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==Gameplay==
==Gameplay==
[[File:Shattered Memories.jpg|thumb|left|alt=A screenshot of a video game. It depicts an icy environment, where a monster grabs a man, while another monster looks on.|Harry (centre) attempts to escape from two monsters in the alternate dimension.]]
[[File:Shattered Memories.jpg|thumb|left|alt=A screenshot of a video game. It depicts an icy environment, where a monster grabs a man, while another monster looks on.|Harry (center) attempts to escape from two monsters in the alternate dimension.]]


''Silent Hill: Shattered Memories'' is a reimagining of the first installment of the series, '' Silent Hill''. It keeps the premise of writer Harry Mason's quest for his missing daughter after a car crash, although it leads into a different plot.<ref name="Game Informer SHSM"/> The personalities and roles of characters from the first game have also been changed,<ref name="Game Informer SHSM">{{cite web|url=http://www.gameinformer.com/games/silent_hill_shattered_memories/b/wii/archive/2009/12/08/review.aspx|title=Silent Hill: Shattered Memories Review|author=Turi, Tim|date=December 8, 2009|work=[[Game Informer]]|publisher=Game Informer Magazine|accessdate=December 29, 2010}}</ref> and ''Shattered Memories'' introduces new characters as well.<ref name="VideoGamer interview part 2"/>
''Silent Hill: Shattered Memories'' is a reimagining of the first installment of the series, '' Silent Hill''. It keeps the premise of writer Harry Mason's quest for his missing daughter after a car crash, although it leads into a different plot.<ref name="Game Informer SHSM"/> The personalities and roles of characters from the first game have also been changed,<ref name="Game Informer SHSM">{{cite web|url=http://www.gameinformer.com/games/silent_hill_shattered_memories/b/wii/archive/2009/12/08/review.aspx|title=Silent Hill: Shattered Memories Review|author=Turi, Tim|date=December 8, 2009|work=[[Game Informer]]|publisher=Game Informer Magazine|accessdate=December 29, 2010}}</ref> and ''Shattered Memories'' introduces new characters as well.<ref name="VideoGamer interview part 2"/>

Revision as of 02:22, 11 September 2012

A cover of a video game. It depicts a young girl encased in ice on a swing, surrounded by an icy environment; on the upper part of the image, a title reads "Silent Hill: Shattered Memories". Other markers indicate that this game is published by Konami in the PAL region and is intended for gamers sixteen years old and older.
European box art depicting the main protagonist's daughter, Cheryl Mason, encrusted in ice
Developer(s)Climax Studios
Publisher(s)Konami Digital Entertainment
Director(s)Mark Simmons
Producer(s)Tomm Hulett
Designer(s)Sam Barlow, Robert McLachlan, Mark Diggles, Sam Gage
Writer(s)Sam Barlow
Composer(s)Akira Yamaoka
SeriesSilent Hill
Platform(s)Wii, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable
Release
December 8, 2009
  • Wii
    PlayStation 2 / PSP
Genre(s)Survival horror
Mode(s)Single-player

Silent Hill: Shattered Memories is a survival horror video game developed by Climax Studios and published by Konami Digital Entertainment for the Wii in December 2009. It was ported to the PlayStation 2 and the PlayStation Portable platforms, and these versions were released in January 2010. The game is the seventh instalment in the Silent Hill video game series, and is a reimagining of the first instalment. Shattered Memories retains the premise of the original game—Harry Mason's quest to find his missing daughter in the American town of Silent Hill—but is set in a different fictional universe, has a different plot, and altered characters, alongside new ones. Gameplay takes place in two parts: a framing, first-person psychotherapy session with an unseen patient, and an over-the-shoulder perspective of Harry's journey through Silent Hill, which is periodically interrupted by the occurrence of a shift to an alternate dimension in which he is pursued by monsters. Five endings, which are dependent upon the player's actions during the game, are available.

Shattered Memories' gameplay focuses on completion of psychological tests which alter in-game elements while in the first setting, and exploration, puzzle-solving, and monster evasion when in the second setting. The game's developers did not integrate combat, instead featuring a weaponless character who is trying to rescue himself from powerful opponents, as they considered this element to be fear-inducing. The game received generally positive reviews, and its graphics, storyline, voice acting, soundtrack, and use of the Wii Remote were praised by reviewers. Some reviewers criticized Shattered Memories' chase sequences and duration, which they deemed potentially frustrating and short.

