Compare Silent Hill f vs Lost Records: Bloom & Rage

P1 Silent Hill f
P2 Lost Records: Bloom & Rage

Comparison Takeaways

Silent Hill f

Where It Has the Edge

  • core gameplay loop is 4.5 vs 1.5. The core loop was praised when exploration and combat reinforced Hinako’s psychological journey rather than acting like a...
  • originality is 5.0 vs 2.5. Originality received a strong positive score from one reviewer who emphasized how divergent and culturally distinct this entry...
  • stealth mechanics is 4.5 vs 2.2. Stealth received a positive note from one reviewer who found avoidance viable and encouraged rather than merely optional.
  • lore depth is 4.1 vs 2.1. Lore depth was usually praised for notes, folklore, religious context, and New Game+ revelations, though one negative review...

Lost Records: Bloom & Rage

Where It Has the Edge

  • crash stability is 4.0 vs 2.0. Crash stability had limited direct evidence, with one PS5 reviewer noting no crashes.
  • character development is 4.2 vs 2.8. Character development was one of the strongest areas, with broad praise for the four girls, their relationships, and...
  • movement feel is 4.0 vs 3.0. Movement feel received limited but positive evidence, with one reviewer saying roaming and camera use usually felt good...
  • side character depth is 4.4 vs 3.5. Side character depth was often strong, especially around Kat, though one review singled out Dylan’s unresolved arc as...
Average score
Product 1: Silent Hill f
3.7
Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
3.5
accessibility options
Product 1: Silent Hill f
2.5

Accessibility support was described as limited, with some useful subtitle, colorblind, and controller layout options but no extensive customization.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
age appropriateness
Product 1: Silent Hill f
1.9

Age appropriateness was consistently cautionary because reviewers emphasized the 18 rating, graphic violence, content warnings, and strong-stomach requirements.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
AI behavior
Product 1: Silent Hill f
2.0

Enemy AI was criticized in IGN’s written and video reviews for being easy to exploit by breaking line of sight or skipping encounters.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
animation quality
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.5

Animation quality was praised in the limited evidence available, especially for lifelike cutscene movement and striking cinematic sequences.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
4.5

Animation quality was praised where discussed, especially expressive action and realistic imperfect body movement.

art direction
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.9

Art direction was one of the clearest strengths, with reviewers repeatedly praising the beauty-in-terror concept, monster imagery, and striking visual identity.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
4.1

Art direction was mostly praised for cinematography, lighting, production design, and visual identity, with one strongly negative dissent calling the aesthetic average.

atmosphere
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.7

Atmosphere was a signature strength, with most reviewers praising the foggy, oppressive, beautiful, and unsettling mood, though TechRadar found it inconsistent.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
4.5

Atmosphere was a strong point, with praise for dreamlike, creepy, nostalgic, and emotionally charged mood.

boss design
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.0

Boss design was mostly praised for strong visual concepts, spectacle, symbolism, and better encounter pacing than regular combat, though a few found fights unexciting or too action-like.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
bug frequency
Product 1: Silent Hill f
No score yet
Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
2.4

Bug frequency was a common concern, with many reviews mentioning texture pop-in, progression issues, visual bugs, reloads, or a buggy launch.

camera behavior
Product 1: Silent Hill f
2.2

Camera behavior was one of the weaker mechanical areas, with repeated complaints about narrow spaces, lock-on fights, and blocked views.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
character development
Product 1: Silent Hill f
2.8

Character development was mixed: one review found optional material effective enough, while another criticized the characters as unlikable and poorly developed.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
4.2

Character development was one of the strongest areas, with broad praise for the four girls, their relationships, and the adult/teen contrasts, offset by a few dissenting views.

character roster
Product 1: Silent Hill f
No score yet
Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
4.7

The character roster was praised for diversity, design, and romanceable central characters, with reviewers responding strongly to the core group.

combat system
Product 1: Silent Hill f
3.1

Combat was the most divisive attribute: several reviewers liked the melee pressure and thematic vulnerability, while many others found it clunky, overemphasized, unrewarding, or exhausting by the final act.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
content variety
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.5

New Game+ was singled out for adding more content, which improves the product’s content variety beyond a single first run.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
4.0

