Silent Hill: Downpour: Difference between revisions

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Like other games in this franchise, the town of Silent Hill takes on a unique personality which preys upon Murphy's inner turmoil. This time around, Silent Hill becomes washed out in torrential rain, and electricity -- representing Murphy's fear of execution for his crimes -- arcs across the landscape whenever Murphy travels into [[Genius Loci|the Otherworld]]. There's also a lot of fire in the Otherworld, possibly reflecting a fear of Hell.
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{{tropelist}}
=== Tropes specific to this game: ===
* [[Adaptation Distillation]]: The game takes bits and pieces from all over the series, mostly from the fan-favorite first 2 installments.
* [[Adult Fear]]: Of the {{spoiler|"Watch out for your kids"}} variety.
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** Which is probably Silent Hill's doing, if you think about it enough. What better way to ramp up the horror and fear when weapons break much easier than they would normally? Alternately, the monsters could be much sturdier than they appear. Or possibly both.
* [[Breaking the Fourth Wall]]: See [[Interface Screw]] below; some of the loading-screen hints address you directly:
{{quote| Are you sure you're alone?<br />
STOP DOING THAT!<br />
She's lying to you...<br />
Was it worth it?<br />
I know you are lying.<br />
They know what you've done.<br />
It knows you are alone. }}
* [[But Thou Must!]]: {{spoiler|Justified in game due to the strange nature of Silent Hill. This is lampshaded after DJ Ricks reveals he has a boat but someone stole the keys, Murphy replies that he will just hot-wire it. DJ Ricks says that it wouldn't work and that the town has some strange form of reality, and that it has rules. When DJ breaks them, he is overwhelmed by screamers.}}
* [[Call Back]]/[[Easter Egg]]: Several references to previous ''Silent Hill'' games appear:
** The music tracks [[Silent Hill 1 (Video Game)|"Silent Hill"]], [[Silent Hill 2 (Video Game)|"Magdalene"]], and [[Silent Hill 3 (Video Game)|"Please Love Me...Once More"]] can be heard playing on radios at certain points in the game.
** The Centennial Building has pictures of the [[Silent Hill Homecoming (Video Game)|"Welcome to Shepherd's Glen"]] sign and the Shepherd family house.
** Elsewhere in the same building a book mentions a member of the Shepherd family who was among the first settlers of Silent Hill.
** Perhaps the biggest one, you can find {{spoiler|[[Silent Hill 4 (Video Game)|Henry Townshend's apartment room, complete with chained door]]}} in the south part of town.
** The red "Void" which periodically chases Murphy is similar to the [[Fan Nickname|Red Light of Death]] from ''Silent Hill 3'', which stalked Heather through a winding fun house. More so, the chase sequences it instigates are basically lifted from its predecessor, [[Silent Hill: Shattered Memories|Shattered Memories]]
** {{spoiler|Pyramid Head}} as well as {{spoiler|two Bubble Head Nurses}} makes a cameo in the joke ending. {{spoiler|Heather Mason, James and Mary Sunderland, and Laura}} make an appearance as well.
** A painting of "Demon Samael" (i.e. the Incubus final boss from the first game), also in the Centennial Building.
** One particular building (which you can't enter) will offer a horribly familiar [[Silent Hill 2|metallic scraping sound]] when you pass by it.
** Quite early in the game you will find that ever-present wheelchair tipped on the side with its wheels still spinning. {{spoiler|Turns out it's somewhat of a subversion as it's actually [[Foreshadowing]]...}}
** A much appreciated aversion; While the stages are more open and sprawling than they've ever been, the amount of broken [[Locked Door|Locked Doors]] you'll encounter can be counted on one hand. And among the doors that are locked but ''can'' be opened most just require you to break the lock with a metal item.
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* [[Convection, Schmonvection]]: Averted. When Murphy accidently starts a fire early on by turning off a leaking gas valve, he starts coughing, like anyone would in a smoke-filled fire situation.
* [[Creepy Doll]]: Appropriately, the Doll enemies.
* [[Cat Scare|Crow Scare]]: Frequently and somewhat [[All Thethe Tropes Wiki Drinking Game|egregiously]] used in the earlier stages, though they do taper off in favour of other, more unsettling types of horror.
