Operation Backlog Completion 2025
Oct 242014
 

We’re back with another look at an oft-maligned Silent Hill game, Silent Hill: Shattered Memories. Shattered Memories is a re-imagining of the first Silent Hill game, and that’s where most of the negativity comes from.

Case cover for Silent Hill: Shattered Memories

Shattered Memories is not a remake of Silent Hill. It is not a reboot of Silent Hill. It was always described as a “re-imagining,” which basically means the developers looked at the basic premise of the original game and started asking “what if” questions.

What if the cult wasn’t involved?

What if Dr. Kaufmann was a psychologist? (To those of you who have played the original and think he’d be just about the worst psychologist ever… you’re right.)

What if Dahlia was a sexualized young woman in a relationship with Harry?

What if… okay, those are all the “what ifs” I can ask without getting into major spoilers for Shattered Memories, but by the time you finish the game, you’ll understand.

As a Wii game (eventually ported to the PS2 and PSP), it makes use of the motion controls for the flashlight similarly to Fragile Dreams, but with additional motion controls for mechanics like turning door handles and shaking off monsters.

Silent Hill Shattered Memories, the abstract form of the Raw Shock enemies

One person’s “bland” is another person’s “RUN!”

Like my favorite Silent Hill game, Silent Hill 4, Shattered Memories doesn’t receive a lot of credit from fans. Its re-imagining status is part of it, but other players complain about the lack of difficult puzzles, the lack of combat, the chases, the somewhat-bland design of the sole enemy type, how it doesn’t actually fit into Silent Hill canon (we’ll get back to this), and more.

Additionally, while the psychological profiling handled during the first-person psychologist sessions does affect the gameplay, it isn’t as complete and accurate as it might lead you to believe.

The answers you tell Dr. Kaufmann affect the nature of the monsters, the way other characters behave and interact with you, etc. It does cause some interesting variations. As I mentioned in my discussion of Silent Hill 4, I got into the Silent Hill series by watching a friend’s Let’s Play of Shattered Memories. There were certain things I expected because of that Let’s Play, and the differences in my own playthrough surprised me.

Shattered Memories is also criticized for not being scary and not feeling like a Silent Hill game, but… something about the atmosphere works really well for me.

Although you meet several different characters, the snowy streets of Silent Hill are lonely. Maybe it’s because it was my first introduction to the series, but to me, Shattered Memories conveys a haunting sense of isolation better than any of the others. You’re in a world where nothing makes sense, where strangers live at your address, people die in front of you and then reappear, and the world routinely freezes over into a supernatural, icy hell.

It’s not scary in the traditional horror sense, but Shattered Memories makes you feel alone, and its little “hauntings” you can pick up tell stories that play on more realistic fears. The main story also has some genuinely chilling moments and startling revelations. And if you’re familiar with the original, it’s worth playing just for the parallels and deviations.

Maybe it’s not the best Silent Hill game, but it’s definitely worth giving a try. I like it better than some of the others, that’s for sure.

What about you?

One final thing before I wrap this up–is Silent Hill: Shattered Memories canon?

From what I said earlier about it being a re-imagining or “what if” scenario, you’d assume not. But once you reach the end and uncover the true story, new possibilities begin to present themselves…

I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking something very specific about the original Silent Hill, and yeah, that would split it off into some sort of alternate timeline if Shattered Memories was canon. But that’s not what I’m talking about. There’s actually a fan theory out there that placed Shattered Memories in canon with the main Silent Hill series. If you’ve finished the game and are interested, head on over to TV Tropes and scroll down to “Shattered Memories is in continuity with 1 and 3.” It’s worth a read.

Let me know your thoughts on this overlooked Silent Hill gem if you’ve played it, and if you haven’t… celebrate Halloween and all things spooky by playing Silent Hill: Shattered Memories!


Buy Silent Hill: Shattered Memories from Amazon
Buy Silent Hill: Shattered Memories from Play-Asia

Oct 232014
 

Last time I wrote about Amazon’s best-selling video games, it was August and I wanted to provide some contrast between mainstream gaming and my own recent pre-orders… y’know, just in case you couldn’t figure out on your own that “pigeon-dating sim” Hatoful Boyfriend wasn’t mainstream.

Well, now I’m back with another one, this time to focus on Nintendo!

