Silent Hill 2 Remake Hits 5 Million Sales as Konami Launches Spring Sale
Bloober Team's critically acclaimed Silent Hill 2 remake has crossed the 5 million copies sold milestone, and Konami is celebrating with deep discounts on its horror lineup through March 25.
Konami's bet on Bloober Team has well and truly paid off. The Silent Hill 2 remake - once a source of skepticism from longtime fans of the series - has now sold 5 million copies worldwide as of January 31, 2026, counting both digital and physical sales across PC, PS5, and Xbox. The milestone confirms the remake as one of the most successful horror games of recent years and a genuine revival for a franchise many had written off.
To mark the occasion, Konami has kicked off a PS Store Spring Sale running through March 25 with some of the best prices yet on its horror titles. The Silent Hill 2 Deluxe Edition is down to $39.99 (50% off its regular $79.99), while Silent Hill F's Deluxe Edition matches that deal at the same price. For those looking to double up, the Standard Dual Pack containing both games sits at $59.99 (40% off), and the Deluxe Dual Pack drops to $71.99 - also 40% off.
The success of the remake is a vindication story for Bloober Team, a studio that faced real doubt over whether it was the right fit for such a beloved classic. The finished product silenced most of those concerns, delivering a faithful yet modernized take that honored the original's psychological horror while giving it a visual and mechanical overhaul worthy of current hardware. It proved that the Silent Hill name still carries serious weight when handled with care.
Silent Hill F, the other title featured in the sale, carves a different path. Set in 1960s Japan and led by protagonist Shimizu Hinako, it takes a more action-forward approach that risks putting off survival horror purists. But for those willing to meet it on its own terms, it's been praised as an astoundingly beautiful game - one that horror fans really should experience despite its flaws.
The series shows no sign of slowing down. Bloober Team is already working on an original Silent Hill game separate from the remake, while Konami has Silent Hill: Townfall in development at Scottish studio Screen Burn. That one takes a first-person approach, continuing the franchise's recent trend of diversifying how it delivers fear. With 5 million sales as a foundation, the future of Silent Hill looks considerably brighter than it did just a few years ago.