Content variety had limited direct evidence, but one review positively highlighted the abundance of collectibles.

controls responsiveness
Product 1: Silent Hill f
2.8

Responsiveness drew mixed-to-negative reactions, with frequent complaints about sluggish attacks, stamina limits, jank, and loss of control, though one technical review praised responsive animation.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
core gameplay loop
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.5

The core loop was praised when exploration and combat reinforced Hinako’s psychological journey rather than acting like a pure action game.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
1.5

The core loop was criticized by the few reviewers who addressed it directly, with one saying it needed more as a game and another finding little gameplay at all.

crash stability
Product 1: Silent Hill f
2.0

Crash stability evidence was limited but mixed-negative, with one reviewer reporting many crashes and another only one crash.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
4.0

Crash stability had limited direct evidence, with one PS5 reviewer noting no crashes.

dialogue quality
Product 1: Silent Hill f
2.0

Dialogue quality received limited but negative evidence, with Eurogamer criticizing early teen dialogue as cringey or irritating.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
2.6

Dialogue quality leaned mixed to negative, with recurring criticism of clunky, awkward, or unnatural lines despite some qualified praise.

difficulty balance
Product 1: Silent Hill f
3.9

Difficulty balance was generally flexible because combat and puzzle settings are separate, though some reviewers wanted clearer or more normal middle-ground tuning.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
economy and resource balance
Product 1: Silent Hill f
3.3

Resource balance split reviewers: some liked the tension from durability, sanity, scarce supplies, and limited inventory, while others found healing scarcity or item limits frustrating.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
emotional impact
Product 1: Silent Hill f
5.0

Emotional impact was very strong among supporters, who described the story as moving, haunting, morose, and difficult to stop thinking about.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
4.2

Emotional impact was a major strength for many reviewers, with praise for poignancy, tears, nostalgia, grief, and connection, despite a few negative reactions.

endgame content
Product 1: Silent Hill f
2.5

Endgame content drew criticism where the final fourth shifted too heavily into combat and lost the earlier balance.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
enemy variety
Product 1: Silent Hill f
3.2

Enemy variety was highly contested: reviewers loved many grotesque designs, but a repeated complaint was that too few archetypes become overused late-game.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
environmental detail
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.0

Environmental detail was mostly positive for rich, interesting spaces, though TechRadar found some locations too clean or mundane.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
4.5

Environmental detail was a clear strength, with reviewers highlighting era-specific props, lived-in rooms, and careful production details.

exploration quality
Product 1: Silent Hill f
3.9

Exploration was usually seen as rewarding and atmospheric, but several reviewers said combat, tight inventory, or enemy pressure made it harder to enjoy freely.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
3.0

Exploration divided reviewers, with one calling object hunting wasteful while another enjoyed moving through the world at a personal pace.

facial animations
Product 1: Silent Hill f
5.0

Facial animations received a strong positive note for clearly representing character emotions in Unreal Engine 5.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
3.8

Facial animations were mixed: one review praised expressive faces, another criticized lip syncing, and another praised facial animation effects.

faithfulness to franchise
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.0

Faithfulness to franchise was sharply split: many reviewers called it a return to form or landmark entry, while others felt it was disconnected from Silent Hill’s town, lore, or feel.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
family friendliness
Product 1: Silent Hill f
1.5

Family friendliness is very low because reviewers repeatedly emphasized mature content, graphic violence, and content warnings.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
frame rate stability
Product 1: Silent Hill f
3.3

Frame-rate stability was mixed: several reviewers reported stable or mostly locked performance, while others noted stutters, dips, choppiness, or 30 fps cutscene limits.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
3.0

Frame rate stability had mixed evidence, with one Steam Deck review saying it never chugged and another PS5 review reporting hefty drops.

fun factor
Product 1: Silent Hill f
3.4

Fun factor was polarized: positive reviews called the game amazing or hype-worthy, while dissenting reviewers said it failed to grab them or became obnoxious.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
3.8

Fun factor was polarized, with enthusiastic enjoyment from several reviewers and one reviewer saying they did not enjoy it.

gameplay mechanics
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.2

Reviewers generally praised the mechanical mix when it supported survival-horror pressure, highlighting risk/reward systems, progression, and thematic alignment; the few caveats centered on complexity and friction.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
3.4