Amazon’s current video game best-sellers once again begin with three PSN cards. In August, the top 3 best-sellers were a $20 PSN card, a $10 PSN card, and a $50 PSN card, and I swore they never moved. Right now, the top 3 best-sellers are… a $10 PSN card, a $20 PSN card, and a $50 PSN card. Same three, different order. (They’re also the top 3 in Amazon’s best sellers of 2014. Does anything have a prayer of breaking into the top 3?)

A-anyway…

#4. Super Smash Bros. 3DS

Hey! I’m mainstream!

I pre-ordered Super Smash Bros. 3DS, and here it is, number four among all of Amazon’s video game best-sellers.

Smash Bros. is a big deal, and I got it mainly to see what all of the fuss was about. To be quite honest, I still don’t understand the obsession, but I enjoyed it. I even made Mii Fighters of a couple of my favorite characters… namely Simon Blackquill and King Gaius. Hey, some people have fun playing online, others have fun pretending to be Gaius! Custom Mii Fighters are one of the most compelling reasons to get Smash Bros., in my twisted opinion…

#5. Bayonetta 2

In an age when some people are focused on making their games as gritty and realistic as possible, we have a game about a witch who shoots enemies with guns on her heels and attacks them with her hair, which also happens to be her clothes. And since it’s the 5th best-seller right now, it’s safe to say fun really IS more important than realism.

Bayonetta 2 is another one I’ve pre-ordered. The inclusion of the first game is a great bonus for me, since I never played the original. I already had my eye on it… and then #OperationPlatinum took off after Ubisoft claimed not enough Wii U owners buy M-rated games… So in part, my motivation comes from my desire for the localization of games like Fatal Frame V, but I also tried out the Bayonetta 2 demo and had a lot of fun! I didn’t even button mash!

…Well, maybe a little.

Now we take a little break from Nintendo with Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare, more Call of Duty, Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor (I’m a Lord of the Rings fan, so I might try it someday), the PlayStation 4 itself (I’m going to get it someday), Halo: The Master Chief Collection (stuff like this tempts me to get an Xbox One, too), yet another version of Call of Duty, and… back to Nintendo!

#12 and #14. Pokemon Alpha Sapphire and Omega Ruby

Pokemon! You gotta love Pokemon, and I’ll be sure to play one of these eventually. Ruby and Sapphire have been remade for the 3DS with graphics and features along the lines of Pokemon X and Y. Now, X/Y didn’t thrill me, and Ruby/Sapphire stand out in my memory as my least favorite Pokemon generation, so I’m not as excited as a lot of fans.

I’ve been playing the demo. It’s all right. Odd demo for a Pokemon game, though–I really wish there was more exploration and a cohesive adventure, instead of tiny little missions.

What’s in between these two on the list, you ask? A $100 PSN card.

All right, we leave Nintendo behind for a PS4 controller, an Xbox Live Gold 12-month subscription, Sid Meier’s Civilization: Beyond Earth, Madden NFL 15, and an Xbox 360 controller… and reach a surprise.

#20. Fantasy Life

When my copy of Bayonetta 2 comes tomorrow, it will be accompanied by Fantasy Life, a game I’ve been looking forward to since 2011, when I played Layton’s London Life and learned it shared some elements with Level-5’s upcoming RPG Fantasy Life, which by the way, has music composed by Nobuo Uematsu!

I’m so happy Fantasy Life was localized, I can’t wait to try it, and the only reason I’m surprised to see it among Amazon’s video game best-sellers is because it’s received some mixed reviews and had to bump Super Smash Bros. Wii U from the top 20.

Super Smash Bros. Wii U is in 21st now.

So, a quick review!

1. $10 PSN card
2. $20 PSN card
3. $50 PSN card
4. Super Smash Bros. 3DS
5. Bayonetta 2
6. Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare (PS4)
7. Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare (Xbox One)
8. Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor
9. PlayStation 4
10. Halo: The Master Chief Collection
11. Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare (Xbox 360)
12. Pokemon Alpha Sapphire
13. $100 PSN card
14. Pokemon Omega Ruby
15. PS4 controller
16. Xbox Live Gold 12-month subscription
17. Sid Meier’s Civilization: Beyond Earth
18. Madden NFL 15
19. Xbox 360 controller
20. Fantasy Life
21. Super Smash Bros. Wii U

I feel almost mainstream for once, but what I really want to point out is that Nintendo is doing well! Of the 11 actual games on this list (excluding consoles, controllers, and cards), 6 are Nintendo games. More importantly, perhaps, Nintendo holds spots #4 and #5, the top two spots among games and overall after the ever-present PSN cards.

