Skip to main content

We didn’t need Hollow Knight: Silksong in 2024

Key art for Hollow Knight: Silksong.
Team Cherry
3D renders of video game controllers and devices.
This story is part of our 2024 in Gaming series. Follow along as we reflect on the year’s best titles.

Metroidvania fans like myself spent all of 2024 impatiently waiting for Hollow Knight: Silksong, but we didn’t really need to.

Take a step back, and you’ll see just how good of a year 2024 was for the Metroidvania genre even without that one game. From the AAA space with Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown to the indie scene with games like Nine Sols, many fantastic games dropped in this well-trodden platforming subgenre this year. You’re doing yourself a disservice if you aren’t checking out other well-made Metroidvania tiles while you wait for Team Cherry to drop the game it has been teasing since 2019.

Hollow Knight: Silksong - Xbox Game Pass Reveal Trailer - Xbox & Bethesda Games Showcase 2022

I do not doubt that Team Cherry’s long-awaited sequel will be a monumental release, but we shouldn’t use that as an excuse to ignore how the genre evolved over the course of the year. It’s misguided to place all your opinions on whether a year was good for games on a single title. The video game industry is much too diverse and flush with options for that — and 2024 proved it.

Recommended Videos

The many Metroidvanias of 2024

The original Hollow Knight is considered one of the best Metroidvanias of all time. It sported gorgeous visuals, had a lot of intriguing lore to dig into, gave players a massive and secret-filled world to explore, and featured silky-smooth platforming. No matter which of those things about Hollow Knight you liked the most, some new Metroidvania game this year appealed to that sensibility.

Want to play a game with gorgeous art? Look at the stunning animation of Bo: Path of the Teal Lotus or the detailed pixel art of Gestalt: Steam & Cinder. Are narrative and action the most important elements of a Metroidvania for you? Then Nine Sols’ Taopunk world and deflection-driven combat create the Sekiro to Hollow Knight’s Dark Souls. And no Metroidvania this year captured the feeling of curiosity during exploration as expertly as Animal Well did.

NineSols - Console Release Date Trailer

Even those who prefer retro games were satiated this year with the Castlevania Dominus Collection. There are several other competent Metroidvanias that I could mention, like Biomorph, The Devil Within: Satgat, AWAKEN — Astral Blade, Yars Rising, or Pinball Spire. A quick look at the genre’s new and trending Steam page will show how many Metroidvania games are coming out every month. Hollow Knight: Silksong might not be out right now, but this genre is as lively as ever.

Coming for Hollow Knight’s crown

Of all the Metroidvania games that came out this year, one matches — and, in some areas, surpasses — Hollow Knight. That game is Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown. Released in January, this game brought the series back to its 2D roots while innovating in the Metroidvania space. The Lost Crown is a meaty adventure that takes upward of 20 hours to beat, and not a moment of that feels like fluff.

Combat is fast and snappy, sometimes feeling like a 2D version of Devil May Cry or Stellar Blade. Platforming is fluid, and Ubisoft wasn’t afraid to create some truly devious challenges that wouldn’t have felt out of place in a game like Celeste. Both benefit from the Metroidvania formula as their complexities deepen as players acquire more abilities. On top of all that, it’s also incredibly approachable.

Prince of Persia The Lost Crown - Reveal Gameplay Trailer

There are tons of difficulty and accessibility modifiers, and a Memory Shard system allows players to take screenshots of important locations and pin them to a map so they don’t forget where to go next. Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown gives Hollow Knight a run for its money as the best recommendation for someone’s first Metroidvania. The base game and its DLC provided some of the most fun I’ve had in video games this year, and I can’t imagine not having played it because I just wanted to wait for Silksong.

It’s always a good year for games

There’s a takeaway in all of this. Whenever a highly anticipated product takes a long time to come out, the noise surrounding the hype for it becomes deafening. Right now, Hollow Knight: Silksong is right up there with Nintendo Switch 2 and Grand Theft Auto 6 as the biggest culprits of this in the gaming space. Of all those titles, the hype for Silksong can be the most damaging because it takes away attention from other indie games and other standout Metroidvanias.

