HomeFeaturesResident Evil Village
Lady Dimitrescu’s castle gets a jammy new makeover in Resident Evil Village’s Shadows Of Rose DLCI love what they’ve done with the place
I love what they’ve done with the place

It’s not yet clear what role Lady D’s castle has to play in Rose’s journey, but man, it sure is nice to be back roaming its ornate hallways again. Or rather it would be, if it weren’t for all the ashen mold men stalking its corridors, and its rather gross (but strangely hypnotic) rivers of undulating strawberry jam gore that have been plastered all over the walls, floor and ceiling. Ach, now it’s on my shoes. Great. And the gate’s locked behind me. Fantastic. I knew coming back here would be a bad idea…
Resident Evil Village – Winters’ Expansion – TGS TrailerWatch on YouTube
Resident Evil Village – Winters’ Expansion – TGS Trailer

Technically, I don’t think this is the actual Castle Dimitrescu you were rocking about in Village; rather, it seems to be a version of it that exists inside the wider consciousness of that evil weaponised mold… creature, organism, thing. Goodness knows. Visually, though, it’s exactly the same castle you remember, with all its fancy pants décor and Lady D’s oversized vampire dresses still hanging up in her copious wardrobe collection. Lady D, of course, was nowhere to be seen during my hands on demo, but a masked version of the also extremely large Duke, known here as the Marquis, definitely was, and he’s out to get poor Rose if it’s the last thing he does.
Having been dropped into the expansion a little ways into the main story, I can’t tell you why the masked Marquis has such big beef with Rose, or why either of them are hanging out in Lady D’s castle in the first place. It may have something to do with thatotherRose running around that we glimpsed in that very first teaser trailer for it (see below). A case of mistaken identity, perhaps? Or maybe it’s the mold just playing one big deadly mind trick on everyone. We’ll have to wait until it comes out properly on October 28th before we can know for sure.
Resident Evil Village Gold Edition - Announcement TrailerWatch on YouTube
Resident Evil Village Gold Edition - Announcement Trailer

Needless to say, there are just as many nasty things waiting to gloop out of the ceiling for Rose as there were for her dad in this version of Castle D, and man alive, this is some potent nightmare fuel, all right. From afar, they’re not too bad – yer classic grey shamblers who lurch and lunge at you to grasp your tiny shoulders. Only these molders aren’t sinking their teeth into your neck this time round. Rather, they’resucking your face into a terrifying tentacle vortexso they can absorb your flesh into their jammy entrails. It’s kinda horrifying, and not something you want to happen often.
The mold men hit peak Lovecraft when they grab you.

Indeed, these grabs take quite the toll on Rose’s health, so you’ll only be able to survive a couple of them before she’s dragged down into the gunge for good. Luckily, Rose can fight back using her own moldy powers to counter and push them away so she can get a few more shots in. I only had a pistol in my preview build (although I did spy a shotgun locked away in a cabinet), but the gunplay feels more or less identical to the original Village.
The key difference is that I was playing Shadows Of Rose in third-person – another new addition for the Winters' Expansion pack. This over the shoulder perspective can be applied to the base game as well, no doubt making a marked difference to its default first-person viewpoint. Here, though, it felt very much akin to theResident Evil 2and3 Remakes, creating tighter, more intimate camera angles when you’re staring down the barrel of your gun, and jacking up the tension when you’re trying to manoeuvre tank-style out of harm’s way. The castle setting might be the familiar, but this change in control scheme is just enough to make its polished floors and corridors feel fresh and dangerous again, especially when those aforementioned jam rivers are now taking you on a different path through the mansion and can slurp out enemies when you least expect it.

Rose starts off with a pistol, but there are definitely other guns lurking about the place to find later on.

Before that, though, a strange invisible force seemed to be guiding Rose outside to the central courtyard, leaving messages in the furniture for her to follow. Rose is able to converse with these entity and have short conversations with it, acting as both as handy objective guide and, occasionally, a refuel station if it senses you’re low on ammo or could do with another green herb. Of course, this being Resident Evil, you can almost guarantee there’s more to this spirit than meets the eye here, but for now it seemed friendly, and was a welcome, if silent, companion on our tour through the castle.
As with the original Village, the path you take through Castle D is pretty linear to start off with, with plenty of locked doors, barricaded entrances and those globs of “gross lumpy things” (Rose’s words, not mine) blocking your path. Eventually, though, Rose gains more powers to help clear the way and open it up again. The first is a kind of focus blast that lets her destroy ‘mold cores’ – big purple and red flower type things that seem to be growing in all sorts of nooks and crannies around the castle. Sometimes they’re obvious, but others will need you to follow throbbing red tendrils in order to locate them. Aim your mold laser mind powers at these cores and the gunge pouring out of them will turn harden and disintegrate into ash, leaving the floor beneath good as new. Eradicating these cores not only created new pathways through the castle, but many also held additional items within, such as ammo, health or crafting items. Resources felt scarce in my preview build, so you’ll want to seek out these extra jam caches whenever you see one – especially since there didn’t seem to be any limit on how often or long Rose could focus for.


