By Elie Gould,Harvey Randall,Kara Phillips,Sean Martin,Shaun Prescott,Wes Fenlon
Copyright pcgamer
Skip to main content
Close main menu
THE GLOBAL AUTHORITY ON PC GAMES
View Profile
Search PC Gamer
PC Gaming Show
Movies & TV
Affiliate links
Meet the team
Community guidelines
About PC Gamer
PC Gamer Magazine Subscription
Why subscribe?
Subscribe to the world’s #1 PC gaming mag
Try a single issue or save on a subscription
Issues delivered straight to your door or device
From£35.99Subscribe now
Battlefield 6
Essential Hardware
Borderlands 4
Don’t miss these
I spent all weekend playing Hollow Knight Silksong and I’m totally enthralled, but nothing could completely live up to the hype after so many years
Gaming Industry
Hollow Knight’s creators didn’t want to be constrained by the ‘metroidvania’ label, but they accidentally set a standard that every game since—even Silksong—has to reckon with
Is Silksong everything we hoped? 5 PC Gamer writers react to the first hours of Team Cherry’s extraordinarily hyped sequel
Forget trying to cram in Hollow Knight before Silksong launches—it’s too good to rush
I thought we moved on from hellish boss runbacks, but Silksong is here to remind us what it’s like to be kicked while you’re down
If you’re having trouble with Silksong’s difficulty, keep going—Act 2 is worth the pain, and it does get ‘easier’
Silksong players are wrestling with the game’s ‘stabs you and kicks you for crying about it’ difficulty
If Silksong’s corpse runs and double damage hits are too demanding, here’s a pair of mods to tone down the difficulty just a notch
After 30 minutes with Hollow Knight: Silksong, I’m desperate to play another 100 hours of its refined, needle-sharp action
The best indie games on PC
Hollow Knight: Silksong live launch coverage: It’s finally here
All of Silksong’s top mods make the game easier, including a returning Hollow Knight QoL favorite: An always-on compass without wasting a tool slot
Even more games are moving out of Silksong’s way: ‘I feel like a little krill trying not to get eaten by a blue whale’
Why did Team Cherry’s devs stay so quiet about Hollow Knight: Silksong? ‘All we could really say is, we’re still working on it’, so they stopped doing that
15 hidden gems in the Steam Summer Sale you’ve still got time to grab
9 metroidvanias to play if you’ve realized Hollow Knight: Silksong just isn’t for you
Shaun Prescott
Contributions from
Kara Phillips, Wes Fenlon, Harvey Randall, Sean Martin, Elie Gould
10 September 2025
If fleas, beetles and needles aren’t your thing, there’s a world of possibilities out there.
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.
(Image credit: NIGORO)
Everyone’s talking about Hollow Knight Silksong, and that’s understandable. It’s one of the most obsessively anticipated sequels in recent memory, and it’s a really fun metroidvania. It’s also a brilliant excuse to re-open the reliably polarising difficulty in games debate.
I can’t remember there ever being this much buzz for an exploration platformer before, but aside from the aforementioned difficulty, there’s probably a few good reasons why you might bounce off Silksong. Perhaps you suffer entomophobia? Maybe you abhor protracted boss run backs? Or maybe you’re just averse to hype and want to dive into Silksong once the buzz has quietened down and the post-launch updates have smoothed its roughest edges?
If you don’t like Silksong but do love labyrinthine 2D platformers, we’ve put together a list of some great alternatives. Silksong belongs to a very crowded genre, one that has spawned countless games over the last decade. What’s below isn’t exhaustive, but all come highly recommended if you’re after something like Silksong with a different flavor.
