Silent Hill 2

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Silent Hill 2
A video game cover. At the top is the PlayStation 2 logo, followed by a distorted, green-tinted close-up of the side of a person's face above the Silent Hill 2 logo. At the bottom is the Entertainment Software Rating Board's rating of the game as Mature, and Konami's logo.
Developer(s) Konami Computer Entertainment Tokyo
Creature Labs (PC)[6]
Hijinx Studios (HD edition)
Publisher(s) Konami
Director(s) Masashi Tsuboyama
Producer(s) Akihiro Imamura
Artist(s) Masahiro Ito
Writer(s) Hiroyuki Owaku
Takayoshi Sato[7]
Composer(s) Akira Yamaoka
Series Silent Hill
Platform(s) PlayStation 2
Xbox (DC)
Microsoft Windows (DC)
PlayStation 3 (HD)
Xbox 360 (HD)
Release date(s)
Genre(s) Survival horror
Mode(s) Single-player
Distribution Optical disc

Silent Hill 2 is a survival horror video game published by Konami for the PlayStation 2 and developed by Team Silent, a production group within Konami Computer Entertainment Tokyo. The game was released in September 2001 as the second installment in the Silent Hill series; an extended version of it was released for the Xbox in December of the same year as Silent Hill 2: Restless Dreams in North America and Silent Hill 2: Inner Fears in Europe, and for the PlayStation 2 in 2002 as Silent Hill 2: Director's Cut, with a port of Director's Cut to Microsoft Windows released in December 2002. Silent Hill 2 has been re-released multiple times, including under the Greatest Hits label and as part of The Silent Hill Collection, while a remastered high-definition version of it was released for the PlayStation 3 and the Xbox 360 on March 20, 2012.[11]

While set in the series' eponymous fictional American town, Silent Hill 2 is not a direct sequel to the first Silent Hill game. Instead, it centers on James Sunderland, who enters the town after receiving a letter written by his deceased wife, saying she is waiting for him in their "special place" in Silent Hill. Joined by Maria, who strongly resembles her, he searches for her and discovers the truth about her death. Additional material in re-releases and ports included Born from a Wish, a sub-scenario which focuses on Maria before she and James meet.

Silent Hill 2 uses a third-person view and gameplay places a greater emphasis on finding items and solving riddles than combat. Psychological aspects such as the gradual disappearance of Mary's letter were added to the game. More humanoid than their counterparts in the preceding game, some of the monsters were designed as a reflection of James' subconscious. References to real world history, films and literary works can also be found in the game.

Silent Hill 2 was positively received by the audience and critics. Within the month of its release in North America, Japan, and Europe, over one million copies were sold, with the greatest sales in North America. English-language critics praised the atmosphere, graphics, story and monster designs of Silent Hill 2, but criticized the controls as difficult to use. Silent Hill 2 appeared on several critics' top lists for its story and use of metaphors, psychological horror and taboo topics.

Gameplay

A screenshot from a video game. On the corner of a foggy street, a monster with no arms faces a man in a green jacket wielding a pipe.
James, set to attack, encounters a monster.

The objective of Silent Hill 2 is to guide the player character, James Sunderland, through the monster-filled town of Silent Hill as he searches for his deceased wife. The game features a third-person view, with various camera angles.[12] The default control for Silent Hill 2 has James moving in the direction that he is facing when the player tilts the analog stick upwards.[13] Silent Hill 2 does not use a heads-up display; to check James' health, location, and items, the player must enter the pause-game menu to review his status.[14][15] Throughout the game, James collects maps, which can only be read if there is sufficient light or when his flashlight is on.[14] He also updates relevant maps to reflect locked doors, clues, and obstructions,[13] and writes down the content of all documents for future reference.[14]

Much of the gameplay consists of navigating the town and finding keys or other items to bypass doors or other obstructions, with less focus on killing enemies.[13] Occasionally puzzles will be presented, often with riddles left for the player to interpret.[13] The difficulty levels of the enemies and the puzzles are determined independently by the player before starting the game.[12] James keeps a radio with him, which alerts him to the presence of creatures by emitting static, allowing him to detect them even through the thick fog.[14] He also tilts his head in the direction of a nearby item or monster.[12] For combat, he finds three melee weapons and three firearms over the course of the game, with another two melee weapons unlocked during replays.[12] "Health" restoratives and ammunition can be found throughout the game.[14]

