The GameOn Magazine Issue 61 | Page 15

Articles 5 Games That Will Terrify You for Halloween introduction of the Silent Hill series onto the wildly popular PlayStation 2 console made some tough guys and girls quiver as they made their way through…Silent Hill (the town, not the game. Actually, both. Carry on.). While the game isn’t exactly a direct sequel to the original, the creep factor nonetheless remains at a 10 out of 10 as protagonist James Sunderland visits the town in response to a letter sent to him by his deceased wife, Maria. From there, all hell breaks loose, but not in the conventional, Issue 61 • November 2014 guns blazing at zombies scenario that many of us have come to expect from games like these. In contrast, the true brilliance of Silent Hill 2 rests in its ability to affect the mind of the player by constantly forcing one to question whether what is being seen is “real.” The game has been described as a tribute to the films of David Lynch, and this strikes me as pretty spot on. One consequence of this is, like with most Lynch films, the game can be somewhat polarizing for those who enjoy the more mindless experiences of hack and slash titles (Diablo) and traditional shooters (Call of Duty, Battlefield). This is in no way a knock on those games, as they undoubtedly have their respective places held tight within the modern video game lexicon, but there is something unique and special about the psychological warfare that takes place from start to finish in Silent Hill 2. Think this might be your cup of tea? Give it a whirl—it’s been remastered and added to updated collections more times than I cried during my first playthrough. 15 • GameOn Magazine