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'Silent Hill f’ turns 1960s Japan’s cultural traumas into terrifying monsters that stalk the mind and streets

Making cultural trauma the real monster

Silent Hill f

The game explores patriarchal pressures, rigid traditions, and social trauma

YouTube/PlayStation

Highlights:

  • Konami’s Silent Hill f is the first brand-new entry in the franchise in over a decade.
  • The story follows Hinako, a teenage girl in 1960s Japan, whose personal struggles transform into supernatural horror.
  • The game explores patriarchal pressures, rigid traditions, and social trauma as central themes.
  • Critics hail it as one of the series’ strongest entries since Silent Hill 2.

A return to form with a new vision

After years of lackluster releases, the Silent Hill franchise has made a striking comeback. Following last year’s acclaimed remake of Silent Hill 2, Konami has released Silent Hill f, a completely new chapter that proves the series still has the power to terrify and provoke.


Rather than revisit familiar settings, Silent Hill f takes players to a rural Japanese village in the 1960s. Its protagonist, Hinako, begins her journey with seemingly ordinary problems: family tensions, the pressures of marriage, and friendships under strain. But those everyday troubles soon unravel into a nightmare that blurs the line between psychological torment and supernatural horror.

Society as the true monster

Where earlier Silent Hill titles confronted players with personal guilt and trauma, Silent Hill f goes further by embedding those fears within a cultural context. Hinako’s descent into madness is tied not only to her inner demons but also to the suffocating weight of societal norms.

Rigid expectations of women, patriarchal structures, and the burden of reputation all manifest in the game’s shifting environments and monstrous imagery. This makes Silent Hill f more than just a horror game; it becomes a meditation on how collective pressures can corrode individual identity.

A narrative layered with mystery

The story is steeped in ambiguity, carefully revealing fragments of truth while leaving much unanswered. Who is the masked man that haunts Hinako? What secrets lie in her strained relationships? Like the best of the series, Silent Hill f forces players to question whether the protagonist is losing her mind, or if the world itself is collapsing into madness.

This layered storytelling ensures replay value, with fans already dissecting its symbols, puzzles, and unanswered questions.

Gameplay strengths and flaws

Konami’s attention to atmosphere and cutscene direction elevates Silent Hill f into one of the most cinematic entries in the series. Its pacing is relentless, the puzzles are inventive, and the difficulty curve feels finely tuned, even on Story mode.

The main criticism has been its heavy reliance on combat. With a range of attack mechanics, light, heavy, focus, and counters, some players may find the frequent fights overbearing. Yet, even these moments are narratively justified, woven into Hinako’s struggle.

Silent Hill f - Reveal Trailer | PS5 Games

A franchise reborn

For many fans, Silent Hill 2 has long stood as the series’ gold standard. Yet Silent Hill f earns its place beside it, not by imitation but by reinvention. By grounding its horror in the social anxieties of a specific time and place, it delivers a fresh kind of dread, one that lingers well after the screen fades to black.

Konami’s decision to push the franchise into new territory has paid off. Silent Hill f is not just a strong comeback, it is one of the finest horror games in years.