Plot

Setting

While not a direct sequel to the events and characters of the first Silent Hill game, Silent Hill 2 takes place in the series' namesake town, located in the northeastern United States.[16][4] Silent Hill 2 is set in another area of the town,[17] and explores some of Silent Hill's backstory.[16] The town draws upon the psyche of its visitors and ultimately forms alternative versions of the town, which differ depending on the character.[note 1][2] The concept behind the town was "a small, rural town in America"; to make the setting more realistic, some buildings and rooms lack furnishings.[18]

Letter from Silent Heaven

James Sunderland is the protagonist of the main scenario of Silent Hill 2, titled Letter from Silent Heaven. He comes to the town after receiving a letter from his wife Mary (Monica Taylor Horgan), who died of an illness three years ago.[19] While exploring the town, he encounters Maria (also Monica Taylor Horgan), who strongly resembles Mary except for a different personality and clothing; Angela Orosco (Donna Burke), a 16-year-old runaway on a search for her mother; Eddie Dombrowski (David Schaufele); and Laura (Jacquelyn Brekenridge), an eight-year-old who has met and befriended Mary.[5][20][21]

After arriving in Silent Hill, James decides to search a local park,[22] where he meets Maria, who claims that she has never met or seen Mary and, as she is scared, he allows her to follow him. While looking for Laura inside a hospital, James and Maria are ambushed by the monster Pyramid Head, and Maria is killed by him just as James escapes;[23] He resumes his task of finding Mary, and chooses to search a local hotel, where he and Mary spent their vacation.[24] On the way, James finds Maria alive and unharmed in a locked room.[25] She claims ignorance to their previous encounter and discusses elements of James and Mary's past that only Mary would know.[26] James then sets off to find a way to release Maria from the room and eventually returns to find her dead again. Later on, he rescues Angela from a monster; she confesses that her father used to sexually abuse her,[27] and a newspaper clipping James can find implies she killed him in self-defense before coming to Silent Hill.[5] He also confronts Eddie, who admits to maiming a bully and killing a dog before fleeing to Silent Hill;[28] Attacked by Eddie, James kills him in self-defense.

At the hotel, James locates a videotape which depicts him killing his dying wife.[29] At this point in the game, the letter from Mary vanishes from the envelope. In another room, a final meeting with Angela sees her giving up on life and unable to cope with her guilt any longer. She walks into a fire and is not seen again.[30] James later encounters two Pyramid Heads, along with an alive Maria, who is killed again. James realizes that Pyramid Head was created because he needed someone to punish him. The envelope from Mary disappears and both Pyramid Heads commit suicide. James heads to the hotel's rooftop; depending on choices made by the player throughout the game, he encounters either Mary[31] or Maria disguised as her.[32]

Silent Hill 2 features six endings, all presented as equally possible; Konami has kept their canonicity ambiguous.[16][33] In "Leave", James has one last meeting with Mary, reads her letter and leaves the town with Laura, while "In Water" sees James commit suicide;[34] in "Rebirth", James plans to resurrect Mary using objects collected throughout the game.[35] The "Maria" ending sees Mary as the woman on the rooftop, who has not forgiven James for killing her. After her defeat, James dismisses her as a hallucination and then leaves the town with an alive Maria, who starts coughing.[36][37] The other two are joke endings available on replay games: in the first, called "Dog", James discovers that a dog has apparently been controlling all the events of the game,[38] and the second, "UFO", sees James being abducted by extraterrestrials with the help of the first game's protagonist, Harry Mason.[39]