Gameplay

A screenshot of a video game. It depicts an icy environment, where a monster grabs a man, while another monster looks on.
Harry (center) attempts to escape from two monsters in the alternate dimension.

Silent Hill: Shattered Memories is a reimagining of the first installment of the series, Silent Hill. It keeps the premise of writer Harry Mason's quest for his missing daughter after a car crash, although it leads into a different plot.[1] The personalities and roles of characters from the first game have also been changed,[1] and Shattered Memories introduces new characters as well.[2]

Silent Hill: Shattered Memories divides its gameplay between two different settings. The first section is set in a psychotherapist's office and the second in a town called Silent Hill.[3] In the first section, the player interacts with Dr. Michael Kaufmann, a therapist[4] who is a non-player character, from a first-person perspective. The player responds to Kaufmann's questions and completes a psychological test, fills in a questionnaire or colors pictures.[3][5] The player's responses to these tests alters aspects of gameplay in the second setting, including the available areas, the physical appearance and behavior of characters encountered, and the physical appearance of the monsters.[6] Shattered Memories returns to Kaufmann's office periodically throughout the game.[3]

In the second setting, the player guides Harry Mason in an over-the-shoulder view as he searches for his missing daughter Cheryl in the snowy town of Silent Hill.[5] Harry carries a mobile phone and flashlight.[5] Mason can use a mobile phone to check his location on a global positioning system map, receive text and audio messages, take photographs, and make telephone calls.[5] To view the details of various documents, the player can zoom in on objects, often accompanied by Harry's commentary.[3] The game also alters details of gameplay based on what the player views.[5] Throughout his journey, Mason encounters puzzles, such as a keys in empty soft drink cans.[3] In the Wii version, the Wii Remote is used for puzzle solving and to control Mason's flashlight and mobile phone.[3] The game occasionally shifts to an icy alternate dimension called "Nightmare", where hostile monsters exist.[7] To escape from this dimension, Mason must find a predetermined exit while avoiding the wandering creatures which chase him upon detection.[7] Mason is weaponless for the entire duration of the game, and can only run, hide, slow down the monsters by knocking down objects to block their path, and throw off the creatures if they latch onto him.[3] He loses health every time the monsters grab him, and his running speed decreases.[7]

Plot

The game begins with a psychotherapy session conducted by Dr. Kaufmann, which acts as a frame story for Harry's quest.[4][2] Suffering from issues with his memory,[8] Harry travels home to search for his seven-year-old daughter Cheryl, hoping that she is already there.[9] His consciousness moves between the in-game real world and Nightmare—a frozen version of the town in which monsters chase him—but finds that another family lives in his house.[7][10] Police officer Cybil Bennett arrives and decides to take him to the police station,[11] but Harry leaves the vehicle.[12] Eventually, Harry finds his way to the local high school, where he learns from a woman named Michelle Valdez that a Cheryl Mason attended school there previously.[13] She offers to drive Harry to Cheryl's address,[14] but after briefly stepping away, he returns to find Valdez has been replaced by Dahlia Mason, who claims to be Harry's lover and acts as if she has been with him the whole time. He accepts the ride,[15][16] although during another shift to the Nightmare, the car falls into a river. Harry escapes but loses consciousness.[17]

He awakens in a wheelchair pushed by Cybil in the town's hospital. Before Cybil can tell him about his file at the station,[18] the town transitions to the Nightmare. Harry escapes and meets Lisa Garland, a nurse injured in a crash, and escorts her to her home.[19] At her request, Harry gives Lisa pills for her headache,[20] and returns to find her either dead or dying, depending on in-game actions taken by the player. Finding him next to Lisa's corpse, Cybil attempts to arrest him, but he re-enters the Nightmare.[21] Harry escapes to Cheryl's home, where he finds an older Dahlia who claims to be his wife and tells him that Cheryl is at the lighthouse.[22] Harry enters the Nightmare, escapes it, and eventually gets a ride from Michelle, whose boyfriend ends their relationship.[23] Harry finds a young Dahlia, who sets the course for the lighthouse and seduces him.[24] Harry wakes, finds Dahlia and the environment covered in ice, and crosses a frozen lake but falls into the water and passes out. Harry is dragged ashore near the lighthouse by Cybil, who confronts him with the news that Harry Mason died eighteen years ago in an accident.[25] As Harry proceeds, he finds "the lighthouse" is actually the name of Dr. Kaufmann's counseling clinic.[4] The patient in the therapy session is an adult Cheryl, who is in denial over her father's death.[26] Harry enters the office and Cheryl either reconciles herself to his death[27] or continues to cling to her fantasy father.[28]

