If Resident Evil Requiem left you buzzing—whether it was Leon’s cathartic power-trip combat, Grace’s slower-burn tension, or that blink-and-you’ll-miss-it fan service—there’s a timely way to keep the momentum going without torching your wallet. A new Capcom Favorites: Build Your Own Bundle deal is live as part of BundleFest 2026, and it can slash the price of Resident Evil Village (and a lot more Capcom heavy hitters) by over 80% depending on how you build it.
It’s a smart post-credits move: Requiem is clearly pulling in fresh blood, and this bundle is basically an on-ramp to the modern Resident Evil era—plus a buffet of Capcom classics across genres, from courtroom drama to monster-slaying.
The Bundle Deal: How It Works, and Why It’s a Big One
The hook here is flexibility. Fanatical’s Capcom Favorites: Build Your Own Bundle lets you pick and mix from a broad Capcom catalog, with two games starting at $6.50 / £6.50 each—and the per-game price drops further the more titles you add.
That sliding scale is the whole point. If you’ve ever looked at Capcom’s back catalog and thought, “I’ll grab these eventually,” this is the kind of deal structure that turns “eventually” into “fine, I’ll do it now.” It’s also the kind of bundle that rewards going a little bigger than you planned—because the discount improves as your cart grows.
Just don’t sit on it: the bundle is only available until Wednesday, March 18.
The Post-Requiem Essentials: Resident Evil 7 Gold Edition and Resident Evil Village
Let’s not dance around it: survival horror fans are going to zero in on two names immediately—Resident Evil 7: Biohazard Gold Edition and Resident Evil Village.
If Requiem was your entry point (and it’s been framed as a strong one), these are the obvious next steps because they represent the modern identity of the series: first-person immersion, oppressive atmosphere, and that Capcom knack for turning resource pressure into panic.
Resident Evil 7: Biohazard Gold Edition — the modern reinvention, fully loaded
Resident Evil 7 is still one of the most dramatic pivots the franchise ever made: a shift into claustrophobic first-person horror set inside the Baker family’s deeply unsettling home. The bundle specifically highlights the Gold Edition, which includes all Season Pass content, expanding the experience with extra chapters and challenges.
That matters because RE7 isn’t just “the one with the Bakers.” It’s the foundation for the modern era’s tone and pacing—especially if you’re coming off Requiem’s mix of action-forward heroics and slower, tenser stretches.
Resident Evil Village — bigger, stranger, and built for momentum
Then there’s Resident Evil Village, which takes Ethan Winters’ story in a “bigger, stranger direction,” bouncing between gothic horror and action spectacle. The bundle callout hits the greatest hits: gothic castles, the eerie village, and of course Lady Dimitrescu, who became instantly iconic.
The key appeal after Requiem is rhythm. Village is a game that understands escalation—how to build dread, then release it with larger set pieces, then tighten the screws again. If you want to keep that modern Resident Evil energy going, running RE7 and Village back-to-back is a clean, satisfying way to do it.
Not Just Zombies: Monster Hunting, Courtroom Drama, and Capcom’s Greatest Hits
What I like about this bundle is that it doesn’t pretend Capcom is a one-trick horror machine. Yes, Resident Evil is the headline for a lot of us right now—especially with Requiem landing as a major franchise moment—but the rest of the lineup is a reminder of how absurdly deep Capcom’s bench is.
Here are some of the other notable inclusions called out in the bundle:
- Monster Hunter: World Deluxe Edition — a meaty pick for anyone who wants a long-tail game you can live in for months. It’s also positioned as a great time to jump in before the imminent release of Monster Hunter Stories 3.
- Ace Attorney Trilogy and The Great Ace Attorney Chronicles — perfect palate cleansers if you want “chill detective story with puzzles, mystery and a bit of cute humor.”
- Ghost Trick: Phantom Detective — a cult-favorite style of clever, characterful mystery design that still feels singular.
- Okami HD — a timeless art-forward adventure that remains one of Capcom’s most beloved “they don’t make them like this anymore” games.
- Mega Man Zero/ZX Legacy Collection — a dense package of action-platforming history.
