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The best Silent Hill games of all time, ranked

Features
By Josh West Contributions from Heather Wald, Emma-Jane Betts, Jasmine Gould-Wilson last updated 26 January 2026

Ranking all the best Silent Hill games of all time that are worth playing in 2026

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Silent Hill 2 Remake screenshot of James Sunderland examining his face in the mirror
(Image credit: Konami)
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This list brings together all the best Silent Hill games in one place. After all, this is one of the most memorable survival horror series ever created, and considering how it's still growing with the likes of new games (such as Silent Hill Townfall and a remake of the first Silent Hill) on the horizon, it can be hard to keep up with the greatest gaming hits on offer.

Well, that's where we come in. Below, we've ranked the 10 best Silent Hill games currently worth playing in 2026. From its classic (and very eerie) beginnings in the first game that started it all back in 1999, to Silent Hill f, which released in 2025, and everything in between, no title has been left off our consideration list. That means both mainline titles and spin-off entries are counted in this ranking, since both have given us some of the best survival horror games as well as the greatest video game enemies around (hello, Pyramid Head).

So if you are ready to brave psychological horrors and take a step into the suffocating fog yourself, read on below as we take you through the best Silent Hill games around right now, ranked from worst to best as of 2026!

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  • Best Batman games: Batman getting ready to punch someone with Gotham in the background. Ranking the best Batman games

The best Silent Hill games ever made, starting with...

10. P.T.

A screenshot of the one of the best Silent Hill games with a monster in a hallway, PT.

(Image credit: Konami)

Developer: Kojima Productions
Platform(s): PS4
Released: 2014

As P.T. is technically just a playable demo, one which Konami has made impossible to download in the modern era. Still, it's worth discussing all the same. The Silent Hills dream died with Hideo Kojima's departure from Konami, but that doesn't mean that we should let the legacy of P.T. disappear completely. Short, ill-fated, and confusing as it may get toward the end, PT is a brilliant little pocket of terror that surpasses the quality of horror games twice its length.

On the surface, P.T.'s concept is simple: you're stuck in the hallway of a small house, and you have to find a way out with something sinister breathing down your neck. But this simple concept conceals a genius understanding of horror, where an environment full of flickering lights and unfortunate sounds peels back all your defenses and uses your imagination against you. Only when you're at your most vulnerable does the game start to get weird, throwing out ghostly happenings, frightening creatures, and hints about who you are and why you're here (none of them good), turning you into a shivering puddle of fear. Oh, what could have been.

9. Silent Hill: Origins

A screenshot of Travis Grady during one of the best Silent Hill games, Silent Hill Origins

(Image credit: Konami)

Developer: Climax Action
Platform(s): PSP, PS2
Released: 2007

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Most of the Silent Hill games can be characterized in a handful of words. Silent Hill 2 is the one with Pyramid Head, Shattered Memories is the one with motion controls, and The Room is that weird one, you know, with the ghosts? Silent Hill: Origins, however, can't be described as much more than the one that's there. While there's nothing inherently wrong with it, it doesn't offer much that the rest of the series hasn't already done better and with more soul.

Origins stars a troubled middle-aged trucker named Travis Grady, who is drawn to Silent Hill by a mysterious entity and must battle his way through both a quiet fog world and a grizzly Otherworld. As the name implies, Travis experiences the events that precede the original Silent Hill. You get the thrill of seeing those familiar characters again and then the dull realization that they don't do anything new. Basically, Origins is a great game if you're absolutely craving some Silent Hill action. Check out our four-star Silent Hill Origins review for more details.

8. Silent Hill: Homecoming

A screenshot of one of the best Silent Hill games, Silent Hill: Homecoming.

(Image credit: Konami)

Developer: Double Helix Games
Platform(s): PC, PS4, Xbox 360
Released: 2008

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Far from the return to form that its title implied, Silent Hill: Homecoming brushed aside many of the conventions of the franchise, even if it didn't wave away that dreadful fog. At its outset, everything about Homecoming seemed to trigger the skeptic's alarm: it would be developed by a Western studio, it would be published on multiple platforms, and it would introduce a new combat system. A combat system? In Silent Hill? Unbelievable.

Ignoring the fact that Homecoming was oddly the one Silent Hill game where everyone suddenly cared about the combat (as if we hadn't tolerated a sloppy pipe-swinging sim all this time), it stands out for actually having the first protagonist who would really be able to fight. A former soldier, Alex Shepherd, is uniquely equipped to deal with Silent Hill's twisted menagerie. And spoiler: not only does getting closer make the monsters creepier, but Homecoming uses Alex's background to unfurl the difficulty of returning to mundane suburbia after a traumatic military service. Read our Silent Hill: Homecoming review for more on this blast from the past.

