Konami Clarifies “New Silent Hill Game” in Financial Report: It’s Townfall, Not a Secret Project
Konami has addressed the recent wave of speculation around the Silent Hill franchise, confirming that the “new game in development” referenced in its latest financial messaging is not a surprise, unannounced project. Instead, the company says it was referring to Silent Hill: Townfall, the previously revealed entry announced back in 2022.

The confusion started after Konami’s quarterly financial update highlighted continued work on the franchise, alongside the already-known Silent Hill 1 Remake being developed with Bloober Team. That wording led some fans to believe another Silent Hill title—separate from the announced slate—might be in production.

Konami has now clarified the situation directly: the project it meant is Silent Hill: Townfall, being developed in collaboration with Annapurna Interactive, exactly as originally presented. In other words, the financial report wasn’t teasing a hidden game—it was pointing back to the existing roadmap.

The update also reinforces the broader direction Konami appears to be aiming for: a more consistent release rhythm for Silent Hill, with the publisher seemingly interested in making the series a regular presence rather than a once-in-a-decade comeback.

For now, the key takeaway is straightforward: no newly revealed Silent Hill project was confirmed here—just a firm reminder that Townfall remains part of the active plan, and more official details will likely depend on when Konami chooses to speak next.

The confusion started after Konami’s quarterly financial update highlighted continued work on the franchise, alongside the already-known Silent Hill 1 Remake being developed with Bloober Team. That wording led some fans to believe another Silent Hill title—separate from the announced slate—might be in production.
Konami has now clarified the situation directly: the project it meant is Silent Hill: Townfall, being developed in collaboration with Annapurna Interactive, exactly as originally presented. In other words, the financial report wasn’t teasing a hidden game—it was pointing back to the existing roadmap.

The update also reinforces the broader direction Konami appears to be aiming for: a more consistent release rhythm for Silent Hill, with the publisher seemingly interested in making the series a regular presence rather than a once-in-a-decade comeback.
For now, the key takeaway is straightforward: no newly revealed Silent Hill project was confirmed here—just a firm reminder that Townfall remains part of the active plan, and more official details will likely depend on when Konami chooses to speak next.