Check the chat of every gaming showcase for the past couple of years and you’ll find at least a few people spamming it with pleas for Silksong. Those fans can sometimes tune out announcements from indie-focused presentations like the Triple-I Initiative Showcase because Silksong didn’t appear. Games like The Lost Crown seemingly underperform and don’t get sequels, while some Metroidvania fans act like Silksong is the only upcoming game in the space that matters.

Hollow Knight: Silksong Gameplay - Nintendo Treehouse: Live | E3 2019

None of that is Team Cherry’s fault; the studio should take as long as it needs to craft an unforgettable experience. It’s also OK to be excited about Silksong. I’ve just found myself disappointed in people saying 2024 has been a weak year for games because it didn’t have as many high-profile game launches as 2023 did or 2025 will. The situation with Silksong and the Metroidvania genre in 2024 is a microcosm of that.

The next time you’re about to beg for Hollow Knight: Silksong in a showcase chat, maybe head over to Steam and see if there’s a new Metroidvania title that you’re interested in playing there.

Tomas Franzese
A former Gaming Staff Writer at Digital Trends, Tomas Franzese now reports on and reviews the latest releases and exciting…
Dell slashed the price of the Alienware m18 R2 gaming laptop with RTX 4080 by $420
The Alienware m18 R2 gaming laptop with Baldur's Gate 3 on the screen.

You should be on the lookout for gaming laptop deals if you're thinking about making an upgrade -- these devices are pretty expensive, so any discount will help cushion the blow on your wallet. Here's an offer from Dell to consider: a $420 discount for the powerful Alienware m18 R2 with the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4080 graphics card, which reduces its price to $2,380 from $2,800. You can either pocket the savings or use them to buy more video games and accessories, but you need to act fast because there's a chance that the gaming laptop's price will be back to normal as soon as tomorrow.

Why you should buy the Alienware m18 R2 gaming laptop
The Alienware m18 R2 makes a run at the best gaming laptops with top-of-the-line specifications and a striking design. In addition to the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4080 graphics card, which our gaming laptop buying guide says is among the top-tier GPUs, the machine is equipped with the 14th-generation Intel Core i9 processor and 32GB of RAM that's the sweet spot for high-end gamers, according to our guide on how much RAM do you need. You'll be able to play the best PC games at their most demanding settings on the Alienware m18 R2, and you'll even be prepared for the upcoming PC games of the next few years.

Read more
3 PlayStation Plus games to play this weekend (February 14-16)
Players charge at each other in Chivalry 2's Arena mode.

PlayStation surprised us earlier this week and a new State of Play showcase that highlighted a ton of upcoming PS5 games to look forward to, such as Metal Gear Solid: Delta and Onimusha: Way of the Sword. However, we have a long time to wait for most of those games, and even longer if you want to snag them on PlayStation Plus. This month has no shortage of new games coming out to play, but if you don't have the time or money to get them all, PlayStation Plus has you covered. We picked out some gems from the catalog that might have gone under your radar at the time. Whether you want a deep RPG, fantastic party game, or hardcore multiplayer title, these are the games you should play this weekend.
The Outer Worlds
The Outer Worlds - Come to Halcyon Trailer | PS4

There's a good chance that Avowed will eventually make its way to PS5, but right now, there's no official word on that. What has been on PlayStation Plus for a while is the last major RPG from Obsidian, The Outer Worlds. Often compared to a Fallout in space, this is a more contained RPG experience where you explore several hub locations rather than a single open world. The entire game is a parody on corporations, capitalism, and class that hits way more than it misses. You are given a ton of different build options, and the companions are some of the best we've had the pleasure to meet. This isn't a huge game, but we do need to give you fair warning that it is leaving the service this month so you will need to commit to it if you want to finish it all. Even if you don't, it is worth a purchase to be ready for The Outer Worlds 2.

Read more
How to rebind skills in Avowed
A spellcaster holds a book in Avowed.

Making proper use of all your best abilities in Avowed is the easiest of the tips and tricks you can take into the game. When you begin, you will have your healing and mana potions set on your quick select bar, followed by the first skill you unlock and first companion ability. That's great in the early game, but it isn't long before you unlock new skills that you want on that slot more than what is put there for you. You can always access all your abilities through the tactical menu, but that is a bit cumbersome. Instead, here's how you can remap your quick skills to whatever you want.

Read more