- The games were slated to change pace from the intro of RE5: When Umbrella fell, their weapons and viruses were sold onto the black market. Future games are likely world travel to stop X virus in Y location. Secondly, Wesker lost his head just after the two RPG missiles hit him in the head before the explosion; as well as Wordof God confirming he's gone for good.
- Jossed: RE6 is picking up after RE5. No rebooting for the foreseeable future.
- Confirmed
In addition, the third protagonist states the line: "much better off as a mercenary", possibly referring to his past job as an Umbrella mercenary/agent. This line could also be a nod to the audience. HUNK is now an actual protagonist, but he's wondering if he's better off just being in the Mercenary side games.
- To support this, look at this image of HUNK unmasked◊ and look at this image of the new guy.◊ They look quite similar, with the usual difference in graphics, of course.
- In addition, there's this image of HUNK unmasked◊. Though, the hair is a different colour.
- Jossed. The 3rd Protagonist's name is Jake Mueller, Wesker's "son."
- For all we know about HUNK, he may in fact be Jake Mueller...
- Official bio says he was born in the 1980s. Doubt USS would recruit such a young guy unless he's "exceptional". I would shoot this theory down, as awesome as it sounds.
- Then again, he IS Wesker's son after all.
His dialogue and attitude seem very much Steve as well, more so than the enigmatic and generally quiet HUNK. It immediately sounded like Steve, were Steve to grow up a little but maintain the same ego and style of speech from Code Veronica.
- One of the lines the third protagonist says is, "...much better off as a mercenary". If he's referring to himself, then it can't be Steve since he's never been a mercenary.
- He's already a mercenary before the events of the game, though. It could be him thinking what was supposed to be A Simple Job before B.O.W.s came and changed everything, especially when one of them seems to be specifically hunting him down.
- Furthermore, we have no idea what Steve ends up doing after Code Veronica. Given his experience with B.O.W.s from that game, as well as the T-Veronica virus inside of him, which is consistent with the "needs my blood" line, he very well could have gone into work fighting terrorists for the highest bidder.
- He's already a mercenary before the events of the game, though. It could be him thinking what was supposed to be A Simple Job before B.O.W.s came and changed everything, especially when one of them seems to be specifically hunting him down.
- In Darkside Chronicles, Wesker mentions that he takes a sample from Steve's corpse and gives it to Javier, subtly hinting that he's not keeping Steve alive or in stasis. Unless Wesker only figured out how to bring him back to life afterwards.
- That's what his scar is from. It's what happened to the virus collecting incision after either being returned or released from stasis.
- Wesker saved Jill by preserving her body in cryostasis. That prolonged exposure to the virus from Resident Evil 3 and her term in cryostasis allowed her to develop antibodies to all viruses. It's possible that he always had Steve in cryostasis for testing purposes and this helped him develop virus antibodies. The mercenary also displays the same superhuman acrobatics as Resident Evil 5 Jill had.
- And, if the cryostasis process wasn't as developed when he got Steve, it could be the reason that he's bald. Wouldn't be the first time it's messed with a subject's hair. It's just been tweaked so it just damages hair enough to lose its pigment instead of damaging it enough to fall out.
- Except that he has visible head stubble, indicating that he shaves it rather than him being naturally bald. And on a meta level, it seems like Capcom did that on purpose just to make it harder for us to figure out who he is.
- Jossed. The 3rd Protagonist's name is Jake Mueller, Wesker's "son."
- Confirmed.
- "We have exclusive information about the blonde woman in the trailer — and she's not who you think she is." Apparently IGN is unfamiliar with WMG.
- Confirmed via recent trailer.
- Jossed. Leon's companion is a new character: A government agent named Helena Harper. As mentioned above, Sherry is Jake's companion.
- Wesker? As a protagonist?
- We've never seen him before. Why automatically assume he's evil at all?
- The notes from Resident Evil 5 and additional DLC pretty much spell out that Alex is, with mentions of experiments costing "thousands upon thousands" of lives and a quest for Immortality, which is a pretty typical villain goal, especially if you are willing to kill a whole bunch of people to get it.
- True. However, he could still be a possible villian protagonist, or reformed (after a fashion — the mercenary's clearly a jerk). There's also the information that whoever the mercenary is, he's "related" to one of the main RE characters in some form. Assuming related is not being taken literally (as in he's not Leon's long lost brother or something), Alex Wesker most certainly is this to Albert.
