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Silent Hill f review - a return to form worth sticking with
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Silent Hill f review – a return to form worth sticking with

by admin September 22, 2025


Silent Hill f’s frustrating first-half is outweighed by a brilliant, delirious second that’s well worth the initial slog.

If you take nothing else from me today, just take these three words: stick with it.

Silent Hill f review

  • Developer: NeoBards Entertainment
  • Publisher: Konami
  • Platform: Played on PS5
  • Availability: Out 25th September on PC (Steam), PS5, Xbox Series X/S

If you’d sidled up to me halfway through Silent Hill f, I probably would’ve dropped my voice and advised you to wait for a sale. All the whiny teenage angst is winding me up, and is also more than faintly reminiscent of Silent Hill’s free teaser, The Short Message. I don’t like the combat. For the last hour, I’ve been unsuccessfully playing Inventory Management Sim, spent an embarrassing amount of time lost in a field, and I still can’t really work out what the hell is going on. The (also embarrassing) time I’ve spent wandering through the misty streets of Silent Hill over the years is seemingly of no benefit here, either. In fact, if it wasn’t for Akira Yamaoka et al’s score – which is less recognisably Silent Hill than I’ve ever heard before – I wouldn’t have thought Silent Hill f was a Silent Hill game at all. Which is kind of weird. You know. For a Silent Hill game.

I don’t say that to be difficult. I’m not the fan who only ever wants Silent Hill 2 over and over again (although let’s face it, Remake was exquisite), I don’t automatically despise anything that’s been made by a western studio, but I also don’t blindly accept that everything with Silent Hill on the cover is any good, either (sorry, Ascension). So I came into Silent Hill f cautious, but optimistic.

Here’s a Silent Hill f trailer.Watch on YouTube

But first, some context! Silent Hill f places us in the neat school shoes of teenager Hinako. For reasons that may or may not be explained later, her provincial town, Ebisugaoka, is suddenly submerged into a mysterious fog. The pavements bubble and blister with strange crimson flora, and sinewy strings hang from rooftops like macabre bunting. Unidentifiable fleshy lumps sit about, all haphazard and bloody, as though discarded by a lazy butcher in the sky, but it’s the flowers you need to look out for. One wrong step, and something will curl around your ankle, and you’ll be trypophobia-triggering plant food before you know it.

But none of that is as upsetting as the bloated corpses and twisted marionettes and more – oh-so-much more – that lie in wait across the village. It’s hard to know what’s worse for our Hinako: the deadly denizens or the societal expectations of a teenage girl in 1960s Japan.

But man, those first few hours. People keep doing and saying dumb stuff. The dialogue – teenagery and cringey – is not convincing, and why on earth Hinako and her pals don’t link arms to ensure they stop losing each other in the fog is beyond me. I’d kept myself gloriously spoiler-free coming in, which perhaps means I was less prepared than some for the wild tangents developer NeoBards takes from expected Silent Hill norms, but even the Otherworld is Otherworld-y in a way I absolutely did not expect. Which is again, well, strange. Because if it doesn’t look like a Silent Hill game and doesn’t play like a Silent Hill game, and only sometimes sounds like a Silent Hill game, then is it really a Silent Hill game at all?

And then it just all clicked.

Image credit: Eurogamer / Konami

Not the combat, mind you. I still don’t like it. You’ll have heard some compare it to that of Soulslike games, which isn’t quite right. You’ll spend the game with a pipe or a bat or a sledgehammer in your hand that takes forever to swing, even if you commit to the ostensibly quicker light attacks. The more you attack, the faster you’ll deplete your sad little stamina bar. The more you draw on your focus – which is exactly what it says on the tin; a powered-up focused attack – the quicker you’ll lose your sanity. It’s all pretty standard fare, and I did acclimate to the recommended Story difficulty, but I never quite enjoyed it, I’m afraid. By the time I finished, though, I’m pretty sure that’s more a consequence of the degradable weapons than the combat system itself.

I’ve spent a good chunk of my life in horror games, and know there’s a constant tension between feeling fearful and carefree, which inevitably requires the need to ration health items and weapons as well as liberally deploying ‘Run away! Run away!’ strategies. And while this is fine when you’re, say, fighting enemies outside, when you’re indoors – or in a tight alleyway – it becomes much harder to do that. The more you fight, the faster you’ll exhaust your piddly collection of weapons (you’ll only ever be able to carry three, along with a handful of toolkits to sort-of repair them), which means there was a good fifteens minutes segment where I had no weapon at all, leaving me with absolutely no way to defend myself other than to dodge myself dizzy and hope I make it out alive. Hinako wouldn’t even raise a fist.