Born from a Wish

Born from a Wish is a side-story scenario in the special editions and re-releases of the game in which the player takes control of Maria shortly before she and James meet at Silent Hill. After waking up in the town with a gun and contemplating suicide, she resolves to find someone.[40] She eventually encounters a local mansion, where she hears the voice of its owner, Ernest Baldwin. Ernest refuses to let Maria into the room where he is and will only talk to her through its closed door.[41] After Maria completes tasks for him, Ernest warns her about James, whom he describes as a "bad man".[42] After Maria opens the door to Ernest's room and finds it empty, she leaves the mansion. At the conclusion of the scenario, Maria contemplates suicide, but ultimately resolves to find James.[43]

Development

Influences and design

"Bubble Head Nurses" (pictured) and "Mannequins" (creatures composed of only two pairs of female legs) were designed to be sexually suggestive, a reflection of James' subconscious sexual desires during Mary's hospitalization.[1]

Silent Hill 2 was developed by Team Silent, a production group within Konami Computer Entertainment Tokyo.[16][44][45] The story was conceived by CGI director Takayoshi Sato, who based it on Russian author Fyodor Dostoyevsky's novel Crime and Punishment (1866), with individual members of the team collaborating on the actual scenario.[7][46][47] The main writing was done by Hiroyuki Owaku and Sato, the latter of which provided the dialog for the female characters.[7][46][48] Silent Hill 2's budget has been estimated at US$7–10 million by Sato, in contrast to the previous installment's estimated one of US$3–5 million.[46] The decision to produce a sequel to Silent Hill was partly a financial one, as it had been commercially successful, and partly a creative one, as the team had faced difficulties while working on the game.[17] Producer Akihiro Imamura read all comments about the original game and kept them in mind when working on Silent Hill 2.[17] He estimated that a total of fifty people worked on the game: while the creative team from the first game remained, they had to bring in thirty people from Konami Computer Entertainment Tokyo.[17] Developed at the same time,[17] the PlayStation 2 version of Silent Hill 2 and its Xbox port debuted at the March 2001 Tokyo Game Show to positive reaction.[49][50]

Silent Hill 2 shared the same atmosphere of psychological horror as the first Silent Hill game.[17] As the developers already had a rough sense of the game's environment, they focused on the game's plot first, in contrast to the process of the first game.[18] The hardware of the PlayStation 2 allowed the developers to create improved fog and shadow special effects; for example, as a monster approaches the player character, its shadow cast on the wall by the flashlight grows.[51] When dealing with the camera angles of the game, the team struggled with a balance between those that stayed true to the creative vision and those that did not hamper gameplay.[51] Psychological elements, such as the gradual disappearance of Mary's letter and symbolic holes, were incorporated into the game.[5][52] The team wanted Silent Hill 2's protagonist to "reflect [the] evil," against which the protagonist of the first game battles.[17]

For the art style of the game, the team drew on a variety of influences: the work of film directors David Cronenberg, David Fincher, David Lynch and Alfred Hitchcock, along with films similar to the 1990 psychological thriller/horror film Jacob's Ladder and painters such as Francis Bacon, Rembrandt and Andrew Wyeth.[18] Early in the project, they studied the 1996 video game Tomb Raider's creation of 3D environments.[18] Other influences on the game included the 1992 survival horror video game Alone in the Dark,[18] the first Silent Hill game,[18] and the Japanese comic Whirr by Morohashi.[16] When working on the character designs, Sato and his team sketched human faces and various expressions.[18] To gain a better sense of the characters' facial structures, they drew the characters' profiles from various angles, before creating wire-frame models, each consisting of six thousand polygons; they then completed the model with textures.[18] Data for the character animation was taken through motion capture, and using Softimage, they animated the characters.[18] Masahiro Ito designed the monsters of Silent Hill 2; "soured flesh" was the concept behind their appearance.[18] The monsters were also to incorporate "an element of humanity."[17] For the most part, the monsters reflect the subconscious of the protagonist; for example, the monster Pyramid Head was based on the executioners of the town's fictional history and is intended to be a punisher for James.[1] Two exceptions to this theme are the "Abstract Daddy", a reflection of the subconscious and memories of Angela, and the "Creepers", which are also seen in the first game.[1]