- It's a small thing, but notice that his outfit is all black and his sleeves are 3/4 length, which is certainly reminiscent of some of Albert Wesker's costumes.
- Jossed. His name is Jake Mueller, Wesker's "son."
- According to background data, he really is Wesker's son, and his blood is sought after because of its connection to Albert. However, he knows very little about him, so it's unlikely he has any relation to Alex.
- Alex was specifically noted to be a "he" in Spencer's reports from 5.
- In the Japanese version, Alex Wesker is referred to as a male.
- Well then, the Japanese version of RE5 is wrong. As per her appearance in Resident Evil: Revelations 2, Alex Wesker is indeed a woman.
- Her newfound athleticism might also be a result of, y'know, not being twelve years old anymore. Most of the women in this series are quite athletic.
- Given how this is completely plausable human acrobatic in the Resident Evil universe, I wouldn't say Sherry's athletcism is abnormal.
- Sort of confirmed. Sherry's G-Virus gives her an uncommon healing factor.
- And one of the bases for Carla's creation of the C-Virus was the G-Virus.
- That's not Ashley, that's Sherry Birkin. Plus, it seems like the term "ten years" is more of a rough catch-all time period, seeing as this can't take place in 2008 if it's set after 5 (which took place in 2009), not to mention that the the official Xbox Marketplace description states that it is set in 2013. Either the story writers goofed with the dates, or this really is an interquel (which seems unlikely, seeing as there was no hint of a global bioterrorism outbreak in 5).
- Who's to say that 6 DOESN'T take place before 5?
- I did note that (hence the words "or this really is an interquel"), I just said it was unlikely (from my point of view). We don't know the full scope of things yet, so there's no need to get riled up. The WMG currently at the bottom of the page which mentions Revelations does bring up an interesting point...
- RE6 does indeed take place in 2013.
- Jossed. None of the game takes place in Spain, no places from RE4 are visited again, and the game does not feature nor mention Ashley.
- Kind of sort of Jossed. They aren't modes per se, but a different type of survival horror was in mind for each segment. Leon's is called "Gothic horror" said to resemble earlier iterations of the series. Chris's segments were called "military horror", likely similar to RE5. Jake's section involves being chased by an unrelenting monster, like Nemesis. They aren't different story modes, though, simply different campaigns.
- Double Jossed. The "bitch" seems to be a new villain, and the third protagonist is Jake Mueller, Wesker's "son."
- Chris's section actually takes place in China, but hey, technicalities. Seeing as this is a series of random, global viral outbreaks and several viruses (the t-virus, G-virus, Progenitor virus, and T-Veronica virus, among others) have passed hands quite frequently, it's very well possible that we're looking at various strands being active at the same time.
- In the latter half of the trailer, you see Chris's team in a village-like area with a castle that resembles Saddler's in the background.
- Jossed. The C-Virus is the only prominent virus in the game and the stories are connected.
- Jossed. The villainess is Carla, who Chris believes to be Ada.
- It would be nice to see the branch titles receive more recognition, as unlikely as that sounds.
- Jossed. Fong Ling is not mentioned.
- According to the RE Wiki, it's a guy named Piers Nivans. He apparently showed up in a manga set before 6 (called Biohazard Marhawa Desire) which deals with the viral outbreak in Asia.
- Dead prior to the game, possibly killed by the antagonist, giving Chris a pretty radical personal vendetta.
- The antagonist, perhaps what happened in Resident Evil 5 is still having an effect on her
- A specimen being used for study by either side of the battle, given her immunity
- Jossed. Jill does not appear and is not mentioned in the game.
- They may have even gotten married - the reasons Jill may not be involved in this mission is either because she's still recovering from the events of the last game and is on leave. However, if she and Chris are together, she could be pregnant with Chris's child and thus on maternity leave.
- It's also possible that they're simply in different areas, seeing as it's a global crisis this time around and Revelations already shows that Chris and Jill are able to work competently with other BSAA members. BSAA might've just split up their best members and sent them separately to the biggest viral hotspots on Earth.
- Confirmed by the E3 2012 trailer. She's working for Neo-Umbrella.
- Or at least Ada is in the game, while an entirely different character may be framing her.
- Jossed. Though this is what the villains want people to think.
- Major Spoilers: The "Ada" Chris wants dead is her Evil Doppelgänger, Carla. The real Ada is offering help to the protagonists.
