Silent Hill: Homecoming review (2025)

Table of Contents
GamesRadar+ Verdict More info

GamesRadar+ Verdict

Pros

  • +

    Suitably atmospheric

  • +

    New twists in the Silent Hill story

  • +

    Gets increasingly better

Cons

  • -

    Combat is too easy

  • -

    Dull first few hours

  • -

    A million locked doors

Why you can trust GamesRadar+Our experts review games, movies and tech over countless hours, so you can choose the best for you. Find out more about our reviews policy.

"Things have changed around here, and not for the better,” utters one of the first characters Silent Hill: Homecoming protagonist Alex meets upon returning to his hometown, Shepherd’s Glen. He’s right. Or rather, half right, for while there’s some cause for complaint here, many of the series’ standout signature features are present and correct.

Positives first. Despite our initial reservations, SH: Homecoming’s environments range from creepy to disturbing to absolutely bloody terrifying, despite the parody-verging familiarity of foggy streets. Current-gen’s power has been used well, with jumping shadows and flickering illuminations making exploration a nerve-shredding affair. The locales you visit in both the real world – which, like earlier games is enveloped in thin fog, giving an almost sepia effect – and the infamously horrible Otherworld are rendered nicely. The selection of monsters is fairly imaginative, with their disjointed limbs, zipped faces and hooks for hands.

Silent Hill: Homecoming review (1)

As ever, it’s the audio that really ramps up the tension. Akira Yamaoka’s score is delightfully eerie, while the wailing of babies and ghostly whispered chatter – along with the radio static that signals impending nightmare creature discomfort – is suitably haunting. The narrative builds on the series’ mythology, with the first act of the game taking place in the aforementioned Shepherd’s Glen, a town that borders Toluca Lake, which fans will remember from previous games as being the lake next to Silent Hill itself. Without resorting to spoilers, the fates of the two towns prove to be inextricably intertwined.

How they’re connected, and how his family comes to be caught up in the Otherworldly events, is the mystery that Alex must unravel. In traditional fashion, discovering and reading notes, letters, diaries, pictures and even recordings on cassette tapes pushes the story along. You’ll also chat to the occasional supporting character and there are plenty of flashbacks too. It’s all rather standard psychological horror fare, but we’ve no real complaints in the narrative department. Sadly, Homecoming’s game mechanics are where things deteriorate.

Silent Hill: Homecoming review (2)

Whereas previous lead characters were vulnerable (Harry in SH on PSone didn’t know how to shoot a gun, for example, hence his aim was woeful for the first few hours of play), Alex is a discharged soldier who, understandably, knows how to fight. He can execute light and strong melee attacks, which can be melded into combos, and he also has the ability to dodge. As such, even when you’re only armed with rubbish weapons, you never feel particularly threatened in a fight and the monsters are easy to overcome whether they attack alone or in groups. Later in the game you get access to firearms. As befits a soldier, Shepherd is an excellent shot and with melee attacks being effective against all the standard monsters you can save your bullets for the bosses, who become relatively simple to defeat.

Silent Hill: Homecoming review (3)

While the game establishes a palpable sense of tension and fear, it’s betrayed by the hero’s relative invulnerability. The other core element is puzzle-solving. The conundrums start off as dismal affairs – find item A, take to location B, use on item C – but they do get more teasing. There are several complex slide puzzles where you need to move things about in correct order (books, for example), made harder since your choices don’t reset, and mistakes accumulate.

SH: Homecoming improves rapidly after a dull first few hours, but you can’t escape the feeling that it’s a pseudo pastiche of Silent Hill 2, with clunky cameos from Pyramid Head and nods to previous events. EA’s Dead Space offers similar slow burning tension, but with a relatively fresh setting and punchier visuals. If Konami can preserve the psychological chills, emerge from SH2’s shadow and subvert the gameplay template they mastered, our favourite horror series will be essential again.

Oct 14, 2008

More info

GenreAction
DescriptionThe fifth entry in the dark-as-death survival horror series improves rapidly after a dull first few hours, but you can’t escape the feeling that it’s a pseudo pastiche of Silent Hill 2, with clunky cameos from Pyramid Head and nods to previous events.
Franchise nameSilent Hill
UK franchise nameSilent Hill
Platform"Xbox 360","PS3","PC"
US censor rating"Mature","Mature","Mature"
UK censor rating"","",""
Alternative names"Silent Hill V","Silent Hill 5"
Release date1 January 1970 (US), 1 January 1970 (UK)

More

Categories

Nick_Ellis

Latest in Silent Hill

Silent Hill f hasn't actually been banned in Australia, but it's not out of the woods yet
Silent Hill f has been pre-emptively banned in Australia, with no reason given for the 'refused classification' rating
Famed Silent Hill artist Masahiro Ito, creator of Pyramid Head, says scrapped concepts of freaky creatures "still exist in my mind" and "their children may be" used in future titles
Silent Hill f: Everything we know about the new survival horror game
Silent Hill 2 remake dev says he was "afraid there might be no good way" to rebuild the classic game without "archaic solutions and mechanics"
After Silent Hill 2 helped Bloober Team redeem itself, is the once-controversial studio poised to become horror's latest darling?

Latest in Reviews

Zombicide 2nd Edition review: "Like a zombie flick brought to tabletop"
Razer Handheld Dock review: “Your Steam Deck will ride shiny and Chroma"
Agricola review: "Accurate representation of the highly competitive and often unstable world of agriculture"
Shure MV7i review - convenience and excellence rolled into one superb sounding package
Atomfall review: "This isn't British Fallout – it's something much better than that"
Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro 75% review: "a niche luxury"

Latest

One Google Pixel 9a feature could make it a better gaming phone than most budget mainstream modelsI'm about to spend over $400 on this iconic T60 Power Armor figurine because "Communism is the very definition of failure"Sorry, Adolescence season 2 isn't happening, despite its 99% Rotten Tomatoes score and record-breaking Netflix audience

See more latest

Most Popular

Zombicide 2nd Edition review: "Like a zombie flick brought to tabletop"
Razer Handheld Dock review: “Your Steam Deck will ride shiny and Chroma"
Agricola review: "Accurate representation of the highly competitive and often unstable world of agriculture"
Shure MV7i review - convenience and excellence rolled into one superb sounding package
Atomfall review: "This isn't British Fallout – it's something much better than that"
inZOI review: "Currently feels like a soulless imitation of the worst parts of The Sims"
Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro 75% review: "a niche luxury"
Razer Basilisk V3 Pro 35K review: "hampered by its predecessor"
Assassin's Creed Shadows review: "More confidence, texture, and purpose than we've seen since Assassin's Creed pivoted into RPG territory"
Alienware AW2725Q review: “I dare you to try and spot this QD-OLED 4K monitor’s pixels”
Silent Hill: Homecoming review (2025)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Recommended Articles
Article information

Author: Reed Wilderman

Last Updated:

Views: 6444

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (72 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Reed Wilderman

Birthday: 1992-06-14

Address: 998 Estell Village, Lake Oscarberg, SD 48713-6877

Phone: +21813267449721

Job: Technology Engineer

Hobby: Swimming, Do it yourself, Beekeeping, Lapidary, Cosplaying, Hiking, Graffiti

Introduction: My name is Reed Wilderman, I am a faithful, bright, lucky, adventurous, lively, rich, vast person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.