Reviewers split on the simple narrative-adventure mechanics: several liked the camcorder and environmental interaction, while others felt filming and light interactivity became filler.

graphics quality
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.6

Graphics quality was broadly praised as stunning or gorgeous, with only one negative review calling the visuals bland despite their color and artistry.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
4.5

Graphics quality was broadly strong, with repeated praise for landscapes, character models, lighting, and overall visual presentation.

handheld play suitability
Product 1: Silent Hill f
No score yet
Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
2.8

Handheld suitability was split, with one reviewer praising improved Steam Deck performance and another strongly discouraging Steam Deck play.

horror tension
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.2

Horror tension was strong for many reviewers, especially in symbolic scenes and chase-like moments, but some felt scares faded or never matched classic dread.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
3.3

Horror tension had limited evidence and mixed results, with one review praising suspense while another felt the mystery lacked momentum.

HUD clarity
Product 1: Silent Hill f
2.0

HUD clarity was criticized where the pop-up inventory exposed only tiny icons during stressful moments.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
immersion
Product 1: Silent Hill f
3.0

Immersion was mixed: atmosphere and world detail often pulled reviewers in, but combat friction, stutters, or performance issues could break the spell.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
3.5

Immersion was mixed: one reviewer praised immediate immersion, while another said an editing-like issue broke immersion.

innovation
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.3

Innovation was viewed as bold and risk-taking, though TechRadar framed those risks as both fantastic and flawed.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
learning curve
Product 1: Silent Hill f
3.5

The learning curve was described as noticeable but manageable, especially as players adapt to clunky melee timing and survival choices.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
level design
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.8

Level design was praised for compact, meaningful areas and strong map layout, especially when supporting exploration, puzzles, and atmosphere.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
lore depth
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.1

Lore depth was usually praised for notes, folklore, religious context, and New Game+ revelations, though one negative review argued the lore lacked cohesion.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
2.1

Lore depth was a repeated weakness; reviewers often found the Abyss, supernatural elements, or broader mystery underexplained or unresolved.

map and navigation design
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.8

Map and navigation design was praised where reviewers highlighted strong map layout and clear side-area structure.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
menu usability
Product 1: Silent Hill f
1.8

Menu usability was a recurring complaint, especially around messy inventory management, tiny icons, and awkward item handling.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
movement feel
Product 1: Silent Hill f
3.0

Movement was described as deliberately sluggish and gradual, fitting vulnerability but making navigation and fights feel heavy.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
4.0

Movement feel received limited but positive evidence, with one reviewer saying roaming and camera use usually felt good despite the game’s simplicity.

narrative quality
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.4

Narrative quality was one of the strongest areas, with most reviewers praising its dark, layered psychological story, though a minority found it confusing, disjointed, or unengaging.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
3.5

Narrative quality was sharply mixed: reviewers praised the character drama and emotional payoffs but often criticized the supernatural mystery, structure, ending, or uneven payoff.

originality
Product 1: Silent Hill f
5.0

Originality received a strong positive score from one reviewer who emphasized how divergent and culturally distinct this entry feels.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
2.5

Originality had limited evidence, with one reviewer criticizing the story as trope-heavy.

pacing
Product 1: Silent Hill f
3.4

Pacing opinions were mixed: some liked the compact survival-horror length, while others criticized abrupt arcs, drawn-out final hours, or disjointed world transitions.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
2.7

Pacing was the clearest repeated concern, with many reviews calling the game slow, glacial, rushed in Tape 2, or uneven despite some praise for deliberate buildup.

performance optimization
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.3

Performance optimization was mostly positive, especially on base PS5 and PC, though some reviewers still reported stutters, technical problems, or platform-specific issues.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
3.5

Performance optimization was inconsistent across platforms and patches, ranging from PS5 stability praise to texture loading and popping complaints.

platform-specific feature support
Product 1: Silent Hill f
2.5

Platform-specific support was mixed-negative in the technical review because the PS5 Pro version showed image-quality problems.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
polish
Product 1: Silent Hill f
3.5

Polish received a single mixed score from a technical review that highlighted distracting image-quality issues despite otherwise strong console performance.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
2.0

Polish received limited direct evidence but was criticized through technical blemishes in one review.

