- Provide an immersive gaming experience that combines puzzle-solving with action against smarter zombies.
- Excellent for any Resident Evil fan
- Still makes you jump
- Enhanced DS port of the original
- Choice of characters adds replay value
- Live action cut scenes are entertaining
- Felt unnecessary after the 2002 remake
- Controls take time to get used to
- Some zombies refuse to stay down
- Playing on the go when the console isn’t available
- For fans of the Resident Evil franchise
- Live action cut scenes may not appeal to everyone
- Gameplay may feel dated compared to newer titles
Description
Ever stuck on a dreary train ride, praying for something wild to happen? Fire up your DS and load Resident Evil: Deadly Silence. It isn’t just another zombie shooter—it’s brain-bending puzzles, pitch-black hallways and that sweaty-palms dread. You hit power, and suddenly Raccoon City’s back, waiting to chew you up. Two ways to play. Classic Mode for OG scares or ReBirth to twist things with the stylus. Choose Jill or Chris. Replay value? Sky-high.
- Game Title: Resident Evil: Deadly Silence
- Platform: Nintendo DS
- Modes: Classic Mode and ReBirth Mode – different scares each playthrough
- Playable Characters: Jill Valentine or Chris Redfield to mix things up
- Blood Colour Options: Red or green, your call
- Live Action Cut Scenes: Bits of cheesy drama that strangely grow on you
Look, I was so over the latest remakes—they felt as flat as day-old toast. Then Deadly Silence sucker-punched my nostalgia. Every jump scare had me yelping, flinging the DS like a frisbee. Mate quipped, “Just what the Umbrella doctor ordered,” and I couldn’t argue. Sure, the controls get clumsy at first. But once you nail them, satisfaction overload. Those live-action cut scenes? Some folks sneer, but I dig the kitsch. Brings that handheld charm. So. Are you brave enough? Snag Resident Evil: Deadly Silence now—before copies vanish. Dive into the darkness. Face the undead. Survive… if you can.