Related Articles
I spent all weekend playing Hollow Knight Silksong and I’m totally enthralled, but nothing could completely live up to the hype after so many years
Hollow Knight’s creators didn’t want to be constrained by the ‘metroidvania’ label, but they accidentally set a standard that every game since—even Silksong—has to reckon with
Is Silksong everything we hoped? 5 PC Gamer writers react to the first hours of Team Cherry’s extraordinarily hyped sequel
If you want pixel art and chiptunes: Astalon: Tears of the Earth
(Image credit: LABS Works)
Shaun Prescott, Australian Editor: Though my brain tells me Hollow Knight is the superior game, my heart has an everlasting fondness for Astalon: Tears of the Earth, and it might just be my favourite modern metroidvania. Matt Kapp’s 8-bit era pixel art is stunning, though overall quite subtle compared to more extravagant contemporaries like Blasphemous. Its level design, while labyrinthine and ridden with secrets, is also fairly retrograde, in the sense that its castle setting sprawls nonsensically: there’s no effort to make this place feel like a “living, breathing world.” It’s a videogame and so, so very proud. And like Hollow Knight, it doesn’t bring much that’s new to the genre, except a pro understanding of what makes these games tick.
Honestly, though? Astalon is all about the music and pixel art for me. See also: Castle in the Darkness.
Astalon: Tears of the Earth on Steam
If Silksong is too dang hard: Islets
(Image credit: Kyle Thompson)
Kara Phillips, Evergreen Writer: Silksong is tough, there’s no denying that. But if you want a game that still puts the skills you’ve learnt along the way to the test, then Islets might be a well-needed change of pace. You’ll still get to experience the nail-biting tension of fighting a boss in some pretty epic sequences, just without the frustration of having to constantly go back and forth between your last checkpoint and the arena. Much like Silksong, each enemy you face has a unique moveset, but fights generally don’t feel as punishing which makes the experience a lot more accessible than throwing yourself into Silksong’s maw. Platforming is also still tricky, but less life or death.
The biggest gaming news, reviews and hardware deals
Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.
Contact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBy submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.
Basically, if you just need to remind yourself that maybe your struggles with Silksong aren’t down to your skill level, give Islets a go. See also: Crypt Custodian.
Islets on Steam
If Silksong is too dang easy: La-Mulana
Shaun: Think you’re hot shit, do you? For the expert and overconfident alike, the La-Mulana games are essential tools for self-flagellation. Styled after 1980s MSX games (but with a whole lot more color and fluidity), La-Mulana re-imagines Montezuma’s Revenge as a masocore Indiana Jones. While combat is simplistic compared to more recent highlights like Hollow Knight or Blasphemous, it’s full of innocuous-seeming creatures whose movement patterns will throw you for a loop, and its bosses hit unutterably hard. Oh, and instadeath spike traps: there’s a lot of those.
Still, combat and platforming aren’t why La-Mulana has such a formidable reputation: you’re absolutely going to need a pen and paper to complete this game. Its puzzles are extraordinarily demanding, and unless you’ve got a nigh supernaturally robust memory, I hope your notes are very, very detailed.
La-Mulana and La-Mulana 2 on Steam
If you want all-out puzzles: Animal Well
(Image credit: Bigmode)
Shaun: For players who love exploring a cryptic, interconnected world but hate the relentless difficulty of most modern metroidvania bosses, Animal Well is for you. It’s one of the best metroidvanias of the decade, and it’s all puzzles and exploration. You literally cannot attack anything here, and while things attack you, it’s always a practice of getting out of their way. The puzzles can be tricky at times, but they’re quite self-contained, so you won’t need to take notes like you would in other puzzle-centric outings like La-Mulana.
Or, perhaps you will? When you finish the main serving of Animal Well, there’s another, more complex layer.
And then after that, an even more complex layer. It’s the most atmospheric game I’ve played for years, with some of the most distinctive pixel art in the business.
Animal Well on Steam
If you want a game that holds your hand even less than Silksong: Rain World
(Image credit: Videocult)
Sean Martin, Senior Guides Writer: Imagine a version of Silksong where every region is filled with an array of post-apocalyptic predators who randomly spawn each time you rest. These creatures interact differently with each other, but also you, creating an unpredictable and ultimately hostile ecosystem you have to somehow travel through. You play as the Slugcat—a tiny creature who, guided by your smarts, acts as a rogue element in the food chain, using whatever you can get your hands on to stave off, escape, and sometimes turn the tables on the monsters hunting you—all before the rains come and wash it all away.