At the end of the game, an old video clip from Cheryl's camcorder is played. Four variations of this clip are available depending upon the player's actions as Harry. In "Love Lost", Harry packs his luggage in a car and tells Cheryl not to blame herself for her parents' separation.[29] In "Drunk Dad", a drunken Harry yells at Cheryl, demands another beer and blames his drinking on his family.[30] In "Sleaze and Sirens", Harry flirts on his bed with Lisa and Michelle.[31] In "Wicked and Weak", Dahlia verbally abuses Harry and slaps him.[32] In the "UFO" ending—a continuation of Silent Hill's joke endings involving extraterrestrials—Cheryl tells Dr. Kaufmann that she believes Harry was kidnapped by extraterrestrials and that Silent Hill is a spaceship. After James Sunderland interrupts, the therapy session continues. Cheryl turns into a dog and Dr. Kaufmann into an extraterrestrial.[33][34]

Development

Plans for a Silent Hill remake, and speculation about a possible remake based on the Silent Hill film, were circulating as early as 2006.[35] The idea of a remake was also considered early in the development of the prequel game Silent Hill: Origins (2007).[36] Rumors persisted into 2009,[37] and were seemingly confirmed in February when the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) re-rated the original game.[38] The game was officially announced in the May 2009 issue of Nintendo Power.[39]

Climax Studios, the developer of Silent Hill: Origins, developed Shattered Memories with a development team made up of more than 55 members and a supporting network of more than 90 artists.[40] With the completion of Origins—for which they had attempted to closely replicate the atmosphere and gameplay elements of the first Silent Hill game[41]—Climax Studios wanted to create a different horror game.[42] Because of the tenth anniversary of the first Silent Hill instalment, video game company Konami thought the time was ideal "to revisit" the game.[42] Climax Studios saw the newly-introduced Wii platform as a way to reach a wider range of gamers.[42] Development costs for the Xbox 360 or PlayStation 3 and their gamers' "mindset" factored into the decision for the gaming platform.[40] Additionally, the developers wanted to use the Wii Remote to incorporate the gameplay elements of the flashlight and radio static.[40]

Climax Studios began with the game's plot, the main appeal of the series.[2][42] Early in the game's development, some team members visited a psychiatrist for research.[41] The use of ice as a visual theme originated partly because the developers wanted to create an Otherworld for the game, as previous games in the series had featured the same theme as Silent Hill (1999), and because snowfall is common in the northeastern or midwestern United States, where the fictional town is located.[43] Falling snow was added to limit the player's visibility and build an atmosphere of dread.[44] The developers included a system of psychological profiling that adjusted gameplay elements based on the player's interaction with the game.[43] Writer Sam Barlow explained the system: "ultimately every little thing you do in the game or piece of content you can interact with can be assigned a little personality score. This is all added into a very classical psychometric profile of your personality that can then be mapped onto research."[2] The opening questionnaire has little significance in the player's profile.[43] Capturing the multiple variations of gameplay elements for submission to the Entertainment Software Rating Board proved to be difficult, according to the game's producer, Tomm Hulett.[43]

Hitchcock said that all horror goes back to childhood, that's why it's a universal thing -- it's a fundamental. How many children wake up screaming because they had a dream where they beat up a zombie with a baseball bat? You wake up screaming because you ran and you got caught.

—Lead designer Sam Barlow on the absence of combat in Shattered Memories[40]

The developers felt that creating another game in the series with the same style of gameplay had limited potential.[42] In an attempt to imbue the game with the feel of a horror film where the protagonist is a regular person and the antagonist is powerful, they avoided the common survival horror gameplay feature of a player character who is skilled in the use of weapons. Instead they generated an unarmed player character;[40] and examined the survival horror gameplay staple of difficult combat and sluggish opponents, inspired by zombie films and modeled after the video games Alone in the Dark (1992) and Resident Evil (1996).[42] They also analysed around 50 chase sequences from various films, including horror films, and the structure of slasher films, in which a powerful and intelligent antagonist pursues the protagonists.[42] The developers drew inspiration from common childhood nightmares about running away from an unknown threat, and decided to incorporate an intelligent enemy capable of trailing and outrunning the protagonist.[42] The chase sequences were designed to evoke a brief sense of tension and fright for the player, although the developers did not want to prolong the tension with the constant presence of monsters, and were concerned that this would become overwhelming and spoil the player's immersion in the game and interest in the story.[41] The constant presence of monsters was also thought to be irrelevant to Shattered Memories; director Mark Simmons said, "this Harry Mason is not a guy who is constantly under attack from monsters. It's not a story of surviving a zombie apocalypse."[41] Additionally, to make information-gathering in the game realistic and corresponding to modern life standards, the developers substituted text in scattered documents, a common element in survival horror games, for the player's interaction with the in-game environment and use of the mobile phone.[40]

