Evil Dead Regeneration | The

7/10 – Groovy, but flawed. “Hail to the king, baby.”

Cranky Pants Games Publisher: THQ Platforms: PlayStation 2, Xbox, PC Release Date: 2005 Overview The Evil Dead: Regeneration is the third video game adaptation of Sam Raimi’s cult-classic horror-comedy franchise, but unlike its predecessors ( Hail to the King and A Fistful of Boomstick ), this one doesn’t even try to play it straight. Instead, Regeneration embraces the over-the-top slapstick, gore, and one-liners that made Army of Darkness a fan favorite, while carving out its own alternate continuity. Written with input from series star Bruce Campbell, the game delivers a deranged, foul-mouthed, and gloriously ridiculous take on Ash Williams’ eternal war against Deadites. Story (Spoiler-Free Summary) The plot kicks off with Ash locked away in a mental institution following the events of Evil Dead II (ignoring Army of Darkness entirely). A doctor, attempting to use the Necronomicon Ex-Mortis for research, accidentally unleashes a horde of Deadites. Ash, freed from his cell, faces a new threat: a half-Deadite creature named Sam, whom Ash reluctantly adopts as a dim-witted, chainsaw-wielding sidekick. Together, they must stop a madman from merging the human world with the Evil dimension. The story is nonsense—gloriously, intentionally so—and serves mainly as a vehicle for Ash’s insults, Sam’s burbling, and creative demon-slaying. Gameplay Unlike the survival-horror leanings of the earlier titles, Regeneration is a pure action-brawler with light puzzle elements. Ash uses his signature boomstick (shotgun) and chainsaw arm, but the key twist is the leash system. Ash can command Sam to crawl into vents, attack enemies, or solve environmental puzzles. Combat is visceral and comically gory: enemies can be dismembered, decapitated, or exploded into showers of pixelated blood. The camera sits behind Ash in a third-person view, and while the controls feel clunky by modern standards, the sheer absurdity of the violence carries the experience. Tone and Humor This is where Regeneration truly shines. Bruce Campbell voices Ash with his trademark swagger, delivering lines that range from smug (“Come get some, you ugly sons of bitches!”) to hilariously exasperated when dealing with Sam. The game doesn’t shy away from dark humor—Ash can kick downed enemies for extra damage, Sam eats rotting flesh to heal, and the script mocks horror tropes relentlessly. The ESRB slapped it with an “M” for “Blood and Gore, Intense Violence, Strong Language,” and the game wears that rating like a badge of honor. Graphics and Sound For a mid-2005 title, Regeneration looks dated but characterful. Environments are dingy corridors, cursed forests, and hellish dimensions, all rendered in muted browns and reds. The character models are exaggerated—Ash’s chin could cut glass, and Sam is a hunchbacked gremlin with a stitched mouth. The sound design is a highlight: shotgun blasts echo satisfyingly, chainsaws roar, and the Deadites shriek Campbell’s name (“Ash… Ash…”). The metal-infused soundtrack, while generic, keeps the energy high. Reception and Legacy Critics were mixed: Regeneration holds a Metacritic score in the low 60s. Complaints focused on repetitive combat, short length (6–8 hours), and technical issues (especially on PC). However, among Evil Dead fans, it’s a cult classic. It understands the franchise better than any other game: it’s stupid, loud, and never takes itself seriously. In an era of grim horror games, Regeneration chose to be a cartoonish splatterfest with jokes about exploding groins. Verdict The Evil Dead: Regeneration isn’t a great game by traditional standards, but it’s a fantastic Evil Dead simulator. If you want tense survival horror, play Alien: Isolation . If you want to see Ash Williams kick a miniature Deadite sidekick through a portal while yelling “Groovy,” this is your masterpiece. For fans of Bruce Campbell’s one-liners and Raimi’s manic energy, it’s a bloody, hilarious time capsule worth digging up. the evil dead regeneration

Here’s a write-up on The Evil Dead: Regeneration : The Evil Dead: Regeneration (2005) – Ash’s Most Unhinged Adventure 7/10 – Groovy, but flawed