Silent Hill 2 also incorporates some references to real-life events. In the original scenario, the developers designed Maria and James with double personalities: Maria's other personality was "Mary", a reference to Mary Jane Kelly, Jack the Ripper's last victim, while James' was "Joseph", a reference to one of the Jack the Ripper suspects.[5] Eddie Dombrowski's name was taken from actor Eddie Murphy back during the beginning phases of production when Eddie was originally designed with a pleasantly optimistic personality.[5] The name of Angela Orosco was derived from Angela Bennett, the name of the protagonist in the 1995 film The Net, and Laura's from the 1970 novel No Language But a Cry by Richard D'Ambrosio.[5] The developers satirized guns in American society by allowing James to find a handgun in a shopping cart.[53] There are also indications that the layout of Silent Hill has been based on the town of San Bruno, California, to a certain extent.[54]

Audio

Akira Yamaoka composed the music of Silent Hill 2.[16] At his home, Yamaoka took three days to write the music for "Theme of Laura", the main theme of Silent Hill 2, by combining "a sad melody" and "a strong beat", although he does not consider a melody to be the "most important" element of a music piece.[55] He wanted to evoke emotion from the player with the music.[55] Silent Hill 2 makes extensive use of sound effects ranging from screams to footsteps on broken glass.[12] In charge of the game's fifty sound effects, Yamaoka wanted to surprise the player with different sounds and create an unsettling environment.[55] He also incorporated occasional silence, commenting that "selecting moments of silence is another way of producing sound."[55]

Konami published Silent Hill 2 Original Soundtrack in Japan on October 3, 2001.[56] Eight tracks ("Theme of Laura", "Null Moon", "Love Psalm", "True", "Promise", "Fermata in Mistic Air", "Laura Plays the Piano" and "Overdose Delusion") appeared in the 2006 PlayStation Portable release The Silent Hill Experience.[57] At the 2006 Play! A Video Game Symphony concert in Chicago, Illinois, Yamaoka performed music from the series with a full-size orchestra; among the pieces performed was "Theme of Laura".[58]

Release

System requirements
Minimum Recommended
Microsoft Windows[10]
Operating system Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows ME, Windows XP
CPU Pentium or AMD Athlon 700 MHz (single core) Pentium or AMD Athlon 1 GHz (single core)
Memory 64 MB 128 MB
Hard drive space 1.8 GB of free space 2.3 GB of free space
Graphics hardware DirectX 8.1 compliant card with 32 MB RAM DirectX 8.1 compliant card with 64 MB RAM
Sound hardware DirectX 8.1 compliant card

Silent Hill 2 was first released for the PlayStation 2 in North America on September 24, 2001, in Japan on September 27, 2001, and in Europe on November 23, 2001.[8] The original European edition also included a second disc: a "Making-of" DVD video featuring trailers, an artwork gallery and a documentary on the title's development.[59] The revised version of the game was ported back to the PS2 and billed as a director's cut under both the "Greatest Hits" and "Platinum" labels depending on location.[60] In 2006, Konami re-released Silent Hill 2 with its indirect PS2 sequels, Silent Hill 3 and Silent Hill 4: The Room, as The Silent Hill Collection and again in 2009.[61][62] Silent Hill HD Collection, a compilation of remastered high-definition editions of Silent Hill 2 and 3, was released for the PlayStation 3 and the Xbox 360 on March 20, 2012;[11] it also contains new voice actors for the characters of both games, along with the option in Silent Hill 2 to listen to the original ones,[63] but was notable for multiple bugs and technical issues upon launch[64] which were barely ironed out out following the release of online patches. [65]

Ports of the game were also published. Konami released the Xbox port in North America on December 20, 2001, in Japan on February 22, 2002, and in Europe on October 14, 2002.[9] Each region had a different subtitle: the Xbox port was subtitled Saigo no Uta (最期の詩, lit. "Poem of the Last Moment") in Japan, Restless Dreams in North America, and Inner Fears in Europe.[60][66] Creature Labs ported Silent Hill 2 to the PC, which Konami released in December 2002.[6][67] The PC port is equivalent to the Xbox port and the PS2 budget versions, and includes Born from a Wish and the extra ending. Added features included the ability to quicksave, and trailers for Silent Hill 3.[15]

