intended.
Common mistakes
- Assuming third-person automatically means “less scary,” then dying because you still ignored route planning.
- Treating first-person as the only valid experience even though the game was designed for both from the start.
- Playing Grace and Leon with the same mindset when one side is more about survival stress and the other is more about controlled combat cleanup.