Silent Hill F Review — 'Paints a Bright Future for the Franchise'
5 Articles
5 Articles
The Rubius is disappointed with Silent Hill f for this aspect of Konami's survival horror and acknowledges that it takes him out of the experience to play it live.
This week, we turn off the lights and we tremble in the dark... and even in the light, in the middle of the fields of the Japanese countryside of the 1960s. Welcome to "Silent Hill f", the most exhilarating of the games of the series, and at the same time the one who is most faithful to his codes.
Silent Hill f Review - Trading Fog for Flowers and Fear
The Silent Hill series is usually associated with its fog-covered little town, somewhere deep in America. The games began with Harry Mason searching for his daughter, continued with James Sunderland returning to the mythical town, and then followed Heather Mason as she faced her own personal reasons for being drawn back. All of this culminated in Silent Hill 4, which expanded the story of the town to the outside world. I am not a lore expert on …
Silent Hill f review — 'paints a bright future for the franchise'
Platforms: PS5, Xbox Series X|S, PC Silent Hill f wants you to forget everything you think you know about the long-running horror franchise. Rather than being set in the eponymous American town, it takes players to the fictional town of Ebisugaoka in 1960s Japan. Meanwhile, the focus on new protagonist Hinako Shimizu, a 16-year-old girl practically drowning in typical teenage drama, feels a massive departure from the likes of previous moody lead…
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