Reception

Reception
Aggregate scores
AggregatorScore
GameRankings85.82% (PS2)[68]
82.40% (Xbox)[69]
71.30% (PC)[70]
Metacritic89/100 (PS2)[71]
84/100 (Xbox)[72]
70/100 (PC)[67]
Review scores
PublicationScore
Allgame[73]
Eurogamer9/10 (PS2)[74]
9/10 (Xbox)[66]
Famitsu34/40 (PS2)[75]
32/40 (Xbox)[76]
GameSpot7.7/10 (PS2)[13]
7.9/10 (Xbox)[77]
6.2/10 (PC)[78]
GameSpy96/100 (PS2)[79]
86/100 (PC)[80]
IGN9.0/10 (PS2)[12]
8.4/10 (PC)[15]
Awards
PublicationAward
IGNEditor's Choice (PS2)[12]

Silent Hill 2 was positively received, selling over one million copies in the month of its release in North America, Japan and Europe, with the most units sold in North America.[81]

Rating aggregation site Game Rankings shows an average rating of 85.82% for the PS2 version,[68] 82.40% for the Xbox version,[69] and 71.30% for the PC version.[70] Rating aggregation site Metacritic shows an average rating of 89 out of 100 for the PS2 version,[71] 84 out of 100 for the Xbox version,[72] and 70 out of 100 for the PC version.[67]

Silent Hill 2 has received praise from video game journalists at the time of its release and in retrospect. Andy Greenwald of Spin magazine praised it as a frightening, though "restrained" game.[82] Jon Thompson of Allgame stated: "Silent Hill 2 feels a bit rushed, and although it might not live up to the dizzying horror of the first game, it packs enough of its own punch to make it a worthy sequel."[73] IGN's Doug Perry wrote: "It's frightening, deep, clever, and tries to improve the genre, if just a little, and in the end, that's all I really want in a survival horror game."[12] Joe Fielder of GameSpot concluded, "Silent Hill 2 is a much prettier, somewhat smarter but less-compelling game than the original."[13] In Replay: The History of Video Games (2010), Tristian Donovan described Silent Hill 2 as the "high point" of the series.[83] In a retrospective article on the survival horror genre, IGN writer Jim Sterling praised the game's plot as "one of the finest examples of narrative construction in gaming to this day."[84] In another retrospective article on survival horror, fellow IGN writer Travis Fahs credited the game as a factor in the "short-lived period of renewed interest in horror games."[85] Online game critic for the Escapist Magazine Ben "Yahtzee" Croshaw lists this game as among his top 5 favourite games of all time, praising the game for thick and unsettling atmosphere creating tension and fear for players. In his review of the game he commented, "Silent Hill 2 is the game I replay every now and again to remind myself that for all the shiny brown, quick-time event, RPG element space marines, gaming is still worth defending," and that, "It's a fascinating voyage of pain and despair that leaves you emotionally drained and satisfied."

The graphics and atmosphere of Silent Hill 2 received praise from reviewers, who highlighted the smooth transitions from computer-generated (CG) to in-game cutscenes and the sense of claustrophobia caused by the fog.[12][74] On the other hand, Thompson felt that the grainy image effects and dense fog hid the details of the environment,[73] while Fielder wrote that the exterior environments "rarely push the PlayStation 2's graphical capabilities".[13] Character animation was considered realistic by reviewers,[12][74] though James' animation in the CG sometimes appeared "marionette"-like, according to Perry.[12] The voice acting received mixed responses from reviewers divided over whether it was well done with an improved script,[12] or hampered by the script.[13] Reviewers enjoyed the monster designs,[12][13][79] although some found the monsters less frightening due to the abundance of ammunition,[13][73] and easily avoided.[73] Reviewers found the camera, though improved, still difficult when battling monsters which hung from the ceiling[12][74]—concerns echoed by reviewers of the PC version.[15][78] The soundtrack and sound effects were considered by reviewers to be effective in creating suspense,[12][13][73] though Thompson considered them sometimes "a bit forced and contrived".[73] The puzzles were generally seen as not overly challenging by reviewers,[12][13] though Thompson found them generally easy and GameSpy's David Hodgeson wrote that they were sometimes illogical.[73] Less well-received was the combat, criticized for its lack of challenge and easily defeated monsters and bosses.[13][73]

