Players digging through Resident Evil Requiem have surfaced a cluster of details that appear to reference Resident Evil: Code Veronica — and given Capcom’s long history of hiding announcements in plain sight, the community isn’t treating them as coincidence.
What Players Actually Found
The discoveries started in Requiem‘s photo mode. In a hotel register visible within the game, the name “Alyssa” appears at position nine — a likely nod to the protagonist of Code: Veronica. Directly next to it: the name “Veronica” itself.
Taken individually, either detail could be dismissed. Together, they read less like coincidence and more like a deliberate placement.
The second find is harder to explain away. In a bar in the Rhodes Hill area, players spotted a bottle labeled “Avernico” — a direct anagram of “Veronica.” Capcom has used this kind of wordplay before, and the community recognizes it as a signature move.
Why Capcom Easter Eggs Are Worth Taking Seriously
Capcom has spent decades building a reputation for hiding real information inside their games. Cryptic documents, name lists, background objects — these have repeatedly turned out to be advance signals for projects that were later officially announced. With a franchise as lore-dense as Resident Evil, where every detail can carry narrative weight, fans have learned to treat these finds as deliberate communication rather than decoration.
The pattern held before the Resident Evil 2 Remake announcement in 2019. It held again with Resident Evil 3. Capcom is a studio that rewards close reading — and the community has gotten very good at close reading.
What a Code: Veronica Remake Would Mean
Code: Veronica occupies a specific and important place in the franchise. Originally released in 2000 on the Sega Dreamcast, it deepened the series’ central mythology around biological weapons, covert organizations, and the Ashford family — filling narrative gaps that the mainline numbered entries left open.
A full remake would bring it in line with what Capcom has already proven works. The RE2 Remake demonstrated that modernizing classic survival horror — updated visuals, reworked gameplay, current production values — could land both critically and commercially. Code: Veronica is a story that deserves that treatment, and a portion of the fanbase has been asking for it loudly for years.
For players who never experienced the original, a remake would also make one of the series’ most plot-significant chapters accessible without the friction of 25-year-old hardware and game design.
The Community Is Already Deep Into It
The findings have ignited the kind of forum and social media activity that tends to precede real announcements. Players are cross-referencing other potential Easter eggs, theorizing about reveal timing, and speculating that a formal announcement could arrive at one of this year’s major gaming events. YouTube breakdowns, TikTok speculation threads, and Reddit analyses are compounding on each other in real time.
None of it is confirmed. Capcom hasn’t commented.
An Anagram, Two Names, and a Pattern That Keeps Paying Off
The honest read: nothing here is proof. Capcom has not announced a Code: Veronica remake. These are environmental details in a video game — they could be tributes, they could be coincidences, and they could be exactly what they look like.
But “Avernico” is an anagram. “Alyssa” and “Veronica” appear side by side in a hotel register. And Capcom has a documented track record of doing precisely this before pulling back the curtain.
Watch the next major showcase closely.