- Jossed. She does not appear, though she is mentioned for the first time in a game since Code Veronica.
- Jossed. Wesker does not appear.
- Unless I'm remembering things incorrectly, the G-vaccine only suppressed the G-mutation from the G-embryo placed inside Sherry back in 2. Given the heavy focus on genetic experimentation in this series, there's probably some way to induce the mutation once more to a stronger effect that could somehow reverse the effects of the G-vaccine.
- Jossed. Sherry is fine at the game's conclusion.
- Why? Because even though this'll probably be Jossed, right now I honestly can't think of another reason to have an evil clone of the series' most morally ambiguous character as the villain.
- Sort of confirmed, though no character but Ada gets the full story during the game.
- Well, they certainly are receiving a fair amount of shiptease.
- Jossed. There are some Ship Tease moments, but they ultimately just say goodbye and go their own separate ways.
- To further prove this point, watch the E3 trailer where "Ada" is speaking with Simmons about their objective. Listen to the his phrasing. "The major cities around the world will suffer the same fate... at the hands of Neo Umbrella's very own Ada Wong." The way he says it implies that this is actually an imposter (Carla?) acting as Ada.
- Or maybe, it really is Ada! But she pulls a reverse impostor on Neo Umbrella. Maybe she is posing as Carla who is posing as her, so she can relay information to the good guys.
- Jossed. Ada is the real Ada.
- Actually the first troper nailed it pretty accurately. There are two Ada Wongs in the game, Blue Ada Wong, the one committing all the mischief is actually a mutated Carla, real Ada Wong keeps saving you.
- Jossed. Jill does not appear in the game, nor is she mentioned.
- Or the two women could be in a DLC mission working together. That'd be cool too.
- Sadly jossed. Neither one appears.
- Not all that likely. The men Chris lost under his command (they were all men, you can see as Piers shows them to him) six months previous are probably the reason for his depression.
- Jossed. Neither Jill nor Claire appear in the game and Jill isn't even mentioned. Chris's depression comes from the loss of his squad in Edonia.
- It's a feeling I have, given how big the game is and how destructive and action-y it all looks, not to mention the monsters are smarter and faster. Plus the fact that Jake has the blood that could stop the infections, but refuses to give it up unless he's uber-rich.
- Jossed. There is no Apocalypse. The heroes once again save the day.
- And it's implied that Jake's given up on money and is more than willing to help people.
- 3 sets of Heroes, 2 major bad guys. Someone must be pulling the strings, and who better than the man at the top? The Person Leon shot was possibly a clone. Due to Carla/Ada, it's been established Clones exist, and who would have better access to clones than the president?
- Jossed. The real big bad is Carla.
- Derek Simmons also holds this position, to the point that Carla and Simmons are against each other as much as they oppose the protagonists.
- Leon Kennedy has an acid flashback when he is supposed to be guarding the president. Leon goes nuts and shoots the president and the rest of his game is his own schizophrenic breakdown.
- Then Ada's relation to him in this game would be very boring.
- Jossed. Leon's mental health is fine.
- When all (or one) of the campaigns are completed, the label "No Hope Left" will warp into "There's Always Hope".
- In ties with the Epileptic Tree in the pre-release section which states that Chris and Jill got together sometime between 5 and 6. I mean, in both bar scenes (intro cutscene and epilogue) Chris seems to be wearing a necklace. Who knows if that's a locket or just a pendant.
- Belikova's ouster and the joint U.S./Russian intervention into the ESR did little to address the underlying causes of the civil war in the country. As soon as a new government was formed and the Americans and Russians disposed of her B.O.W.'s and left, tensions flared up again and war broke out once more in late 2012. And since Belikova had already had the Elders of the rebel movement disposed of, the new leadership of the rebels had nobody to rein them in and were all too happy to throw in their lot with Neo-Umbrella, thus gaining access to cutting-edge B.O.W.'s and the C-Virus instead of the outdated Lickers and Las Plagas they had been using before. Hence, why this time it is the B.S.A.A. that intervenes instead of America or Russia: Lickers and Plagas are things that are now well-known and modern militaries can deal with them, but the new mutations with unknown abilities that have appeared on the battlefield are better handled by a unit that is specifically formed to handle situations like this.
- For a simpler out-of-universe explanation, having two separate countries in the same general area suffering two civil wars with heavy use of B.O.W.'s seems unnecessarily complex.