Scoring Shattered Memories' soundtrack was Akira Yamaoka's last contribution to the Silent Hill series' development before he resigned from Konami.[45]

Video game composer Akira Yamaoka scored the soundtrack of Shattered Memories.[40] It was his final contribution to the Silent Hill series before he resigned from Konami after 16 years with the company.[45] Voice actress Mary Elizabeth McGlynn provided vocals for four musical pieces included in the game, musician Joe Romersa wrote lyrics for three of them, and co-directed Shattered Memories' voice acting.[46] The game is the first in the series to make prominent use of dynamic music; a composition is introduced and subsequently retracted, based on the player's actions, in every major are of the game.[40] Widely varying compositions, ranging in genre from undertones to rock music, were produced for the game.[40]

Release

A playable demo of Shattered Memories was made available in June 2009 at the annual trade fair Electronic Entertainment Expo 2009 (E3) and received favorable reviews from video game journalists. A group of editors of the IGN website gave the game three "Best of E3" awards in the Wii category for best overall game, best adventure game, and best video game graphics technology.[47] The game was also given a "Best Wii Game" award by editors of the GameSpot website in an article on their preferred games featured at the E3 show.[48]

Shattered Memories was published by Konami for the Wii in North America on December 8, 2009,[49] in Europe on February 26, 2010, and in Japan on March 25, 2010.[50] The Australian release was delayed until June 22, 2010, due to European supply problems caused by the economic effects of the 2010 eruptions of Eyjafjallajökull.[51] Major Australian retailers struggled to confirm available copies of the game for several months after the delayed release, potentially damaging initial sales of the game.[51][52] The PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable versions were published in North America on January 19, 2010;[49] in Europe on February 26, 2010; in Japan on March 25, 2010;[53] and in Australia on April 22, 2010.[52]

Critical reception

Review aggregator website Metacritic displays an averaged score for Silent Hill: Shattered Memories of 79/100, indicating "generally favorable reviews"[68] and aggregate website GameRankings shows an average of 78.75%.[65] Wesley Yin-Poole of VideoGamer.com ranked Shattered Memories in seventh place on his list of "top ten nerve-shredding video games", and wrote, "Dark, dank and dangerous, Silent Hill grabs you by the scruff of the neck, shakes you till you throw up, then headbutts you right between the eyes."[74] Gamasutra's Brandon Sheffield, ranked the game in fifth place on his top ten list of list of overlooked games of 2009, and wrote that despite the absence of horror elements, the game was a nice experience.[75] Matt Wales of IGN also included the game in a list of overlooked Wii games, and wrote that the combination of various elements which he regarded as positive delivered "a meticulously-constructed, expertly-paced experience quite unlike anything the series has seen before."[76]

According to Sam Barlow, the game received very favorable player feedback in online forums.[77] Chris Schilling of The Daily Telegraph described it as "one of the most innovative and enjoyable survival horrors for many a year."[78] Eurogamer's Kristan Reed wrote, "Packed with inventive ideas and one engaging sequence after another, it's a spirited, poignant and unsettling game that not only delivers a long-overdue return to form, but reinvigorates horror adventures in the process."[3] According to Lark Anderson of GameSpot, "Shattered Memories is a fantastic return to the core concept of personal fear, and though its developers made some unorthodox decisions—such as removing combat entirely—those decisions have paid off handsomely."[60] Nintendo Power called it audacious and compelling.[54] Leigh Alexander of The A.V. Club wrote that, "it’s a shame a unique, accessible horror experience had to ride the rep of another series, when it’s innovative enough to stand on its own."[79] Conversely, Game Informer's Tim Turi considered the frustrating controls and dull pacing to be major flaws, and wrote, "If you’re a Silent Hill fan interested in a fresh take on the stale formula, this Wii entry may be the Cheryl you’ve been searching for—but it comes at a cost."[1]