7. Silent Hill 4: The Room

A screenshot of one of the best Silent Hill games, Silent Hill 4: The Room.

(Image credit: Konami)

Developer: Team Silent
Platform(s): PC, PS2, Xbox
Released: 2012

Rumor has it that The Room was originally a standalone title that got integrated into the Silent Hill series towards the end of its development. Konami has assured us that this isn't true, but it's just very different in terms of tone. And it is certainly is different. Following Henry Townsend, as he attempts to escape his gradually more haunted apartment, it's an instantly uncomfortable experience. Holes in the wall, terrifying subways, and a horrendous area known as the water prison – it's an exercise in genuinely uncomfortable horror.

Lurking enemies such as the Twin Victims – yes, those two groaning baby heads stuck together who walk around on two legs – make for toe-curling exploration. In one unforgettable scene, Henry enters a room only to find an enormous model head of his neighbor Eileen with rolling eyes that follow you around. The Room is best in these little moments. Overall, The Room is an unsettling and somewhat miserable experience that encompasses the true horror of the series. After more recommendations? Check out our list of the best horror survival games.

6. Silent Hill: Downpour

A screenshot of one of the best Silent Hill games, Silent Hill: Downpour.

(Image credit: Konami)

Developer: Vatra Games
Platform(s): PS3, Xbox 360
Released: 2012

Silent Hill: Downpour is a brilliantly flawed game. It tried to mend the rift between the unorthodox Silent Hill: Shattered Memories and the rote Silent Hill: Homecoming by making the spookiest town in gaming a pseudo-open-world. And to its credit, developer Vatra Games succeeded in making the town of Silent Hill feel genuinely different. The ever-present fog is downplayed in favor of frequent, violent rainstorms that whip nearby enemies into a frenzy. The constant threat of rain makes exploring Silent Hill feel all the more threatening.

Other moments of genius include the game's opening combat tutorial. In it, the player learns how to fight by brutally stabbing a man to death in a prison shower. In addition to being a gripping scene, our protagonist's motivations are left completely open-ended. However, for all the good Vatra accomplished, there's enough bad (combat, technical issues) to balance it out. But what ultimately held Downpour back was that it's too familiar to be terrifying. Check out our Silent Hill: Downpour review for more insights.

5. Silent Hill: Shattered Memories

A screenshot of one of the best Silent Hill games, Silent Hill Shattered Memories.

(Image credit: Konami)

Developer: Climax Studios
Platform(s): Wii, PS2, PSP
Released: 2009

A lot of things could have gone wrong with Silent Hill: Shattered Memories. A motion-controlled Silent Hill designed for the Nintendo Wii, which reimagines the story of the original game... but different? The groans of despair were loud and mighty when this one was announced. So imagine the surprise when Shattered Memories turned out to be genuinely interesting, creative, and fresh. And its use of the Wii-mote didn't make you want to throw it across the room accidentally.

Perhaps what stands out most about Silent Hill: Shattered Memories is the use of the psychologist, who pushes you out of your comfort zone by psycho-analyzing you in conjunction with events that happen in the main story. And I don't mean he analyzes the main character, Harry Mason, but you, the player, and then use your answers to change the game. Ultimately, the changes are just cosmetic, but they leave you more vulnerable to the rest of the game's scares. Read our Silent Hill: Shattered Memories review for more spooky details!

4. Silent Hill f

Silent Hill f

(Image credit: Konami)

Developer: NeoBards Entertainment Ltd.
Platform(s): PC, Xbox Series X/S, PS5
Released: 2025

Silent Hill f is hands down one of the best horror games of 2025, so of course it ranks highly on our list of the greatest outings in the franchise. However, it should be noted for any die-hard fans that it's technically a standalone spin-off story and not one of the main entries in the canon. With that small fact out the way Silent Hill f is dripping with terrifying atmosphere and is packed with smart horror writing as you take on the role of a Japanese high school student named Hinako Shimizu during the 1960s.

While combat in the game can get a bit grindy and annoying at times, in our Silent Hill f review, we mention how "unravelling the fears that haunt Hinako makes for some of the best horror" that we've ever played. The monsters are gnarly, the tension is high, and you'll have plenty of shocking revelations and story turns to keep you coming back to uncover all the different Silent Hill f endings as well.

3. Silent Hill 3

A screenshot of one of the best Silent Hill games, Silent Hill 3.