What makes Rain World special is that it tells you nothing: there’s no dialogue, few tutorials, and basically no guidance as to where to go or what your goal even is. Everything you acquire is hard won through experience and that’s what makes it even more satisfying as you uncover new mechanics, secrets, and ultimately learn to survive in the most horrifying ecosystem imaginable. Rain World came out within one month of Hollow Knight back in 2017 and has aged just as well, evolving since then with a huge expansion.
Rain World on Steam
If you want more religious cynicism: Blasphemous 2
(Image credit: The Game Kitchen)
Elie Gould, News Writer: OK, so Blasphemous 2 offers more than just a spicy take on Roman Catholicism, but a backdrop of bloody penance certainly helps it form one of the most beautiful artistic motifs I’ve ever seen in a game. It’s also a fantastic base for creating horrifically beautiful bosses that beat you into a pulp. For your sins.
Blasphemous 2 is great if you want to hit things more than you want to jump over them. Yes, there’s some platforming, but it’s nowhere near as finicky as Silksong, meaning you can focus more on fighting grunts than dealing with bouncing on those weird red flower things. Unfortunately this doesn’t really make Blasphemous 2 any less infuriating on the whole, as the battles still make me want to snap my controller in two at times. But it’s a different flavor of simmering rage.
Blasphemous 2 on Steam
If you want to be at one with nature: Ultros
(Image credit: Kepler Interactive)
Elie: Bugs and plants seem closely interlinked, but one thing’s for sure: Ultros is a hell of a lot more peaceful than Hollow Knight. Instead of actively fighting against the environment every step of the way, navigating Ultros is more like solving a puzzle with a bit of platforming thrown in.
You can plant seeds, which will come in handy during later cycles as they will grow into plants that tear open new pathways or can be used as platforms to get to previously unreachable sections of the map. You can also use gardening tools to cut through thorny vines to explore the map more. Ultros is thoughtful, peaceful, and a beautiful experience that you can enjoy without the worry of bosses being too hard or parts of the map being too hostile to explore.
Ultros on Steam
If you want best-in-class 2D combat and don’t really care about the “metroidvania” part of metroidvanias very much: Dead Cells
(Image credit: Motion Twin)
Wes Fenlon, Senior Editor: Dead Cells carries the metroidvania tag on Steam, but in practice it’s about as much of one as a Hollywood backlot is a real Wild West town square. With procedural generation and a roguelite’s encouragement to start over again and again, the levels that resemble the interconnected maps of a Metroid or Castlevania are really more flat facades with nothing behind them—just a backdrop, in other words, to get into a shootout on Main Street. But that’s not a criticism: I love a good western standoff, and I love any game that lets me stack bleed and poison on enemies until they’re oozing red and green pixels from every gaping wound.
We rated it highly back in 2018, years before Dead Cells stacked on update after update including a wonderful Castlevania crossover. At this point its pools of weapons, power mutators and branching zones—just look at this map!—is so vast, it scratches much the same discovery itch as a traditional metroidvania, even if the map’s thrown in a blender every time you restart.
Dead Cells on Steam
If you want more Sekiro in your Silk: Nine Sols
(Image credit: Red Candle Games)
Harvey Randall, Staff Writer: Holding me over during Silksong’s long, hermetic development was Nine Sols—one of my favourite metroidvanias and Sekiro-likes ever, and I’m not the only one. Made by Red Candle games, who hard-pivoted from horror titles to this banger. Nine Sols has some of the best boss fights in both genres. Oh, you liked the Mantis Lords from Hollow Knight? We’ve got a Mantis Lords 2.0 bossfight in a cyber-psychosis dream realm. Enjoyed beating Sword Saint Isshin? Nine Sols has one of those, too.
We didn’t just give Nine Sols a 92 for its peak parry-based combat, though—it’s also lovely to look at, has an excellent soundtrack, and carries a surprisingly great story. Troubled edgelord Yi is more like Hornet than the Knight, carrying his own troubled past, opinions, and experiencing his own development independent of your choices.
The only real downside is that Nine Sols might be a weaker ‘explore the map game’ than Silksong. Exploration is fine, but rudimentary, and it’s certainly far smaller in scope. Which isn’t necessarily a knock against it—it’s just real focused on satisfying combat, and it nails that.