Your frustration levels may vary depending on how much time you spend with Soulslike games, but for me, SHf’s combat isn’t challenging as much as it’s clunky. I had attacks phase through targets without a dent, dodges not dodge, and never seemed to have enough bloody stamina, even by the endgame. And when she comes out of a dodge, Hinako stands there until you remind her that she’s supposed to be running for her life – it becomes a self-defeating move, often leaving you wide open for a deadly own goal.

Image credit: Konami

The most grievous crime, though: as a long-time Silent Hill fan, it’s extraordinarily difficult to do any real exploration of the world. The grim cocktail of clumsy combat, degradable weapons, and ferocious enemies makes it extraordinarily difficult to do so. That said, about halfway through, you’ll land yourself an Otherworldly, er, upgrade (of sorts). Even if I could tell you about it I wouldn’t, but I will admit that it brought a new twist to combat that I was not expecting, but was very happy to have. Let’s leave it at that.

As for the enemy you’ll find yourself fighting more than any other? The one you’ll never quite get under control? Your inventory.

There are three things you can do when you reach a shrine: save, enshrine, and pray. The latter two ostensibly allow you to upgrade your health, stamina, and sanity bars, although doing so requires you to sacrifice the meagre collection of goodies you’ve amassed as ‘offerings’ or locate one of the vanishingly few ’emas’ found secreted across the game. Initially, I felt as though I’d never have enough items to sacrifice to build up my Faith deposit (the closest the game has to a currency), and later, I’d amassed loads of Faith, but must’ve missed some emas, so I couldn’t upgrade anything. Ho hum.

Image credit: Eurogamer / Konami

You can also utilise a pool of passive skills in the form of Omanoris that you pick up along the way, although I have very little else to say on that given I barely touched them after finding one that helped boost Hinako’s stamina a bit.

I don’t think I’d care as much about Hinako’s tight inventory if we were able to pick and choose what we take and what we leave behind, but switch a bandage to make room for a first aid kit, for example, and that bandage will be gone forever. And sure, some stuff stacks, but many others do not, so it’s particularly galling that you have to make room in your minuscule inventory for those aforementioned offerings, too.

I can’t even tell you what they all do, either. You can recover health, sanity, and stamina in different amounts and ways. Some of it’s pretty self-explanatory – bandages, first aid kits, and so on – whereas the rest, such as Divine Water (fully restores Max Sanity and reduces Sanity drain for a bit), Ramune (greatly restores Max Sanity), Arare (slightly restores Health, but the effect increases when used continuously) are more difficult to keep track of at the best of times. At their worst – say, when you’re in the heat of battle and your pop-up inventory only shows you a tiny icon – they’re infuriating.

And yet there I was, teeth clenched, beating a bulbous…. something – I don’t even know how to describe it! – to death with a crowbar, absolutely hell-bent on seeing this through to the end. I had to see it through. Hinako’s story took a wild pivot the moment I realised what was happening in her Otherworld, and halfway through this bewildering adventure, I realised how stupid I’d been for chalking this up to nowt more than a teen drama with a Silent Hill logo slapped on top of it.

Image credit: Eurogamer / Konami

Yes, SHf deliberately side-steps much of what makes Silent Hill games Silent Hill – there’s no torch, no radio static, not even any rust – but that doesn’t mean it’s a misstep. Its world is still tense and atmospheric. The monsters delight and disgust in equal measure. The ambient sounds are genuinely terrifying. It’s not the same as Silent Hill 2 Remake, no, and I don’t think it’s as scary, but it’s every bit as unsettling, believe me.

It’s almost as though the second half of the game is your reward for getting through the first, pivoting in such devilishly dark ways I couldn’t have predicted it if there was a gun at my head.

Hinako’s Otherworld may not look like any Otherworld we’ve seen before, given the rusty fences and blood-smeared grates have been replaced by dark temples and shrines, but it feels every bit as foreboding. Slowly, methodically, you’ll piece together what, exactly, brought Hinako to this place, and over a number of Otherworldly visits (visits that do not include degradable weapons: huzzah!) you’ll learn things about her you may never have suspected, and even more about what more she’s prepared to sacrifice… both literally and figuratively. Whereas other Silent Hill games have essentially presented a Western idea of horror, SHf unapologetically embraces its roots in ways I couldn’t even imagine. And it’s here, in the unmentionable and often indescribable parts of Silent Hill f, that writer Ryukishi07’s profoundly unsettling story really shines.