** Makes a return in the Centennial garage, should you choose to {{spoiler|inspect either of the cars}}.
* [[Deal Withwith the Devil]]: {{spoiler|Sewell}}'s habit of performing tit-for-tat favors for the prisoners under his watch. Officer Coleridge warns that these "favors" never work out well for the inmates.
{{quote| "I know you're a man of your word, Murphy. You be a straight shooter with me, [[Villains Never Lie|I'll be a straight shooter with you]]." ''([[Dramatic Gun Cock|cocks revolver]])''}}
* [[Death Faked for You]]: The ending "Forgiveness" has {{spoiler|Anne declaring to the police that Murphy died to let him escape.}}
* [[Diegetic Interface]]: The state of Murphy's health is discernible only through the number of wounds on his back.
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* [[Driven to Suicide]]: JP Sater jumps off a cliff {{spoiler|no matter what you say to him.}}
** {{spoiler|Murphy tries this in one of the bad endings. [[Groundhog Day Loop|It doesn't work.]]}}
* [[Dropped a Bridge Onon Him]]: {{spoiler|DJ Ricks doesn't last long once you finally meet him.}}
* [[Drop the Hammer]]: The Bogeyman drops a ''very'' big one made from a metal rod with a concrete block at one end. {{spoiler|Then ''you'' get to use it to fight Anne.}}
* [[Early-Bird Cameo]]: Of the vocal sort: "Revenge is a long and treacherous road, isn't it, Mr. Pendleton? Where do you suppose it ends?" is heard in the opening. We don't find the voice's face or its significance until fairly late in the game.
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* [[Good Angel, Bad Angel]]: Officer Coleridge is the good angel to Murphy, giving him as much respect as his own family and motivating him to apply for parole, while Sewell is Murphy's bad angel, giving him the oppotunity to have revenge on Napier. Officer Coleridge honestly cares about Murphy but Sewell only wants him to take revenge {{spoiler|so he could use Murphy to get Coleridge for trying to have him charged with corruption.}}
* [[Groundhog Day Loop]]: The "Full Circle" ending heavily implies that Howard Blackwood, JP Sater and Bobby Ricks were all [[Hero of Another Story|Heroes of Another Story]] but somehow failed or did something terrible, and became permanent residents of Silent Hill, trapped in their own loop. Said ending results in Murphy having this happen to him - meaning you'll have to play the game again to see another ending.
* [[Harbinger of Impending Doom]] / [[Hell Is That Noise]]: It isn't explicitly stated, but the dedications are apparently an indication of monsters. DJ Bobby Ricks receives calls to his radio station<ref>Implied to be coming from Silent Hill itself</ref> asking him to play songs with dedications to Murphy, which he obligingly does. When Murphy hears these dedications, there are seemingly always monsters nearby. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xPWfcIVuxJA#t=7m31s When Bobby finally meets Murphy] and begins to discuss his plans to escape Silent Hill, [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xPWfcIVuxJA#t=9m45s he gets another call for a dedication... for himself.] He doesn't react well, and his next line to Murphy is "They're coming."
* [[Heroic BSOD]]: A small understated one:
{{quote| '''Murphy''' "I... I can't believe he jumped"}}
* [[Hero Stole My Bike]]: Murphy stole a police-car and proceeded to lead the cops out on an extended car-chase, {{spoiler|all to get himself jailed together with Napier}}.
* [[Hobos]]: Just the one, he provides you access to the subway network in exchange for favours.
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* [[Human Shield]]: Well, maybe not ''human'', but the cages you throw in front of The Void to stall it all have some... thing clearly biological and living inside.
* [[Hyperspace Arsenal]]: Averted with weapons. Unlike in previous entries in the series, Murphy can only carry one weapon at a time. If he finds a gun, Murphy can holster it and carry a melee weapon. Played straight with regular inventory items.