The division of gameplay into puzzle-based exploration, weaponless chase sequences, and therapy scenes drew mixed comments from reviewers. About.com's Charles Herold wrote that the fast-paced action of the nightmare sequences and the therapy scenes undercut the "trapped in a nightmare" feeling of previous Silent Hill games.[7] Matt Casamassina of IGN wrote that "the separation between safe exploration and puzzling and run-for-your-life monster scenarios is too transparent and as a result you will inevitably come to fear the ice and few things else."[6] PALGN's Michael Kontoudis said that the chase sequences severely detracted from the rest of the game.[80] Kirstan Reed wrote that they created a welcome mix with no gameplay element overemphasized.[3] Reviewers were also divided on whether the chase sequences were potentially frustrating,[3][7][81] or quickly grew repetitive.[5][1] GamesRadar's Henry Gilbert expressed frustration over the similar enemies and repetitive use of a stock scream.[82] Neon Kelly of VideoGamer.com was concerned by the absence of the player character, and the accompanying fear are major elements of the survival horror genre.[83] The use of the Wii Remote was praised by reviewers as natural-seeming,[5][58][60] and well-suited to the movement-based puzzles and scenes.[3][6][82][84]

Shattered Memories' reimagined plot received praise from reviewers, some of whom found it easier to follow than the plot of the first game.[1][58][81][82] Turi drew comparisons with film director M. Night Shyamalan's style.[1] Gilbert wrote that the storyline and characterizations were mature, its puzzles clear yet challenging and that the atmospheric scares contributed to the game's appeal.[82] Justin Haywald of 1UP.com said that the text messages about minor characters not introduced in the game detracted from the overall narrative.[56] The game's duration, considered relatively short by reviewers, was seen as a drawback,[3][5][60] although some reviewers said that the psychological elements and multiple endings increased the replay value of the game.[5][6][1] The psychological elements were also criticized. Herold wrote that they were far less subtle than those in Silent Hill 2,[7] and GamePro's Will Herring said that while the player-profiling element was ambitious, he did not think it went far enough, as it changed only cosmetic details and character dialogue.[64] Reviewers praised the graphics, and called them detailed and well-done.[3][6][7][81] GameTrailers praised the variety of objects, many of which can be manipulated by the player, and the detailed textures which lent the game's environments authenticity.[59] The soundtrack was favorably received, and reviewers described it as moody,[6][81] atmospheric,[1] and helping to create tension.[3][5] The voice acting was similarly well-received as believable.[3][1][56][81]

Metacritic shows an averaged score of 77/100 for the PlayStation 2 port, indicating generally favorable reviews;[69] GameRankings displays an averaged score of 76.83%.[66] Casamassina gave the PS2 port a score of 8.0/10, and wrote that while the graphics and control system in the Wii version were better, the port held up well.[61] For the PlayStation Portable port, Metacritic displays an averaged score of 73/100, indicating "mixed or average reviews";[70] GameRankings shows an averaged score of 71.80%.[67] Casamassina gave it a score of 7.0, and commented upon the "obvious visual downgrades", "sluggish controls", and "the inability to directly control and point his flashlight".[62] In his review of both ports, Haywald said that the control systems of both ports worked well, and described them as "a technical triumph".[57]

See also

  • Siren—survival horror video game series emphasizing combat evasion
  • Clock Tower—survival horror video game series emphasizing combat evasion
  • Haunting Ground—survival horror video game emphasizing combat evasion