progression system
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.3

Progression was viewed positively when upgrades and New Game+ rewards encouraged exploration and gave players more reasons to revisit areas.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
4.1

The relationship and choice systems were often praised for reactivity, especially in Tape 2, though at least one review felt dialogue choices lacked meaning.

protagonist appeal
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.3

Hinako was usually praised as a memorable, vulnerable, and compelling protagonist, though a small minority found her less likable or undercut by the broader story.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
3.9

Swann’s protagonist appeal was mixed but mostly positive: several reviewers loved or related to her, while others found her bland or rarely compelling.

puzzle design
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.2

Puzzle design was broadly a strength, with many reviewers praising clever, thematic, challenging puzzles, though some found certain clues obtuse, culturally unclear, or overlong.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
2.7

Puzzle design was mixed to negative: a few simple puzzles were praised for the right complexity, but multiple reviews wanted more depth or found specific puzzles clunky.

replay value
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.2

Replay value was a major strength for most reviewers, driven by multiple endings, New Game+ changes, extra lore, and altered routes; dissenters disliked replaying because of combat.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
3.8

Replay value was generally tied to branching outcomes, relationship variation, and alternate endings, though one negative reviewer said they would never replay it.

side character depth
Product 1: Silent Hill f
3.5

Side-character depth split reviewers, with one praising the small cast as multilayered and another saying Hinako’s friends felt underused.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
4.4

Side character depth was often strong, especially around Kat, though one review singled out Dylan’s unresolved arc as a weakness.

sound design
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.8

Sound design was consistently strong, with reviewers praising enemy audio, ambient terror, and atmospheric cues that heighten tension.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
3.8

Sound design was mostly positive for soundscape and cinematic effect, though one review reported overlapping audio issues.

soundtrack quality
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.5

Soundtrack quality was usually excellent, especially for tension and identity, though one negative review called the music forgettable and another found fewer standout songs.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
4.2

Soundtrack quality was usually praised, often as excellent, atmospheric, or emotionally effective, though one review found it disappointing.

stealth mechanics
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.5

Stealth received a positive note from one reviewer who found avoidance viable and encouraged rather than merely optional.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
2.2

Stealth was mostly a weak point: one reviewer liked a short sequence as variety, but others called later stealth awkward, padding-like, or simply not good.

upgrade system
Product 1: Silent Hill f
3.6

Upgrade systems were appreciated for strategic trade-offs and natural-feeling growth, but a few reviewers found the mechanics minor or confusing.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
user interface design
Product 1: Silent Hill f
2.8

User interface design was split between praise for the journal’s care and criticism of poor organization in notes and collectibles.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
value for money
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.3

Value for money leaned positive, with several reviewers recommending it or calling it a buy, while one more cautious reviewer suggested waiting for a sale.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
3.5

Value for money was polarized: some called the $40 package a steal or worthwhile, while others were hesitant or said it was not worth buying.

visual effects quality
Product 1: Silent Hill f
5.0

Visual effects were praised for fog, lighting, volumetrics, and visual storytelling that reinforce the oppressive atmosphere.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
voice acting
Product 1: Silent Hill f
5.0

Voice acting received consistent praise from the reviews that addressed it, with Japanese and English performances both described as strong or superb.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
3.9

Voice acting was mostly praised, especially the cast performances, though a few reviewers found Swann’s performance weaker or grating.

weapon balance
Product 1: Silent Hill f
2.4

Weapon balance was divisive but leaned negative: some liked durability as tension, while many felt weapons broke too quickly, felt similar, or became tedious to manage.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
No score yet
world-building
Product 1: Silent Hill f
5.0

World-building was consistently praised, especially the Japanese folklore, historical setting, regional symbolism, and mythos behind Ebisugaoka and the Dark Shrine.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
4.4

World-building was widely praised for its nostalgic 1990s setting, memory framing, and believable sense of place.

writing quality
Product 1: Silent Hill f
4.6

Writing quality was usually celebrated as literary, sharp, and emotionally unsettling, but the most negative review criticized it as bloated and note-heavy.

Product 2: Lost Records: Bloom & Rage
3.7

Writing quality ranged from graceful, hard-truth character writing to complaints about structural problems, contrivance, and uneven dialogue.