Aside from an oddity where Kinect Sports Rivals jumped in fourth (seriously?), Super Smash Bros. 3DS and Bayonetta 2 have been trading spots off and on over the past few days, with Shadow of Mordor occasionally jumping in.

Stuff like this makes the future look bright–for Nintendo, for the Wii U, for #OperationPlatinum, and especially for all of us who want great games to play! Are any of these on your list?

Oct 222014
 
Movie cover for The Others

Judging by the excellent reviews The Others has gotten, I suspect I’m in the minority when it comes to my views on this movie. Fair warning, this review contains huge spoilers. I can’t properly discuss my feelings toward The Others without talking about plot twists and the ending.

So, spoilers ahead. Turn back now if you haven’t seen the movie yet and intend to.

All right, onto the review. My feelings through most of The Others were mixed. It had a lot of religious elements that I expected to go somewhere. I wondered if we were going into demon/exorcism territory, since there was such a strong focus on Catholicism. It didn’t. All it really did was work into the character development of the main character, Grace. I’ll get back to that in a little bit.

At first, I thought Grace would be my main complaint about the movie. I didn’t find her character very likable. In fact, in the early scenes, I questioned the movie’s description for making it sound like the servants were the creepy ones, because it seemed to me they were the normal ones suddenly stuck in an isolated house with this crazy lady.

Things changed, and my opinion changed with them.

Grace was clearly unstable and set in her ways (she tried to get into town to talk to the priest about her haunted house, failed, and then suddenly went back to not believing in the hauntings?), but my sympathy for her grew once the curtains were removed. Her dedication to protecting her children struck me, especially her anger when the servants suggested she expose the children to sunlight to see if they’d grown out of their illness. No, if the alternative to growing out of it is death, you don’t just try and see!

Overall, I liked the mood and atmosphere of the movie. It had a certain ambiguity that might have been better handled if we didn’t see the scenes of the two servants talking to one another about what was going on, but it still created a sense of uneasiness. I especially liked the fog, of course.

Foggy woods in The Others
Welcome to Silent Hill?

I never found the movie particularly scary, but it handled some creepy scenes very well. My absolute favorite was near the end, when Grace found the picture of the three servants–dead. The juxtaposition of that moment with Anne’s discovery of the gravestones and then the sudden appearance of the three behind Nicholas was brilliant. My opinion of the movie skyrocketed at that point, because it was just so well-executed.

And then it went on to ruin it.

From reading other reviews, I get the impression people generally liked the final twist. I didn’t. I hated it. And unlike Professor Layton vs. Phoenix Wright, The Others wasn’t enjoyable enough to make me overlook the twist and still recommend it. Not only are the servants dead, but Grace and the two children are also dead. The incident no one wants to talk about is when she smothered them and then killed herself. The supposed ghosts disturbing them are actually the new owners of the house and a medium, trying to investigate the haunting.

It’s an interesting twist on the usual sort of ghost story, I’ll grant it that. I just didn’t like it.

For one thing, is it supposed to have an anti-religion message? Instead of religion being used to fight ghosts, the most religious character is the woman who went crazy (why is never fully explained), killed her children, and committed suicide. Once she learns the truth, she doubts her beliefs and says she doesn’t know if limbo exists. I really expected her to answer the question by saying they’re in limbo (which wouldn’t make sense, but it would have worked if Anne asked about purgatory instead), but instead she just says she doesn’t know it exists.

Why was religion such a focal point in the first place? It meant nothing to the overall plot. I actually expected it to play a role in the scene when Grace asked her husband why he fought in a war that had nothing to do with him instead of staying with them. I thought that was the perfect parallel to Anne saying that she would have denied Christ so the Romans wouldn’t kill her, and that the comparison would be brought up by someone in the movie. But no, it wasn’t.

To me, the religious stuff seemed to have no purpose but to be denied in the end. If anyone else has another explanation, please let me know.

But aside from the dubious role of religion, I just didn’t enjoy the twist. It took away from the impact the earlier (and much better) twist had and ended the movie on a dark, bittersweet note.

Also, why was it called The Others when the characters most often referred to them as “the intruders”?