Would love to see you cover the others, mate. I absolutely adore this book series. SD Perry is a talented writer with a keen sense of character, tone, and voice. Agreed on her love showing up in the novelizations, and despite how cool and collected Wesker portrays himself on the surface in the games, having some POV chapters with his inner monologue actually does somewhat accurately portray how folks with antisocial personality disorder think and view others. They’re often quite petty and fragile, with easily wounded egos. Great job.
@@eliasb22 my opinion 1. Umbrella conspiracy - great book though it takes awhile to get started. Once they reach the mansion though, you can't put it down. Read it 7 times 2. Caliban cove - an original work, it's not as good as the books based off a game but still passable. Read it twice 3. City of the Dead - outstanding book. I've read it 9 times 4. Underworld. Terrible. Read it once 5. Nemesis. Fantastic. Read it 8 times 6. Code Veronica. Good book. Read it 5 times 7. Zero hour- good book. Read it 6 times.
SD Perry did an outstanding job with the books, especially given how little direction she got from Capcom. I love the games but the in-game story is mostly pretty mid, while the Perry books have an awesome story that I still enjoy reading to this day.
I love the first act to the first book, their lives, the rpd, their friendship, the news articles. But as soon as they get to the mansion it just gets closer and closer to the "walkthrough" type of adaptation you mention. "Chris walks into a zombie and kills it, Jill solves an incredibly boring puzzle". On top of that, the author reveals wesker is the villain just too soon. It's not like we don't know he's the villain, but I really wanted to see how they'd make a mystery out of it. About the other books, the original stories are specially unninsteresting, with all villains being megalomaniacal and psychotic (wich is a trend with the villains in all books, like wesker and, if I remember well, nicholai). The adaptation of RE3 is great when it shows the umbrella mercenaries mission. Couldn't finish Code Veronica because I was tired of psychotic villains, which is a shame since Alfred is actually crazy in the game. Never got to RE zero.
Can't belive how few views this has. Cool topic! No idea the whole "Jill learning lockpicking from her master thief father" detail was from the book adaptation. I actually think the Wesker characterization is well done, considering the author had no idea what a flanderized meme he would eventually become.
Wesker is so much creepier in the Code Veronica novel. He basically asks Chris if is sister is hot and then talks about the "hardon" he currently has. Its so fucking jarring and weird.
As someone who has read and currently owns all 7 books, It's always been interesting to me how much emphasis S.D. Perry put on Rebecca Chambers, given how quickly she's pushed to the side in canon (with the perfectly reasonable excuse that she's working as a biologist to help fight against the variety of diseases and variants Umbrella's ilk pumped out). It does make Caliban Cove and Underworld feel very odd, as their stories are far more out there. It is disappointing that the right to make the books was pulled away from her. She admitted that she'd have loved to continue the 'Perryverse,' but it wasn't in the cards. My guess is with how heavily the books differed from the canon as time moved on, along with Resident Evil: Zero Hour being released only months before Resident Evil 4 (10/26/04 and 01/11/05 respectively) and the fact that Capcom gave Perry very little to work with, they saw no reason to continue allowing her to write what was essentially licensed fan fiction. Very good, polished licensed fan fiction using whatever she could at the time to piece together a coherent story from the tangled holiday lights that is Resident Evil canon (with my favorite line coming from Nemesis when Carlos questions Jill as to why items where hidden in such arbitrary puzzles), but fan fiction nonetheless.
I remember reading these when I was first becoming more of an avid reader. Perry's enthusiasm for the franchise was very much evident in the writing and I feel that was mostly to the benefit of the story. I think this version of Wesker works as it shows the sort of person who could develop into the villain he is in later games. The sense of entitlement and superiority was always there but smaller-scale less focussed than it would be later on. Also my fave take on Rebecca. My head-cannon is that Trent is functionally the player. One oddly good game-novel adaption was the FPS Fire Warrior (a 40K tie-in). The game itself was rather flawed but the novel had some fun human-through-alien-eyes moments.
Was 14 when I ran across then instantly fell in love and begged my parents when going to books amillon or Barnes and nobles to get all that I could. The rest later enjoyed them on UA-cam audio adoptions
1. Umbrella conspiracy: 8/10 2. Caliban cove: 4/10 3. City of the dead: 9/10 4. Underworld: 2/10 5. Nemesis: 8.5/10 6. Code Veronica: 7/10 7. Zero Hour: 7.5/10 All the books based off video games are really good. The books not based on games and have original stories are not as good. I really wish they would have her continue and do books on RE 4, 5, 7, 8 and also the revelations games. Skip 6. It's a bad game and would be too long and too complex to write considering the number of stories and interwoven narrative.
Would love to see you cover the others, mate. I absolutely adore this book series. SD Perry is a talented writer with a keen sense of character, tone, and voice. Agreed on her love showing up in the novelizations, and despite how cool and collected Wesker portrays himself on the surface in the games, having some POV chapters with his inner monologue actually does somewhat accurately portray how folks with antisocial personality disorder think and view others. They’re often quite petty and fragile, with easily wounded egos. Great job.