* [[Infant Immortality]]: ''Downpour'' turns [[Averted Trope|dancing on this tropes' grave]] into a freaking sport. In fact, [[What Happened to Thethe Mouse?|with one]] [[Dead to Begin With|possible exeption]], ''every'' kid either shown or referred to in-game ends up dead before the end, making it somewhat of a [[Central Theme|running theme]]. Examples include:
** {{spoiler|Charlie Pendleton's}} death and defilement by a [[Complete Monster]].
** In the sidequests, a father who axed his wife and children to death in a fit of rage, and a mother who is heavily implied to have indirectly caused her severely autistic daughter to drown.
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** That's more a case of [[But Thou Must!]]. And even if he was able to walk over it, [[Closed Circle|the town wouldn't let him get far.]]
* [[Ironic Echo]]: {{spoiler|The "Execution" ending, when Sewell asks him "Any last words?"}}
{{quote| '''Murphy''' Yeah, I'll see you in hell, ''cupcake''.}}
* [[Interface Screw]]: In the latter half of the game, every once in a while the loading screen quotes will change from your standard "Press X to jump" advice into... something a little more sinister:
{{quote| It's in the room with you. You just can't see it.<br />
Why are you lying?<br />
They know you’re alone.<br />
Just give up...<br />
You can’t ignore it forever.<br />
They never really loved you anyway...<br />
We are all slowly dying. }}
** They have no obvious connection to anything in-game, and no explanation is ever given.
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* [[Jump Scare]]
* [[Karma Meter]]: The game keeps a hidden tally of points, which increases or decreases based on whether you kill or spare defeated monsters and at certain points where you have to make moral decisions. Whether your score is positive or negative {{spoiler|combined with your decision at the very end of the game}} determines your ending.
* {{spoiler|[[Karmic Death]]: Sewell is heavily implied to be shot by Anne in one of the endings.}}
* [[Last-Minute Reprieve]]: It's debatable whether or not wandering into Silent Hill was preferable to the alternative.
* [[Let's Play]]: [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s5ofoIeb8wI From] [[Two Best Friends Play]]
* [[Light and Mirrors Puzzle]]: While it ''is'' a puzzle that does involve both lights and mirrors, it's not an entirely straight example; The lights are floodlights used to chase and trap monsters into cages, while the mirror (here a flooded floor) shows the [[Mirror Universe|entirely different plane of existence]] said monsters and floodlights reside on.
* [[Magical Negro]]: Blackwood.
* [[The Man in Thethe Mirror Talks Back]]: {{spoiler|Officer Coleridge}}.
* [[Make Me Wanna Shout]]: The Screamers.
* [[Minimalist Cast]]: There's less than a dozen characters populating the entire town, present day. All the dozens of houses, hovels, and residential areas are completely abandoned. However, between flashbacks, humanoid monsters, and the various well-fleshed out ghost personalities and backstories, it feels a little less desolate.
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* [[Multiple Endings]]: ''Downpour'' continues the tradition.
* [[My Greatest Second Chance]]
* [[Mythology Gag]]: Devil's Pit was run by the ''[[Silent Hill 1 (Video Game)|Gillespie]]'' Coal and Iron Company.
* [[Neck Snap]]: The Bogeyman does this to {{spoiler|the little boy you meet in the monastery}}.
* [[Nightmare Face]]: Monocle Man.
* [[Not Quite Dead]]: If you go for a [[Pacifist Run]] and only knock out enemies, there's a slight chance that they will [[Paranoia Fuel|get back up again and attack you from behind]].
* [[Not What It Looks Like]]: As Murphy kneels over the dead body of {{spoiler|the boy The Bogeyman killed mere seconds ago}}, a little girl walks in on the scene. Naturally she peels off as fast as her legs will let her.
* [[Obstacle Ski Course]]: Well, Obstacle ''Slide'' Course, but there's a few of them in the Otherworld sequences.
* [[Offing the Offspring]]: One of the side quests {{spoiler|involves a missing little girl. Her mother made a route home for her from school by tying ribbons to posts, which she would always follow without hesitation due to her severe autism. You eventually discover that the mother had gotten so sick of living with the girl's condition that she'd deliberately altered the route so she'd walk right off a pier.}}
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* [[Properly Paranoid]]: A sidequest tasks you to clear a haunting by arranging a room till it matches its [[Mirror Universe]] counterpart. But if you fail to do it in the proper order, a monster only visible in said mirror will spawn. When you complete it, you will find a psychiatrists case file on the previous owner of the house, driven totally mad by having to do the same routine of rearranging the room every day, "[[You Have to Believe Me|or else the monsters in the mirror will hurt me!]]".