So while no, this doesn’t negate the clumsy combat, per se, it makes that first-half slog more than worth it.

Plus, it’s a beautiful place when it’s not scaring the bejesus out of you, rich with detail and interest. There’s a fair bit of backtracking – which again, makes that tiny inventory that much more of an issue; a number of times I cleared a place out and discarded an item to make room for another, thinking I’d never be there again, only to return two hours later and could’ve desperately done with it – but you’ll get to poke about in all kinds of places across Ebisugaoka, even if you’re rarely rewarded for stepping off the beaten path. And in keeping with its predecessors, Silent Hill f is not overt with its messaging, which means you should make a point of scouring for discarded notes and checking in with Hinako’s journal as you meander across town.

Image credit: Eurogamer / Konami

Talking of Hinako’s journal: it’s a lifeline when it comes to SHf’s puzzles. I played on Hard – the recommended setting for those looking for a “traditional Silent Hill experience” – and found all but one early scary(crow – if you know, you know) puzzle and the final brain teaser a breeze, thanks to the copious notes Hinako jots down as she goes. The environmental puzzling was tougher – figure out how to get here, do that, now go there, etc. – but again, not overly taxing, making it probably one of the easiest Silent Hill games thus far in this respect.

Silent Hill f accessibility options

There’s a colourblind accessibility setting as well as colourblind “intensity”, and the ability to adjust sound by music, SFX, voice, system, or together. You can also toggle on/off running, invert cameras, and turn off vibration. Subtitles can be enlarged, given specific fonts/colours, a coloured background, and show who is speaking. There is no “easy” difficulty mode for either combat or puzzles. CW for trypophobia and torture.

It’s not the puzzles that are going to make or break Silent Hill f, though – it’ll be that combat. I stand here as someone with average-ish dexterity, poor impulse control, and a core-deep hatred of boss fights, so I like to think that if I can get through it, most of the series’s older fans should cope okay, too, despite the surprising decision to omit an easy mode. For different reasons, the story – and several of its gobsmacking cinematic sequences – similarly requires a strong stomach. Silent Hill has never shied away from mature and complex themes, so it may be prudent to note the content warning when you boot up. (To that end: it advises there’ll be depictions of gender discrimination, child abuse, bullying, drug-induced hallucinations, torture, and graphic violence – and boy howdy, do they deliver on that, as well as trypophobia, which is not listed in the content warning but will absolutely be a deal-breaker for some. Proceed with caution.)

There’s more I want to tell you, of course. Loads, actually, although I’m not convinced you’d believe half of what I witnessed in the twelve-ish hours it took to reach the end. I want to talk about the enemies, the Otherworld, and the multiple endings. But even if Konami’s barbed wire-laden embargo wasn’t preventing me from telling you more, I wouldn’t want to spoil the surprise, anyway. You really should experience Silent Hill f’s final act for yourself.

And given that, I’ll conclude as I started, and leave you three more words to take away: Don’t read anymore. If this has left you curious, close this tab, avoid social media and further reviews or streams, and let yourself experience Silent Hill f first hand. You’ll either thank me for it or hate me for it, but either way, you’ll have a hell of a time.

A copy of Silent Hill f was provided for this review by Konami.



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September 22, 2025 0 comments
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Lego Voyagers review - sticking together even when miles apart
Game Updates

Lego Voyagers review – sticking together even when miles apart

by admin September 15, 2025


A game so lovely it’s hard not to feel sad when it’s all over. A brief adventure that will leave a lasting impression.

It’s nice to have a friend. More than one if you’re lucky. My memories of childhood friends are predictably tied to the era: Sunny D, Apple Fruitang, MTV, bikes, and VHS tapes are all there, hanging around the back of my mind. Surprisingly, though, it’s stupidly long walks that I remember most fondly, although rather hazily. Like most kids before they had jobs (a paper round came some years later), we didn’t have much money, and what we did have we wanted to spend on sweets, so we’d often walk miles to avoid getting a bus – we even had a squeaky metal trolley we’d wheel about to carry all our stuff as we ventured to the distant pitch-and-put or tennis courts.