(Image credit: Konami)

Developer: Team Silent
Platform(s): PC, PS2
Released: 2003

Silent Hill 3 put its own stamp on the distressing creations that fill Silent Hill's streets, with developer Team Silent producing a fascinating new look at horror from the perspective of a rather unique protagonist. The eerily empty environments of the first two games are well-executed here, but the game's at its best when the gore comes out, creating a version of Silent Hill's Otherworld that feels more morbid and suffocating than ever before. There's a truly disturbing atmosphere to Silent Hill 3, and that's a big part of its appeal.

The monsters within are brilliantly grotesque, from the club-armed Closer to the disgusting Glutton, to the point that the series' iconic nurses as easily the most boring enemies. And Silent Hill 3 only gets more disturbing when you consider the game's themes of fertility and childbirth – few games explore these areas so directly and unwaveringly, and that's an area where the game truly innovates. Plus, Silent Hill 3 introduces the technically harmless but completely terrifying Robbie the Rabbit, who still gives Pyramid Head a run for money.

2. Silent Hill

A screenshot of one of the best Silent Hill games, Silent Hill.

(Image credit: Konami)

Developer: Team Silent
Platform(s): PS1
Released: 2003

When life gives you lemons, make one of the best PS1 games and one of the most highly-regarded horror games ever. That's what Team Silent did when it created Silent Hill. Working with the PS1's limited technical capabilities, which could only render nearby chunks of the environment before the draw distance faded into a featureless mass of gray pixels, Team Silent's developers decided this limitation would be a good stand-in for fog. Suddenly, a technical problem became a deeply unsettling boon that helped to define the series' style and atmosphere.

From the minute Harry Mason enters Silent Hill looking for his lost daughter, you're assaulted with its unsettling nothingness, and just knowing that something is out in the fog waiting for you is an instant nerve-frayer. Of course, not everything about Silent Hill was a happy accident. From its opening scene, the game is full of deliberately unnerving set-pieces, like mauled dogs, blood-smeared walls, and the world's creepiest locker. It's all about the build-up to fear, and the original Silent Hill is still the master of the slow, painful burn.

1. Silent Hill 2

A screenshot of one of the best Silent Hill games, Silent Hill 2.

(Image credit: Konami)

Developer: Team Silent
Platform(s): PS2, PC, Xbox
Released: 2001

We hate to be predictable, but this is a given. The original Silent Hill may have introduced the series' unique brand of creeping dread and bare-faced gore, but none execute everything they try to accomplish as brilliantly as Silent Hill 2. It's subtle at first, almost getting you to believe it's just another monster thrasher. But then whispers about James' history bubble to the surface, obscure hints fall into place, and a brilliant twist forces you to face the truth: this town is a personal hell for James.

All of Silent Hill 2 is focused on realizing that vision, so everything fits together like a perfectly esoteric puzzle. Every monster serves a symbolic function outside of just being scary (and oh, are they ever), especially the iconic Pyramid Head. And James' seemingly milquetoast personality is laid out so meticulously that you're completely sideswiped when you figure out who he really is. Perhaps most notable of all, it has no fear in approaching an intimate and uniquely terrifying topic in a way that only Silent Hill can. From its first moment to its last, it asks you, "Why?" And "I don't know" is still the scariest answer of all. Over 20 years later, Silent Hill 2 remains one of the best PS2 games and one of the best horror games ever made.


While you're here, why not check out our pick of the best Resident Evil games or read our Silent Hill 2 Remake review? And if you are exploring this list after watching the recent film, Return to Silent Hill, you can also see our thoughts on that in our Return to Silent Hill review.

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Josh West
Josh West
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Editor-in-Chief, GamesRadar+

Josh West is Editor-in-Chief of GamesRadar+. He has over 18 years of experience in both online and print journalism, and was awarded a BA (Hons) in Journalism and Feature Writing. Josh has contributed to world-leading gaming, entertainment, tech, music, and comics brands, including games™, Edge, Retro Gamer, SFX, 3D Artist, Metal Hammer, and Newsarama. In addition, Josh has edited and written books for Hachette and Scholastic, and worked across the Future Games Show as an Assistant Producer. He specializes in video games and entertainment coverage, and has provided expert comment for outlets like the BBC and ITV. In his spare time, Josh likes to play FPS games and RPGs, practice the bass guitar, and reminisce about the film and TV sets he worked on as a child actor.

With contributions from
  • Emma-Jane BettsManaging Editor, Evergreens
  • Heather WaldEvergreen Editor, Games
  • Jasmine Gould-WilsonSenior Staff Writer, GamesRadar+

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