Health

Exhausted by Silksong? This breezier twin-stick spin on old school Metroid might just be the genre’s second best this year

By Wes Fenlon

Copyright pcgamer

Exhausted by Silksong? This breezier twin-stick spin on old school Metroid might just be the genre's second best this year

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

Borderlands 4
Essential Hardware

Battlefield 6

Don’t miss these

9 metroidvanias to play if you’ve realized Hollow Knight: Silksong just isn’t for you

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

If you’re having trouble with Silksong’s difficulty, keep going—Act 2 is worth the pain, and it does get ‘easier’

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

Hollow Knight: Silksong review — Worth the pain

Silksong players are wrestling with the game’s ‘stabs you and kicks you for crying about it’ difficulty

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

Jetrunner is a great little ‘Trackmania meets Titanfall’ speedrunning platformer I had to peel myself away from to write this headline

Is Silksong everything we hoped? 5 PC Gamer writers react to the first hours of Team Cherry’s extraordinarily hyped sequel

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

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

This roguelike auto-battler has me obsessed with doing entire RPG adventures in 5 minutes

After 30 minutes with Hollow Knight: Silksong, I’m desperate to play another 100 hours of its refined, needle-sharp action

Shadow Labyrinth review: Pac-Man is entertainingly miscast in this grimdark Metroidvania

Exhausted by Silksong? This breezier twin-stick spin on old school Metroid might just be the genre’s second best this year

Wes Fenlon

17 September 2025

Zexion is still hard, but ample checkpoints and boss retries alleviate the usual frustrations.

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

(Image credit: Gallant Leaf)

Before booting up Zexion on my Steam Deck last weekend, I made a grievous error: I looked it up on YouTube and saw that someone had finished the game in three hours. Did I immediately intuit, as someone well-versed in the sicko behavior of gaming speedrunners, that three hours was probably a really fast clear time for this indie game with its throwback 8-bit graphics that includes its own built-in randomizer? Of course not.

“Three hours!” I thought. “What a breezy, compact adventure this will be. A perfect little snack while I take a short break from dying over and over in Silksong.” Well, I’ve now spent almost three hours dying over and over in Zexion instead, and I’m nowhere near finished with it. Apparently Silksong had beaten the ability to spot a speedrun right out of me.
Zexion is not a mini Metroid like I first thought: judging by HowLongToBeat, it’s likely a bit longer than Super Metroid and a good bit longer than several of the other games in the series. But that still makes it compact in comparison to Silksong or Hollow Knight—and the dozens of deaths haven’t gotten under my skin thanks to generous checkpoints and boss fights that take all of 23 seconds to finish.

Related Articles

9 metroidvanias to play if you’ve realized Hollow Knight: Silksong just isn’t for you

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

If you’re having trouble with Silksong’s difficulty, keep going—Act 2 is worth the pain, and it does get ‘easier’

(Image credit: Gallant Leaf)
Because Zexion looks so much like a lost ’80s game, I was caught off guard by just how many cool ideas it dished out in its opening minutes:

It’s a twin stick shooter, with the right stick letting you aim freely in eight directions while moving
Jump is wisely bound to both A and left bumper on a controller, optionally freeing up the left thumb for aiming
Dying to a boss gives you the option to start from right before the boss room or from your last save point. OPTIONAL RUNBACKS ONLY!!
The initial movement power-ups, a wall jump and slide move, arrive incredibly quickly, granting access to multiple possible routes
Terminals in map rooms fill in a new portion of the map for you and let you view everything you’ve revealed so far, but otherwise you can only view a minimap of the nearby area
While I’ve held out on using any yet, the Assist menu offers some welcome options: adjustments to damage taken, ammo refills, a full map reveal, save states and even speeding up or slowing down the game
It’s not as solitary as most Metroid-likes: From the start you regularly see (and then fight) other explorers who are on the planet Cypher-X72 looking for the same resource as you
One of the comments on that three hour YouTube video described Zexion as “basically Metroid 1 If they Locked tf in” and that really does capture the essence of it. Zexion may be a bit too high tech for actual NES hardware—and Nintendo would’ve needed analog sticks to be able to make a twin-stick shooter—but it does effectively feel like a game that could’ve been designed by the same team years later with more experience under their belts.
I’d find some of Zexion’s crueler old school tendencies, like the amount of damage you take from spike traps and enemies bumping into you more annoying without the frequent save points and boss fight restart options. I also more than doubled my health bar by finding energy tanks in the first couple hours, while in more than 15 hours of time spent in Silksong I’ve gotten one measly extra pip of health.

