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Raccoon City

Raccoon City is a fictional city depicted in the Resident Evil series of survival horror video games developed by Capcom. A central location for the franchise; an underground lab for the evil Umbrella Corporation was constructed beneath it, unbeknownst to most of its citizens. The lab covertly manufactures deadly bioweapons and monsters, the unauthorized release of which causes a zombie apocalypse within the city from which various characters, including Leon S. Kennedy, Claire Redfield, and Jill Valentine, must escape, the latter while pursued by the bioweapons.

Concept and design
The original Resident Evil was initially intended as a remake of the 1989 video game Sweet Home, which took place in a haunted mansion in the Japanese countryside, but Capcom no longer held the rights. Therefore, producer Tokuro Fujiwara and director Shinji Mikami searched for ideas for a new setting entirely. They drew heavy inspiration from the works of horror filmmaker George A. Romero, who shot his zombie films in the environs of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and decided to go with an "Anytown, USA" setting to appeal to a Western audience. The city was initially named "Harnbee", but was renamed to "Raccoon City". While a longstanding theory is that the city was named after the tanuki, which features heavily in pop culture, the name refers specifically to the North American mammal due to its purposeful English transliteration. In the Resident Evil 2 remake, Raccoon City's skyline is based on those from Montreal, Quebec in Central Canada. ==Appearances==
Appearances
In video games In the canon of the video games, Raccoon City is located in the Midwestern United States. Founded in the 1800s, it was largely unremarkable until the 1960s, when Oswell E. Spencer commissioned the construction of Spencer Mansion in the Arklay Mountains near the city. A research facility was constructed beneath that served as the basis for Umbrella Corporation's research. Umbrella expanded into Raccoon City, revitalizing its economy and becoming its largest employer. Meanwhile, they built two massive NEST facilities under the city that developed BOWs, or bio-organic weapons. Raccoon City appears as one of the levels in Capcom's Under the Skin. A replica of the town is featured in Umbrella Corps. In films ''. Raccoon City is depicted in the films as a 21st-century cosmopolitan city with an infrastructure largely funded by the Umbrella Corporation. The first film features the Hive as a secret laboratory under the city. Housing more than 500 employees, the facility has an artificial intelligence, the Red Queen, controlling its security. The theft and deliberate release of the T-virus starts the chain of events depicted in the opening of the first film. Although the Hive is sealed off at the end of the film, it is reopened in Resident Evil: Apocalypse, the second film, by the Umbrella Corporation. Infected creatures spread out of the re-opened Hive into Raccoon City and Umbrella places the city under quarantine. In an attempt to stop the spread of the T-virus, Umbrella destroys Raccoon City with a nuclear missile near the end of the film. In the third film, it is revealed that this does not stop the virus from spreading; within five years the human race is on the verge of extinction, and the vast majority of the Earth is a barren wasteland crawling with zombies and mutated animals. Instead of creating large sets for Raccoon City and the Hive, the film crew filmed on location at Toronto, Canada and Berlin, Germany. Due to the fictional city being located in the Midwestern United States, the film's director Paul Anderson chose Toronto to serve as the fictional city. In the third installment, Extinction, there is a brief shot of Raccoon City: the camera zooms out from Raccoon city to a view of the Earth - in this shot, Raccoon City is depicted somewhere in either Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, or Ohio. The city was filmed untouched; many of its prominent features, such as its city hall and the CN Tower, are visible. For the underground train station in the Hive, Anderson chose to film in the Berlin U-Bahn. He said the atmosphere of the underground labyrinth structure was conducive to the acting and promoted a sense of realism and mood in the production. Resident Evil: Extinction features another Hive in Death Valley, which is used for the research of a cure to the T-virus and of the Tyrant Program. The Hive The Hive is a fictional underground research facility located beneath Raccoon City and operated by the Umbrella Corporation. The Hive is the primary location for the development of the T-virus. In Resident Evil, the Hive is the location of the outbreak, contrary to the video game series where the outbreak began in the mansion facility. Prior to the destruction of Raccoon City and the virus outbreak, the Hive became defunct. Welcome to Raccoon City In the 2021 reboot Resident Evil: Welcome to Raccoon City, which follows the games' story more closely than the previous film series, Raccoon City appears as a setting, although it is at the same time as the events of Resident Evil, rather than two months after that, as in Resident Evil 2. Greater Sudbury, Ontario, Canada was used as the set for the film. Resident Evil (2026 film) In the upcoming 2026 reboot as an original story set in the Resident Evil universe, Raccoon City will be the main setting. Prague of the Czech Republic was used as the set for the film. In television In the 2022 Netflix series set in its own universe featuring the games' storyline as its backstory and basis, New Raccoon City was constructed in South Africa following the destruction of Raccoon City. Like its namesake, it saw heavy investment from the Umbrella Corporation, which used it for drug and bioweapons research until the T-virus was leaked, turning the world into a post-apocalyptic landscape. In novels In the novelizations by S.D. Perry, Raccoon City is depicted in Pennsylvania. == Reception ==
Reception
Charlie Lopresto of IGN called the city an "iconic" location in zombie fiction, comparing it to "holy horror spaces like the Monroeville Mall and the Winchester pub". They also called the city undoubtedly the star of Resident Evil: Requiem. MeriStation analyzed the design of the city in the original Resident Evil 2 and 3 and said it resembles more a Japanese city than an American one due to the narrow streets. Virtual Cities: An Atlas & Exploration of Video Game Cities described the city in the original Resident Evil 2 feeling "as if it actually existed before the zombies", saying it's more than "a cardboard prop connecting indoor levels". Both the zombies and city roads were said to be "typical and representative enough to paint images of a wider town before the catastrophe". == References ==
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