@@eliasb22 my opinion
1. Umbrella conspiracy - great book though it takes awhile to get started. Once they reach the mansion though, you can't put it down. Read it 7 times
2. Caliban cove - an original work, it's not as good as the books based off a game but still passable. Read it twice
3. City of the Dead - outstanding book. I've read it 9 times
4. Underworld. Terrible. Read it once
5. Nemesis. Fantastic. Read it 8 times
6. Code Veronica. Good book. Read it 5 times
7. Zero hour- good book. Read it 6 times.
SD Perry did an outstanding job with the books, especially given how little direction she got from Capcom. I love the games but the in-game story is mostly pretty mid, while the Perry books have an awesome story that I still enjoy reading to this day.
The rumor is that Capcoms new resident evil movie is based on the SD Perry's novel... however, the other rumor is that it's based on RE7
Read this book when I was getting into the resident evil series when i was 13. I loved it
I love the first act to the first book, their lives, the rpd, their friendship, the news articles. But as soon as they get to the mansion it just gets closer and closer to the "walkthrough" type of adaptation you mention. "Chris walks into a zombie and kills it, Jill solves an incredibly boring puzzle". On top of that, the author reveals wesker is the villain just too soon. It's not like we don't know he's the villain, but I really wanted to see how they'd make a mystery out of it.
About the other books, the original stories are specially unninsteresting, with all villains being megalomaniacal and psychotic (wich is a trend with the villains in all books, like wesker and, if I remember well, nicholai). The adaptation of RE3 is great when it shows the umbrella mercenaries mission. Couldn't finish Code Veronica because I was tired of psychotic villains, which is a shame since Alfred is actually crazy in the game. Never got to RE zero.
Can't belive how few views this has. Cool topic! No idea the whole "Jill learning lockpicking from her master thief father" detail was from the book adaptation.
I actually think the Wesker characterization is well done, considering the author had no idea what a flanderized meme he would eventually become.
Wesker is so much creepier in the Code Veronica novel. He basically asks Chris if is sister is hot and then talks about the "hardon" he currently has. Its so fucking jarring and weird.
As someone who has read and currently owns all 7 books, It's always been interesting to me how much emphasis S.D. Perry put on Rebecca Chambers, given how quickly she's pushed to the side in canon (with the perfectly reasonable excuse that she's working as a biologist to help fight against the variety of diseases and variants Umbrella's ilk pumped out). It does make Caliban Cove and Underworld feel very odd, as their stories are far more out there.
It is disappointing that the right to make the books was pulled away from her. She admitted that she'd have loved to continue the 'Perryverse,' but it wasn't in the cards. My guess is with how heavily the books differed from the canon as time moved on, along with Resident Evil: Zero Hour being released only months before Resident Evil 4 (10/26/04 and 01/11/05 respectively) and the fact that Capcom gave Perry very little to work with, they saw no reason to continue allowing her to write what was essentially licensed fan fiction. Very good, polished licensed fan fiction using whatever she could at the time to piece together a coherent story from the tangled holiday lights that is Resident Evil canon (with my favorite line coming from Nemesis when Carlos questions Jill as to why items where hidden in such arbitrary puzzles), but fan fiction nonetheless.
Regarding Resident Evil lore, I wish most of all that the Perry novels had been used as outlines for the movies.
I remember reading these when I was first becoming more of an avid reader. Perry's enthusiasm for the franchise was very much evident in the writing and I feel that was mostly to the benefit of the story.
I think this version of Wesker works as it shows the sort of person who could develop into the villain he is in later games. The sense of entitlement and superiority was always there but smaller-scale less focussed than it would be later on. Also my fave take on Rebecca.
My head-cannon is that Trent is functionally the player.
One oddly good game-novel adaption was the FPS Fire Warrior (a 40K tie-in). The game itself was rather flawed but the novel had some fun human-through-alien-eyes moments.
I really loved this book series. I wish she had a chance to adapt more of the games. Do you think you'll cover the other books?
Rebecca is funnily enough also one of my favorite resident evil characters.
@@august2771 nothing wrong with that. She is indeed an under rated character. I've always liked her better than Jill
Was 14 when I ran across then instantly fell in love and begged my parents when going to books amillon or Barnes and nobles to get all that I could. The rest later enjoyed them on UA-cam audio adoptions
Great video! Had no idea this existed.
this guys accent switches between american & irish.
kinda makes me think about how our american accent developed
Bro, she made Wesker an incel that's hilarious.
For the life of me I don't understand why the movies aren't based on these novels...
What do you think about the movie novelizations?
1. Umbrella conspiracy: 8/10
2. Caliban cove: 4/10
3. City of the dead: 9/10
4. Underworld: 2/10
5. Nemesis: 8.5/10
6. Code Veronica: 7/10
7. Zero Hour: 7.5/10
All the books based off video games are really good. The books not based on games and have original stories are not as good. I really wish they would have her continue and do books on RE 4, 5, 7, 8 and also the revelations games. Skip 6. It's a bad game and would be too long and too complex to write considering the number of stories and interwoven narrative.
Those are the 'game' novelizations. There were also 'movie' novelizations for 5 of the 6 RE films.