Lego Voyagers review

  • Publisher: Annapurna Interactive
  • Developer: Light Brick Studio
  • Platform: Played on PS5
  • Availability: Out now on PC, Xbox Series X|S, PS5, and Switch

Friendships are different as adults. There’s less time, more commitments, and unwanted organisation, and nary a single chewy sweet or gobstopper in sight (good news that gobstoppers mostly disappeared, to be honest – I have no idea how generations of children were allowed to wallop cricket balls into their mouths without anyone wondering if it was a bad idea). Good friends click into place at any time, though, as if you just saw each other yesterday even if it’s been “way too long”. Anyway, back to this review before I digress even further from the point. I played Lego Voyagers with my son, someone who still remembers what it’s like to not care about anything but the moment, and who sees the joy in heading out to do something, even if that thing hasn’t been neatly detailed in a group WhatsApp. He also hasn’t dealt with friendships drifting as they tend to do, daily pals turning into occasional hellos shared over huge distances.

Watch on YouTube

Lego Voyagers then, the sort-of-sequel to the Light Brick Studio’s Lego Builder’s Journey, is an entirely co-op adventure. Whereas Builder’s Journey asks you to build using Lego bricks to solve movement puzzles in a string of connected but singular dioramas, Voyagers offers up open levels to explore and characters (single red and blue blocks with an eye each, and an ability to shout out twee, nonsensical noises, which somehow makes them seem more alive than their simple shape should allow) who do the building themselves. It makes for a markedly different experience, that feels like more of an adventure with puzzles than a series of puzzles that take you through a story. It’s also one of the best depictions of friendship I’ve seen in a video game, handled with the most beautifully soft touch.

Character in the industry’s most traditional Lego games comes from an exuberant sense of fun and lampooning, the Lego versions of famous heroes and villains playing caricatures, often brilliantly, but more pantomime than West End. Lego Voyagers manages to convey character subtly, using music, sounds, and small movements rather than slapstick. One moment, which proves to be key in the second half of the game, caused my son to become close to rage, but if I were to explain it here it’d seem like nothing at all. Small things, and in this case, bricks, matter.

You do the actual placing of bricks, which gives you a stronger connection to the world than in most Lego games. | Image credit: Eurogamer/Light Brick Studio

Voyagers isn’t a difficult game, nor a long one, my son and I clocking just under four hours as we casually made our way to the finale. It heavily promotes working together, though, similar to how my wife might hold a door open while I push the buggy through. Neither task there is difficult (unless you’re dealing with an unusually obstinate door), but attempt to do both on your own and you’ll be reversing into a coffee shop pulling off moves usually reserved for a game of Twister (of course I’ve never played Twister, but I can imagine it!).

This is Lego Voyagers, two friends jumping and rolling through a Lego world, building blocks and activating contraptions in order to continue onwards. Sometimes you simply need to build up bricks to reach a high platform, occasionally you’ll be required to fix something by finding the right Lego bricks, from time to time there are some platforming sequences that rely on using a machine to aid you, there’s a train, a dump truck, and a rocket.

This looks like nothing, but it was the cause of multiple family humps. | Image credit: Eurogamer/Light Brick Studio

The rocket, parts of which appear on Red and Blue’s idyllic remote island home after a failed launch, is central to the pair’s voyage through the world – finding where it’s manufactured, fixing it up, and eventually much more. It’s the joining tissue in what often feels like a lazy afternoon hangout, a stress-free stroll. Sure, I admit to raising my voice when my son and I had different ideas of what “forward” meant while co-driving a vehicle, and my wife had to put headphones on when we took turns arguing over which of us had the more difficult job flying and landing a miniature space craft, but this is largely a game you move through rather than work through. There’s no peril, no sense of disaster, fear, or worry, just a bit of good natured squabbling. Nothing that a joke or two can’t fix.

Lego Voyagers accessibility options

None.

As we reached what I saw to be the start of the end of our adventure, I said to my son: “I don’t think you’re going to like what is happening here.” As this panned out, almost exactly as I predicted, I was right. He didn’t like it, but it felt right – the final moments about as perfect as I can imagine this story could be. As a short but sweet puzzle-adventure game, Lego Voyagers handles itself with an air of grace but no snootiness – a game so lovely it’s hard not to feel sad when it’s all over. Look deeper though, or simply from the privilege of age, and it’ll leave a more lasting impression on those of us who know what proper friendship feels like. Sometimes a little “hello” is all you need.

A copy of Lego Voyagers was provided for this review by Annapurna Interactive. A single copy of Lego Voyagers can be played co-op online (via the Friend’s Pass) or on the same console.

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September 15, 2025 0 comments
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