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Turi, Tim (December 8, 2009). "Silent Hill: Shattered Memories Review". Game Informer. Game Informer Magazine. Retrieved December 29, 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d Kelly, Neon (January 22, 2010). "Silent Hill: Shattered Memories Interview for Wii". VideoGamer.com. Pro-G Media Ltd. pp. 1–3. Retrieved April 23, 2012.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Reed, Kristan (December 8, 2009). "Silent Hill: Shattered Memories Review". Eurogamer. The Eurogamer Network. Retrieved March 19, 2012.
  4. ^ a b c Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Level/area: Lighthouse.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Hudak, Chris (December 31, 2009). "Silent Hill: Shattered Memories Review". Game Revolution. AtomicOnline, LLC. Retrieved March 19, 2012.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Casamassina, Matt (December 4, 2009). "Silent Hill: Shattered Memories Review". IGN.com. IGN Entertainment, Inc. pp. 1–3. Retrieved March 19, 2012.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Herold, Charles. "'Silent Hill: Shattered Memories' - Game Review". About.com. The New York Times Company. pp. 1–2. Retrieved March 19, 2012.
  8. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Harry: And I can remember most things. Just sometimes, some details... I try to focus, but then they slip away.
  9. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Cybil: Harry Mason. Levin Street. Your ID says here you live on Levin Street. That's a few blocks from here. / Harry: Yeah. Yeah! That's where I live. [...] Maybe she went home. That makes sense...
  10. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Harry: What are you doing in my house? / Man: I think you have the wrong address. / Harry: No. This is my house.
  11. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Cybil: I can't raise the station on my radio. Lets go over there together and sort this mess out.
  12. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Cybil: Damn. Can't even see the road. I'm going to see exactly where we are.... Stay put.
  13. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Michelle: There was a Cheryl Mason when I was here. She was above me at school.
  14. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Michelle: There's my boss's SUV. I'm looking after it while she's on vacation. [...] I could give you a lift.
  15. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Harry: We're sleeping together!? / Dahlia: This is a joke, right? A really lame joke.
  16. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Harry: Where's Michelle? / Dahlia: Funny. Come on, let's get going. [....] Oh come on, you're not THAT wasted. That's why we're in this lousy club. To get the SUV so we can drive up to Simmons Street...
  17. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Cybil: Who's Dahlia? / Harry: A girl. The car went into the river... she drowned. / Cybil: Another crash? This is a different girl? / Harry: You must have seen the bridge... we went right off the side.
  18. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Cybil: We need to talk. When I was at the station, I pulled the file for Harry Mason. / Harry: So? (Hospital transitions to the frozen Nightmare.) No...! No!
  19. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Lisa: I had an accident. [...] / Harry: It's okay. Let's get you inside. You need help. / Lisa: I want to go home. I have medicine and gauze there. I'm a nurse.
  20. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Lisa: Headache. Be a hero and fetch me some pills from the bathroom. Check the cabinet.
  21. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Harry: Oh God. / Cybil: Don't move. / Harry: No, this isn't what-- / Cybil: I said don't move. Stand up and step away from the girl. [...] I know you're not Harry Mason.
  22. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Harry: Where's Cheryl? / Dahlia: Still at the lighthouse, maybe. [...] / Harry: You're my wife?
  23. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Michelle: If I still love you, it can't be over. / John: It is. You don't love me, You love the John in your head.
  24. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Dahlia: We'll be at the 'lighthouse' in about twenty minutes. It's a slow boat.
  25. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Cybil: I think you think that you are Harry Mason. Hell, I believe that you ARE Harry Mason. But... Harry Mason was killed in a car crash eighteen years ago.
  26. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Dr. K: The term is 'complicated grief'. But it's simple, isn't it? A young girl... Her parents don't get along. She blames herself, as all children do. Then Daddy dies. What's a girl to do? Deny that Daddy died. Deny who Daddy was. [...] So she obsesses and obsesses over this fantasy dad, propping up her make-believe with scraps...
  27. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Cheryl: You've been with me for so long. / Harry: I always will be. (Cheryl shakes her head, and Harry freezes over)
  28. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Cheryl: Dad? You are a hero. The man who died? That wasn't my father.
  29. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Harry: You know this has nothing to do with you, right? Even though mom and dad don't love each other anymore, we both love you.
  30. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Harry: The hell are you filming for? Am I supposed to dance for you? Be a good girl for Daddy. Get him another drink, will you? Now! Get me a damn beer! No wonder I drink with a family like this.
  31. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Harry: Action. Come on in, girls. Introduce yourselves. / Michelle: I'm Michelle. And I'm Midwich High's prom queeen. / Harry: And our next star. / Lisa: I'm Lisa. I'm a nurse. / Harry: And I'm Harry Mason, famous author and seducer of prom queens and nurses.
  32. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Dahlia: You piece of shit. When are you going to bring in some real money? You think your crap is Shakespeare? Your piece of shit novels? No one even reads them! Be a man. Come on, fight back. Pathetic. To think I used to hang off your every word. Dickless waste of space.
  33. ^ Climax Studios (December 8, 2009). Silent Hill: Shattered Memories (Wii). Konami Digital Entertainment. Dr. K: You honestly believe that... your father was abducted by aliens? It made more sense when you were talking about cults and demons! / Cheryl: This whole town... it's really just a giant spaceship. / Dr. K: James? / James Sunderland: Wrong day again? / Dr. K: See you tomorrow, James. One of my couples therapy patients. ...Haven't seen his wife in a while. Where were we? / Cheryl: (now a dog) My mother was a bitch. / Dr. K: (now an alien) Go on. I'm listening.
  34. ^ "Silent Hill: Shattered Memories Hidden Bonuses". IGN.com. IGN Entertainment, Inc. p. 3. Retrieved April 20, 2012.
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