Reactions to the Xbox port were also positive. Reviewers have written that the PlayStation 2 and Xbox versions were mostly similar, except for the Born from a Wish side-scenario found on the Xbox version.[66][77] Eurogamer's Kristan Reed called Born from a Wish "more like a demo than anything",[66] while Fielder described it as "a commendable extra".[77] Both felt that it could be completed in around an hour and did not add much to the game.[66][77] The PC port, in contrast, received mixed reaction. Allen Rausch of GameSpy considered the PC port overall to be "[a] fantastic translation of Konami's stylish and scary survival-horror game".[80] IGN's Ivan Sulic advised against playing the game with the keyboard, and rated the game "Great".[15] Conversely, Ron Dulin, another reviewer for GameSpot, wrote: "Not even the game's foggy atmosphere is thick enough to hide Silent Hill 2's problems."[78]

The Silent Hill HD Collection received an average score of 70/100 from Metacritic for the PlayStation 3 release[86] and 69/100 for the Xbox 360 release, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[87] According to Play, "Technically the collection is lacking, but there's no denying the quality of the games."[86] The Official PlayStation Magazine stated: "As an exercise in Playstation fear, it doesn't come any purer than this."[86] Conversely, GameTrailers expressed disappointment with the collection, writing: "The inconsistent presentation, compromises to the original developer’s vision, and lack of any interesting bonus features make this compilation’s $40 price even more unnerving than its games."[88] The new voice acting drew a range of reactions, from praise as a general improvement over the originals,[89][90][91] to mixed results.[92][93][94] Several reviewers commented on the absence of other Silent Hill games, such as Silent Hill 4: The Room and Silent Hill: Origins.[92][94][91] Glitches[95] and issues with the lip-synching were also noted.[93][88][94]

Silent Hill 2 appeared on several critics' lists for its story and use of metaphors, psychological horror, and taboo topics. It ranked 1st on X-Play's list of the scariest games of all time in 2006.[96] IGN listed it as one of the five best horror video games created after 2000 in 2009,[97] and one of the 12 greatest PlayStation 2 games of all time.[98] Additionally, in 2010, IGN ranked it as 54th in its top 100 PS2 games;[99] in a retrospective by GamePro, it as the 26th best game for the PS2.[100] In 2008, GamesRadar placed it on its list of the 15 best "videogame stories" ever, describing it as "a punishing tale not easily matched".[101] In 2009, Wired News listed it as the 11th most influential game of the decade for its emphasis on psychological horror and exploration of taboo topics such as incest and domestic abuse, rather than gore.[102] In 2012, a top video games of all time list by G4 television network ranked the game in the 85th place.[103] That same year, the game's narrative was ranked at 1st place on GamesRadar's list of "The Best Videogame Stories Ever".[104]

