Resident Evil 3 Remake (Jill and Carlos) - Part 5 - Police station: defeat the monster

Resident Evil 3 Remake (Jill and Carlos) - Part 5 - Police station: defeat the monster

Resident Evil 3 is a survival horror video game that is played from an over-the-shoulder, third-person perspective. Although the player controls Resident Evil protagonist Jill Valentine through most of the game, certain sections require the player to control a supporting character, Carlos Oliveira, for short periods. The player must explore the environment to open doors, climb up ladders, and pick up items. When an item is collected, it is stored in an inventory that can be accessed at any time. Items in the inventory can be used, examined, and combined to solve puzzles and gain access to areas that were previously inaccessible. The player may also pick up maps to reveal unexplored sections in the game's automap, which shows the player's current position and indicates if an area still has items to collect. Resident Evil 3 is set in Raccoon City after most of its citizens have been turned into zombies due to an outbreak of the T-virus, a mutant virus secretly developed by the pharmaceutical company Umbrella. Former Special Tactics And Rescue Service (S.T.A.R.S.) member Jill Valentine meets up with fellow S.T.A.R.S. officer Brad Vickers shortly after being attacked by an intelligent bioweapon known as the Nemesis-T Type in her apartment. While trying to find a safe place, Brad is killed by a zombie and Jill is confronted by Nemesis once again. Umbrella Biohazard Countermeasure Service (U.B.C.S.) mercenary Carlos Oliveira saves Jill, explaining that he and his group of surviving U.B.C.S. mercenaries—Mikhail Victor, Tyrell Patrick, and Nicholai Ginovaef—have set up subway trains which they plan to use to evacuate civilians from the city. Jill helps them reactivate power to the subway and then departs on a train with Nicholai and Mikhail, while Carlos and Tyrell remain in the city to search for Dr. Nathaniel Bard, an Umbrella scientist who might know how to make a vaccine for the T-virus.