* [[Quick Time Event]]: Occasionally show up, though not to the extent that ''Homecoming'' had them, and all but a few of them only consist of waggling the left stick.
* [[Revenge]]: This is a major theme in the game.
* [[Revenge Before Reason]]: Murphy {{spoiler|and Anne.}}
* [[Scenery Porn]]: Surprisingly for a [[Scenery Gorn|Silent]] [[Ominous Fog|Hill]] game, The Devil's Pit in particular feature many meticulously rendered mountain-scenes.
* [[Self-Inflicted Hell]]: {{spoiler|Anne in the "Reversal" ending.}}
* [[Shock and Awe]]: The Otherworld's water and electricity motif, which includes the likes of an engulfing fog of electricity that pursues Murphy.
* [[Shout-Out]]:
** The bus crash and Murphy's subsequential escape is more than a passing nod to ''[[The Fugitive (Filmfilm)|The Fugitive]]''.
** [[Word of God]] states that the water slide sequence is a homage to [[The Goonies]].
** The reward for complete the Cinema Verite side-quest is the Golden Gun from the James Bond movies. The caption even says "Just like in the movies."
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* [[Survival Horror]]
* [[Terms of Endangerment]]: Sewell addressing Murphy as "cupcake."
* [[Things That Go Bump in Thethe Night]]: For a game that actively deals with the death of children, naming the recurring baddie "The Bogeyman" was [[Meaningful Name|probably not an accident]].
* [[Town Withwith a Dark Secret]]: Guess. {{spoiler|However, this is the second game to suggest that the town itself is sentient, the first being Silent Hill 2. The town seems to captures people, putting them through test to determine if they are worthy of redemption, if they succeed they achieve some sort of closure, if they fail they die. When DJ Ricks tells Murphy about his boat and its missing keys. Murphy replies that he will hot-wire it, DJ Ricks responds that it wouldn't work and explicitly says that the town has some weird form of reality and that it has rules that must be followed. The town then demonstrates what happens when you try to break them, by sending a group of screamers to grab Anne and DJ Ricks but leaving Murphy unharmed.}}
* [[Trapped in TV Land]]: The Cutting Room Floor sidequest.
* [[Video Game Caring Potential]]/[[Video Game Cruelty Potential]]: How nice or mean you are basically determines your ending:
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* [[Waking Up At the Morgue]]
* [[Weirdness Censor]]: Played with, The Postman is seemed oblivious to the strange occurrences of the town and continues his route. {{spoiler|because he is a manifestation of the town and has been present since before 1867.}} DJ Ricks has been continuing his job as a Disc Jockey despite the town being in near ruins. {{spoiler|DJ Ricks however, is actually very aware of the monsters but is playing along out of fear. He states it as "This town has rules." He tries to contact Murphy several times to help him escape but it backfires.}}
* [[What Happened to Thethe Mouse?]]: {{spoiler|No mention of DJ Bobby Ricks is made after the attack at the radio station.}}
* [[Whispering Ghosts]]: Frequently, sources including but not limited to {{spoiler|Frank Coleridge}}.
* [[Wide Open Sandbox]]: Not quite a giant sandbox, but you have more areas to explore and some side-quests to complete; think "original ''Silent Hill''" and some of its optional areas, as opposed to the more linear areas of later games.
* [[Written Sound Effect]]: A truly bizarre example. In the Monastery Otherworld there is a prison-hallway made entirely out of cardboard that contains a life-sized string-puppet version of the Bogeyman, [[Little Big PlanetLittleBigPlanet]]-style. A little cardboard [[Speech Bubble]] with the appropriate sound-effect written on it appears whenever it swings its hammer.
* [[You Killed My Father]]: {{spoiler|The whole reason Anne Cunningham chases after Murphy. Whether he did it or not depends on the ending you get.}}
 
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Survival Horror]]
[[Category:Silent Hill]]
[[Category:Silent Hill: Downpour]]
[[Category:Video Game]]
[[Category:Silent Hill{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Video Games of the 2010s]]