Notes

  1. This can be seen prominently with James, who experiences a version of the town influenced by his guilt and delusions for the majority of the game. His version of the town fades as he comes to term with his guilt and responsibility for his actions.[2] For example, the hotel transforms from being just as it was three years ago,[3] to its true form of a mostly burned-out structure.[4] In contrast, only Laura perceives the town as normal because she is not burdened with guilt or past misdeeds; to her, neither the monsters nor Maria exist.[5]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Silent Hill 2 Creature Commentary". サイレントヒル3公式完全攻略ガイド: 失われた記憶-サイレントヒル・クロニクル-。 [Silent Hill 3 Official Strategy Guide / Lost Memories: Silent Hill Chronicle] (in Japanese). Japan: Konami. 2003. pp. 48–49. ISBN 4-7571-8145-0. OCLC 168084311. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 "XXI: The World". サイレントヒル3公式完全攻略ガイド: 失われた記憶-サイレントヒル・クロニクル-。 [Silent Hill 3 Official Strategy Guide / Lost Memories: Silent Hill Chronicle] (in Japanese). Japan: Konami. 2003. p. 111. ISBN 4-7571-8145-0. OCLC 168084311. 
  3. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. Level/area: Lakeview Hotel. "James: This place hasn't changed at all in three years..." 
  4. 4.0 4.1 "Silent Hill Area Map". サイレントヒル3公式完全攻略ガイド: 失われた記憶-サイレントヒル・クロニクル-。 [Silent Hill 3 Official Strategy Guide / Lost Memories: Silent Hill Chronicle] (in Japanese). Japan: Konami. 2003. pp. 4–5. ISBN 4-7571-8145-0. OCLC 168084311. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 "Silent Hill 2 Character Commentary". サイレントヒル3公式完全攻略ガイド: 失われた記憶-サイレントヒル・クロニクル-。 [Silent Hill 3 Official Strategy Guide / Lost Memories: Silent Hill Chronicle] (in Japanese). Japan: Konami. 2003. pp. 46–47. ISBN 4-7571-8145-0. OCLC 168084311. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 "Credits". Silent Hill 2 Manual. Konami of America, Inc. 2 December 2002. p. 24. 
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Dieubussy (15 September 2009). "Interview with Takayoshi Sato: Seizing New Creations". Core Gamers. Archived from the original on 6 January 2011. Retrieved 6 January 2011. 
  8. 8.0 8.1 "Silent Hill 2 for PlayStation 2". GameSpot. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2010-04-23. 
  9. 9.0 9.1 "Silent Hill 2 for Xbox". GameSpot. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2010-04-23. 
  10. 10.0 10.1 "Silent Hill 2". GameSpy. IGN Entertainment, Inc. Retrieved August 5, 2007. 
  11. 11.0 11.1 Makuch, Eddie (2012-02-29). "Silent Hill HD Collection delayed further - Report". GameSpot. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2012-03-01. 
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 12.5 12.6 12.7 12.8 12.9 12.10 12.11 12.12 12.13 12.14 12.15 Perry, Doug (2001-09-25). "Silent Hill 2". ign.com. IGN Entertainment, Inc. Retrieved 2007-01-26. 
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 13.3 13.4 13.5 13.6 13.7 13.8 13.9 13.10 13.11 13.12 Fielder, Joe (2001-09-25). "PlayStation 2 - Silent Hill 2 - Reviews". GameSpot. CBS Interactive. pp. 1–2. Retrieved 2007-01-21. 
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 14.4 Silent Hill 2 -- Instruction Manual. Konami. 2001. pp. 9, 19, 22–23. 
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 15.4 Sulic, Ivan (2002-12-03). "Silent Hill 2 Review". ign.com. IGN Entertainment, Inc. Retrieved 2007-01-26. 
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 16.4 16.5 "E3 2001: Silent Hill 2 Interview". IGN.com. IGN Entertainment, Inc. 17 May 2001. Retrieved 26 December 2010. 
  17. 17.0 17.1 17.2 17.3 17.4 17.5 17.6 17.7 IGN Staff (2001-03-29). "IGN Xbox Interviews Silent Hill 2 Producer Akihiro Imamura". ign.com. IGN Entertainment, Inc. Retrieved 2012-02-04. 
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 18.3 18.4 18.5 18.6 18.7 18.8 18.9 IGN staff (2001-08-17). "Interview with Silent Hill 2's Artist Takayoshi Sato". ign.com. IGN Entertainment, Inc. Retrieved 2012-02-06. 
  19. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "James: I got a letter. The name on the envelope said "Mary". My wife's name... It's ridiculous, couldn't possibly be true... That's what I keep telling myself... A dead person can't write a letter. Mary died of that damn disease three years ago." 
  20. "Meet the Characters and Monsters of Silent Hill 2". IGN. 2001-08-15. Retrieved 2007-08-08. 
  21. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. Scene: Credits. 
  22. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "James: Our "special place"... What could she mean? This whole town was our special place. Does she mean the park on the lake? We spent the whole day there. Just the two of us, staring at the water. Could Mary really be there? Is she really alive... waiting for me?" 
  23. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "James: Maria's dead. I couldn't protect her. Once again, I couldn't do anything to help." 