- Turns out this is actually Jossed by the Japanese website for Resident Evil 6, which establishes that Edonia and the Eastern Slav Republic are two different countries. However, it does mention that the course of the civil war in Edonia was influenced by the very similar war that went on in the ESR a year prior.
A B.O.W. killed by a fall? Please, by that point she'd been shot, blown up, hit with a rail car and stabbed with her own stinger. She should have laughed off being dropped which is just what she did. The reason she didn't show up again is because she had no way to get to China for the final showdown (which took place over the span of a single night so she would have had to know where the final fight was taking place before the fight started to get there before it ended) and she regained enough of her sanity not to pursue her sister.
Piers, in the six months between the Edonia mission and the Lanshiang outbreak, was given secret assignments to perform while Chris was missing. His participation in these assignments was not to be known about, so he took part under the cover of "Agent". The proof?
- The Agent has the same throw, counters, and roundhouse kicks as Piers.
- The Mercenaries loadout for him has the remote bombs, which Piers has in the Mercenaries. Since the Anti-material rifle could be linked back to him, and because it might be unwieldy depending on the mission, he just opted for a semi-auto sniper rifle.
- As an homage to his captain, he used Chris's neck-breaker in place of his own version. He also used Chris's 909 handgun for similar reasons, but used the survival knife instead of the Combat knife because it was more compact.
- The Agent's coup-de-grace is a hammer punch, to pretend that it wasn't Piers under the mask (Piers used a uppercut for the coup-de-grace).
To cover for the loss of the Agent in future missions, as Piers is dead, the reports on the C-virus outbreak claim that he ended up working with Carla Radames and dying in the aftermath of the attacks caused by Neo-Umbrella in China. Unfortunately, since Ada Wong is framed for Carla's crimes in the beginning, the Agent is retroactively inserted as accompanying Ada/Carla during any encounters she had with field agents who were working in the midst of C-virus outbreaks, like the DSO (Leon and Sherry), the USSS (Helena), or the BSAA (Chris and Piers). This is due to confusion in when the real Ada was met and when it was Carla, and the official reports cannot make the distinction between them without one of the two women testifying and clarifying.
This is probably the most likely scenario for the Agent's backstory. The less likely possibility is that the Agent was created in response to criticism over Ada's lack of a co-op partner, and reused existing animations or assets to create.
And she will come back: powerful, snarky and calling the heroes colossal imbeciles for believing she actually died.
The mutation made Carla's body take over the entire aircraft carrier, and Ada definitely didn't destroy the whole white goo, so there was still some Carla behind when she escaped. As we've seen with Simmons, the subject of the Jake-powered C-Virus mutation can go back to their "human" form, so there's nothing stopping Carla from going back to her human body, even if it's still somewhat mangled as a result of the mutation.
But there's still one thing no one took into account: Carla's current form was created by using the C-Virus. She has it in her body for years, she's perfectly adapted to it. If Simmons, without any high-speed-healing virus in his system, was capable of sustaining a human form so close to his original one after being injected, just imagine what Carla can do. She may even have the capacity to go back to her human form, without the deformations Simmons had, and draw power from the virus, becoming a Wesker-like person.
And, as we've seen throughout the game and in Ada's ending, Carla has a lot of cards up her sleeve, some of which we probably haven't even seen yet. The woman was ready for everything, she's more likely than not to have planned some way to beat death — probably by using the C-Virus in her body in some way, combined or not with the Jake-powered form.
At last, Carla is currently the best candidate to take over Wesker's legacy as the resident (evil) Big Bad. It would be great. (her presence in the multiplayer modes may even be a reference: Wesker had this role in 4 and 5, she's taking over from him)
Sure, he's a bit of loner, so he's going to walk the earth for a while (or, perhaps, clean Edonia from bio-threat), but sooner or later he'll drift to one of B.O.W.-fighting organisations, and chances it will be B.S.A.A are the highest: they're covering him already, he's likely to run into them on his missions, he's got more reasons to trust them than, say, US government, his strength, skill and experience would be much appreciated there, and he can get detailed information on the viruses, his father and his legacy there.
Also, it would be a delicious irony of him joining an organisation that was basically created to oppose his father, and possibly even becoming Chris's subordinate. Both Chris and Jake were heavily affected by the events of the game and have a complicated attitude towards each other, it would be interesting to see them as partners next time...