An anonymous Capcom insider, described by some outlets as a source trusted by Resident Evil leaker Dusk Golem, has circulated a set of claims that include a remake of the original Devil May Cry and multiple planned Resident Evil remakes.
None of the claims have been officially confirmed by Capcom; this article presents the leaked information as reported and supplements it with verified context about the franchises and the studio’s recent history.
What the insider reportedly claimed
- The source said a remake of the original 2001 Devil May Cry is in development.
The insider characterized this project as a priority for long-running franchise fans.
- The source asserted that, during a June–July 2022 internal meeting, Capcom gave the green light to remakes of Resident Evil Zero, Resident Evil (the original), and a future title referred to as Resident Evil 10.
- According to the leak, internal codenames include Project Chambers for Resident Evil Zero, Project Fallen for a Resident Evil 1 remake, and Project Redlife for Resident Evil 10, and one purported note was that a Resident Evil 1 remake moved from pre-production into full production since 2022–23.
- The insider also claimed that Resident Evil Zero and the referenced Resident Evil 10 would use Capcom’s RE Engine.
- The leak included development casting notes suggesting Claire Redfield would be central to Project Redlife, and referenced additional DLC plans and the return of Ada Wong in an earlier Resident Evil title’s post-launch content.
Verified facts and factual context
- Devil May Cry originally launched in 2001 on PlayStation 2; the series is developed and published by Capcom.
- Capcom’s RE Engine (often written as RE Engine) is the studio’s in-house engine and has been used on recent Resident Evil remakes and entries, including Resident Evil 7, the Resident Evil 2 and 3 remakes, Resident Evil Village, and the Resident Evil 4 remake.
- Capcom has an established history of producing high-profile remakes for the Resident Evil series, with Resident Evil 2 (2019), Resident Evil 3 (2020), and Resident Evil 4 (2023) receiving full remakes that were released across multiple platforms.
What to take away
These leak claims have circulated alongside earlier, unconfirmed reports from known leakers.
They should be treated as unverified until Capcom provides an official announcement.
For consumers and platform holders such as Nintendo, confirmed news about remakes or platform plans typically appears through publisher statements, digital storefront listings (for example, the Nintendo eShop), or major presentations like Nintendo Direct when Nintendo is a target platform.
Until Capcom confirms any remake or project status, industry watchers should rely on official channels for release dates, platform availability, and development details.
None of the claims have been officially confirmed by Capcom; this article presents the leaked information as reported and supplements it with verified context about the franchises and the studio’s recent history.
What the insider reportedly claimed
- The source said a remake of the original 2001 Devil May Cry is in development.
The insider characterized this project as a priority for long-running franchise fans.
- The source asserted that, during a June–July 2022 internal meeting, Capcom gave the green light to remakes of Resident Evil Zero, Resident Evil (the original), and a future title referred to as Resident Evil 10.
- According to the leak, internal codenames include Project Chambers for Resident Evil Zero, Project Fallen for a Resident Evil 1 remake, and Project Redlife for Resident Evil 10, and one purported note was that a Resident Evil 1 remake moved from pre-production into full production since 2022–23.
- The insider also claimed that Resident Evil Zero and the referenced Resident Evil 10 would use Capcom’s RE Engine.
- The leak included development casting notes suggesting Claire Redfield would be central to Project Redlife, and referenced additional DLC plans and the return of Ada Wong in an earlier Resident Evil title’s post-launch content.
Verified facts and factual context
- Devil May Cry originally launched in 2001 on PlayStation 2; the series is developed and published by Capcom.
- Capcom’s RE Engine (often written as RE Engine) is the studio’s in-house engine and has been used on recent Resident Evil remakes and entries, including Resident Evil 7, the Resident Evil 2 and 3 remakes, Resident Evil Village, and the Resident Evil 4 remake.
- Capcom has an established history of producing high-profile remakes for the Resident Evil series, with Resident Evil 2 (2019), Resident Evil 3 (2020), and Resident Evil 4 (2023) receiving full remakes that were released across multiple platforms.
What to take away
These leak claims have circulated alongside earlier, unconfirmed reports from known leakers.
They should be treated as unverified until Capcom provides an official announcement.
For consumers and platform holders such as Nintendo, confirmed news about remakes or platform plans typically appears through publisher statements, digital storefront listings (for example, the Nintendo eShop), or major presentations like Nintendo Direct when Nintendo is a target platform.
Until Capcom confirms any remake or project status, industry watchers should rely on official channels for release dates, platform availability, and development details.