(Image credit: Gallant Leaf)
Zexion does seem stingy with health and missile refills at first, but it’s more generous and more clever than it looks. Spend enough time shooting random walls and empty spaces and you’ll start finding hidden blocks that drop ammo, while certain types of enemies will always drop health.

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.
It’s simple stuff compared to the environmental storytelling in Silksong, where you can start to see how an entire society fits together, but it still satisfies that basic itch of these types of games: feeling out how the world ticks. It’s also refreshing to play a game so interested in the Metroid and uninterested in the vania—there’s none of the leveling up or looting or more RPG-esque mechanics that now come almost as standard.
At the same price on Steam I’d struggle to recommend anyone play it instead of Silksong, but it’s an excellent chaser. The pace is faster, the boss fights are simpler, and you don’t have to grind any sort of currency to unlock your next save point. I may turn that damage slider down to half, though. Silksong’s already given me enough bruises for the month.
If you discovered Team Cherry’s latest really isn’t for you, you should also check out the nine metroidvanias we recommend instead.

Social Links Navigation
Senior Editor

Wes has been covering games and hardware for more than 10 years, first at tech sites like The Wirecutter and Tested before joining the PC Gamer team in 2014. Wes plays a little bit of everything, but he’ll always jump at the chance to cover emulation and Japanese games.

When he’s not obsessively optimizing and re-optimizing a tangle of conveyor belts in Satisfactory (it’s really becoming a problem), he’s probably playing a 20-year-old Final Fantasy or some opaque ASCII roguelike. With a focus on writing and editing features, he seeks out personal stories and in-depth histories from the corners of PC gaming and its niche communities. 50% pizza by volume (deep dish, to be specific).

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.

9 metroidvanias to play if you’ve realized Hollow Knight: Silksong just isn’t for you

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

If you’re having trouble with Silksong’s difficulty, keep going—Act 2 is worth the pain, and it does get ‘easier’

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

Hollow Knight: Silksong review — Worth the pain

Silksong players are wrestling with the game’s ‘stabs you and kicks you for crying about it’ difficulty

Latest in Action

Ubisoft’s Saudi-funded Assassin’s Creed DLC provokes staff unrest, but the publisher insists partnering with the controversial regime is A-OK: ‘Talking with partners who do not share our democratic values ​​does not mean abandoning them’

Yakuza fans smell blood in the water as RGG studio accidentally puts the words ‘Kiwami 3’ on its website

Assassin’s Creed: Black Flag remake reaches unprecedented levels of leaked, despite Ubisoft’s best efforts to stomp on yapping actors

All Silksong mementos and how to get each one

The next Silksong update helps the bosses but does little to allay our own, interminable suffering

MindsEye’s response was so mindblowingly negative its star thought ‘I might never work in another game again’

Latest in Features

Exhausted by Silksong? This breezier twin-stick spin on old school Metroid might just be the genre’s second best this year

Do you know Jack? Take our quiz that’s all about videogame characters named (or not named) Jack!

In the 16 years I’ve played this series, Borderlands 4 is the first entry that’s made me want to do post-game grinding—Gearbox just needs to fix its dang Wildcard Missions first

Stalker’s remaster has taught me just how much of a terrible sicko I am for the pop of a Steam achievement

This Frankenstein’s monster of ARPG and battle royale from a studio founded by a former Blizzard chief creative officer is stitching together pieces of Diablo, Dark Souls, and PUBG into something new

I have finally played the best version of Battlefield 6, and of course it’s big maps with lots of vehicles

HARDWARE BUYING GUIDES
LATEST GAME REVIEWS

Best SSD for gaming in 2025: the fastest and the best value solid state drives to perk up your PC

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

Deep Rock Galactic: Survivor review

Humanscale Freedom Chair with Headrest review

Strange Antiquities review

Medion Erazer Scout 15 E1 review

Hollow Knight: Silksong 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…