- Street Fighter V — a major modern fighting game entry if you’re looking to round out your library with something competitive.
The real value here is that you can build a Capcom “sampler platter” that matches your mood after finishing Requiem. Want more fear? Grab RE7 and Village. Want to decompress? Go Ace Attorney. Want a completely different kind of obsession? Monster Hunter: World Deluxe Edition is right there.
Steam Deck Notes: A Portable Capcom Library (Mostly)
One practical detail that makes this bundle more than just “cheap keys”: 14 of the games included are listed as verified or playable on Steam Deck.
That’s not a blanket guarantee for the entire bundle lineup, and it’s not framed as universal compatibility. But it’s still a meaningful number—especially if your ideal version of “revisiting Capcom’s history” is doing it on a handheld while you chip away at a backlog.
Why This Hits Now: Requiem’s Detail, Fan Service, and the Hunger to Go Back
Part of why this bundle feels so well-timed is that Resident Evil Requiem has been the kind of game that encourages post-finish-line curiosity. It’s packed with little touches and fan-facing moments that get people talking—sometimes about things they’d never even notice in a normal playthrough.
One of my favorite examples is the kind of hidden polish that screams “someone on this team cared a lot”: Requiem reportedly includes unique idle reload animations for each gun—animations that most players won’t ever see because they’re triggered by standing motionless in safe rooms. It’s the sort of detail that doesn’t change your completion time or your build, but it does change how the game feels: more tactile, more authored, more lovingly overproduced.
And then there’s the fan-service tightrope. Requiem has been described as a “wonderful victory lap” for the franchise as it arrives in time for Resident Evil’s 30th anniversary, with a structure that balances Leon’s empowering action with Grace’s more tense pacing. It’s also not shy about big moments—like a third-act cameo that’s sparked debate precisely because it’s so abrupt.
That cameo? HUNK, the legendary mercenary whose very identity is tied to survival. In Requiem, he appears late, ambushes Leon, and the two clash in a hatchet fight reminiscent of Resident Evil 4’s iconic knife duel energy. The controversy isn’t that he shows up—it’s that the encounter is over fast, and his fate is left just ambiguous enough to keep the fandom arguing. If you return to the fight location, HUNK’s body disappears, which has fueled speculation about whether he’s truly dead.
All of this feeds into the same player impulse: once you’re done, you want more. More context, more history, more “how did we get here?” And that’s exactly where a bundle like this lands—especially when it puts RE7 Gold Edition and Village right in the crosshairs.
Release, Platforms, and the Fine Print You Should Know
A few key details worth keeping straight:
- Resident Evil Requiem released February 27, 2026 on PC, PS5, Xbox Series X|S, and Nintendo Switch 2.
- The Fanatical deal is a Capcom Favorites: Build Your Own Bundle running during BundleFest 2026.
- Pricing starts at $6.50 / £6.50 each when you select two games, with the price dropping further as you add more.
- The bundle is available until Wednesday, March 18.
- 14 games in the bundle are listed as verified or playable on Steam Deck.
Specific per-game final prices (including the exact percentage discount you’ll land on for each title) depend on how many games you choose, and the full list of included titles beyond the highlighted examples isn’t fully detailed in the available information.
What Remains Unknown
- The complete roster of games included in the Capcom Favorites bundle beyond the highlighted titles has not been fully detailed here.
- The exact discount breakdown per title (and the precise conditions for “over 80% off” on specific games like Resident Evil Village) depends on bundle size and hasn’t been exhaustively confirmed in the available details.
- Whether additional Resident Evil entries (beyond RE7 Gold Edition and Village) are included in the bundle lineup hasn’t been confirmed here.
If you’re fresh off Resident Evil Requiem and you’re chasing that same modern-era intensity—or you just want a curated excuse to finally grab Capcom staples you’ve been circling for years—this is one of those rare bundles that actually feels tailored to the moment. The clock’s ticking to March 18, and for once, “build your own” doesn’t read like marketing fluff—it reads like a dare to assemble your ideal Capcom backlog.