  24. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "James: Well, there's the hotel, too, I guess. The one on the lake... I wonder if it's still there. / Maria: The Lakeview Hotel? Yeah, it's still there. So, the hotel was your "special place", huh? I'll bet it was." 
  25. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "James: You're alive! Maria...! I thought that thing killed you...! Are you hurt bad? / Maria: Not at all, silly. / James: ...Maria? That thing... it stabbed you. There was blood everywhere. / Maria: Stabbed me? What do you mean?" 
  26. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "Maria: See? I'm real. Don't you want to touch me? / James: I don't know.... / Maria: Come and get me. I can't do anything through these bars." 
  27. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "Angela: So what do you want, then? Oh, I see... you're trying to be nice to me, right? I know what you're up to. It's always the same. You're only after one thing. / James: No, that's not true at all. / Angela: You don't have to lie. Go ahead and say it. Or you could just force me. Beat me up like he always did..." 
  28. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "Eddie: Do you know what it does to you, James? When you're hated, picked on, spit on just 'cause of the way you look? After you've been laughed at your whole friggin' life? That's why I ran away after I killed the dog. Ran away like a scared little girl. [...] Then he came after me. I shot him, too. Right in the leg! He cried more than the dog!! He's gonna have a hard time playing football on what's left of that knee." 
  29. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "James: Mary's gone. She's dead. / Laura: Liar! That's a lie! / James: No, that's not true... / Laura: She... she died 'cause she was sick? / James: No. I killed her." 
  30. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "Angela: James. Give me back that knife. / James: No... I... I won't. / Angela: Saving it for yourself?" 
  31. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "Mary: Don't make excuses, James. I know I was a burden on you. You must have hated me. That's why you got rid of me. / James: It's true... I may have had some of those feelings. It was a long three years... I was... tired. / Mary: And that's why you needed this "Maria" person? James, do you really think I could ever forgive you for what you did?" 
  32. James: Mary! / Maria: When will you ever stop making that mistake? Mary's dead. You killed her. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. 
  33. "Silent Hill 2 Ending Analysis". サイレントヒル3公式完全攻略ガイド: 失われた記憶-サイレントヒル・クロニクル-。 [Silent Hill 3 Official Strategy Guide / Lost Memories: Silent Hill Chronicle] (in Japanese). Japan: Konami. 2003. pp. 50–51. ISBN 4-7571-8145-0. OCLC 168084311. 
  34. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "James: Now I understand. The real reason I came to this town. I wonder what was I afraid of? Without you, Mary, I've got nothing... Now we can be together..." 
  35. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "James: Mary. You look so peaceful. Forgive me for waking you. But without you, I just can't go on. I can't live without you, Mary. This town, Silent Hill... The Old Gods haven't left this place.... And they still grant power to those who venerate them... Power to defy even death..." 
  36. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "Maria: You killed Mary again? / James: That wasn't Mary. Mary's gone. That was just something I... Maria? Maria. / Maria: What, James? / James: I want you... I want you with me... / Maria: Are you sure? / James: C'mon. Let's get out of here. / Maria: What about Mary? / James: It's okay, I have you." 
  37. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "James: You'd better do something about that cough..." 
  38. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "James: So it was all your work! (The dog comes down from a vision mixer and licks James's face.)" 
  39. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "Harry: Sorry... Ah... / James: Who... who are you...? / Harry: Have you seen a little girl around here? Short, black hair... / James: What are you talking about...? Anyway, listen... Have you seen my wife... her name's Mary — Aaarrgghhh!!! (An extraterrestrial stuns him and with the help of Harry Mason, carries him to a spaceship.)" 
  40. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "Maria: I don't have any reason to go on living, but... But I'm scared to die; I'm so afraid of pain! Should I... run away? I want to find someone. I don't like being alone." 
  41. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "Maria: Hello? / Ernest: Stop it. You're disturbing me. / Maria: Whew, thank God. I finally found somebody. Can you open the door? / Ernest: No." 
  42. Konami (Team Silent) (2001-09-21). Silent Hill 2. PlayStation 2. Konami. "Ernest: That James, he's a bad man. / Maria: James...? Y,yes... I know. / Ernest: He's looking for the you that isn't you. / Maria: Because he's kind." 
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