As for difficulty, I wouldn’t say Nine Sols is easier than Silksong, but I wouldn’t say it’s harder, either. Its fights can get more technically demanding, but the game is far fairer. And, most importantly, there are no real boss runbacks.
Nine Sols on Steam
Hollow Knight: Silksong
Blasphemous 2
Animal Well
Shaun Prescott
Social Links Navigation
Australian Editor
Shaun Prescott is the Australian editor of PC Gamer. With over ten years experience covering the games industry, his work has appeared on GamesRadar+, TechRadar, The Guardian, PLAY Magazine, the Sydney Morning Herald, and more. Specific interests include indie games, obscure Metroidvanias, speedrunning, experimental games and FPSs. He thinks Lulu by Metallica and Lou Reed is an all-time classic that will receive its due critical reappraisal one day.
With contributions from
Sean MartinSenior Guides Writer
Harvey RandallStaff Writer
Elie GouldNews Writer
Wes FenlonSenior Editor
Kara PhillipsEvergreen Writer
You must confirm your public display name before commenting
Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.
I spent all weekend playing Hollow Knight Silksong and I’m totally enthralled, but nothing could completely live up to the hype after so many years
Hollow Knight’s creators didn’t want to be constrained by the ‘metroidvania’ label, but they accidentally set a standard that every game since—even Silksong—has to reckon with
Is Silksong everything we hoped? 5 PC Gamer writers react to the first hours of Team Cherry’s extraordinarily hyped sequel
Forget trying to cram in Hollow Knight before Silksong launches—it’s too good to rush
I thought we moved on from hellish boss runbacks, but Silksong is here to remind us what it’s like to be kicked while you’re down
If you’re having trouble with Silksong’s difficulty, keep going—Act 2 is worth the pain, and it does get ‘easier’
Latest in Action
Suffering with Silksong’s hard-as-nails High Halls gauntlet? Fret not, there’s a way to get some help
How to get through The Mist in Silksong
Red Dead Redemption 2 modder says to hell with your realistic western cowboy fantasy, get horse girl pilled instead
How to beat Sister Splinter in Silksong
How to reach and climb Mount Fay in Silksong
‘We’re all still hungover’: Ghost of Yōtei devs celebrated GTA 6’s delay, which freed them from impending doom—’That was a great day’
Latest in Features
While we wait for Borderlands 4 to unlock, let’s make a definitive ranking of the series’ many musical cinematic intros
Oh, you like Call of Duty? Name every Call of Duty game in under 3 minutes in our latest timed quiz
I’m ranking every Borderlands game ahead of BL4’s release from worst to best, because the people love their lists and I’m here to provide
9 metroidvanias to play if you’ve realized Hollow Knight: Silksong just isn’t for you
If you saw Ruiner and thought it would be cool in first-person, its developer is back with, you guessed it, an FPS
I’m already dreaming about the Steam Deck 2, and the upgrade at the top of my wishlist is a sleeker, lighter form factor
HARDWARE BUYING GUIDES
LATEST GAME REVIEWS
Best gaming laptop in 2025: I’ve tested a ton of notebooks this generation and these are the best in every category
Best Hall effect keyboards in 2025: the fastest, most customizable keyboards for competitive gaming
Best PCIe 5.0 SSD for gaming in 2025: the only Gen 5 drives I will allow in my PC
Best graphics cards in 2025: I’ve tested pretty much every AMD and Nvidia GPU of the past 20 years and these are today’s top cards
Best gaming chair in 2025: I’ve tested a ton of gaming chairs and these are the seats I’d suggest for any PC gamer
Naya Create review
Caput Mortum is a fantastic, bite-sized horror game
Audeze LCD-S20 Closed-back review
Creative Stage Pro soundbar and subwoofer review
Grovemade desk review
PC Gamer is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.
Contact Future’s experts
Terms and conditions
Privacy policy
Cookies policy
Advertise with us
Accessibility Statement
Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury,
BA1 1UA. All rights reserved. England and Wales company registration number 2008885.
Please login or signup to comment
Please wait…