yes the game is baced on a true town that had a massive coal mine fire that is just burning out today and the was a cult but the thing with alssa from the games is not true. although the people who suvived the fires belive the town is haunted.
I'm afraid notTechnically no, as far as I'm aware there is no actual 'Silent Hill'. However, There is the town that Silent Hill (the movie) was based upon called Centrailia, PA.But Just like Silent Hill, there is an underground coal fire that's been burning for the last 40 years. You can not actually enter the town due to high levels of toxic gas and sinkholes. You can however visit the outskirts and surrounding towns! I actually live about an hour away and its pretty eerie place!
Atop the Fourth Wall - 2008 Silent Hill Paint It Black 4-40 was released on: USA: 3 October 2011
well they say it was burning for 40 years so i believe it's still burning
The mine fire in Centralia has been burning since 1962.
Katy Hill is 40 years old (birthdate: April 15, 1971).
Yes. Age 40 is considered "Over The Hill"
Usually the term "over the hill" refers to over the age of 50. Twenty years ago, it actually referred to the age of 40. It seems as time goes by, 40 becomes the new 30 and so on.
Silent Valley is about 40 km from anaikatti
The Burning Man is 40' tall.
As of the end of the 2013-2014 NFL season Terrance Williams is 24 years old.
Silent Hill is real. Located in Centralia, Pennsylvania. It is almost deserted.As recently as 1981, there were over 1,000 residents living in Centralia, although the population has now dwindled to 11 (we'll say that again: 11 people) as a result of a 40-year mine fire burning beneath the borough (we'll say that again: it's been burning for 40 years... underneath the town). This is certainly not unlike Silent Hill, which was left deserted since devastating coal fires ravaged the town and its people.The inferno started when a trash fire was lit in an abandoned mine pit in Centralia in 1962. The fire ignited an exposed vein of coal and spread throughout the mines beneath the borough. Several attempts have been made and millions of dollars have been spent unsuccessfully to extinguish this fire that still burns today.The "problem" wasn't really acknowledged until a series of accidents in the '70s and '80s, including the appearances of sinkholes hundreds of feet deep. In 1984, Congress allocated more than $40 million for relocation efforts, and most residents moved to nearby Mount Carmel and Ashland.However, a very few families opted to stay, and they're still there, despite the fact that the state of Pennsylvania has condemned all the buildings in the borough and the US Postal Service has revoked its zip code of 17927. The 11 holdouts include the town's 89-year-old mayor, Lamar Mervine, who refuses to leave because "I like it here."Try going to google maps, Type in West Virginia silent hill, pick first option.
It is the age of 40.