Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
GamesRadar
GamesRadar
Technology
Dustin Bailey

Silksong is harder than Hollow Knight because "Hornet is inherently faster and more skillful than the Knight," Team Cherry says, and you can use Elden Ring logic to get around the difficulty anyway

Hollow Knight: Silksong.

Hollow Knight: Silksong has ignited the level of capital-D Discourse over game difficulty typically reserved for a new FromSoftware game. But for Team Cherry, the difficulty was just a natural outcome of Hornet being so darn cool – and anyway, you can just use the same logic the world applied to Elden Ring to avoid getting frustrated.

"Hornet is inherently faster and more skillful than the Knight – so even the base level enemy had to be more complicated, more intelligent," Team Cherry's Ari Gibson says in a book accompanying Silksong's exhibit at the ACMI museum in Melbourne, Australia. Quotes from the book were recently shared by Dexerto.

"The basic ant warrior is built from the same move-set as the original Hornet boss," according to William Pellen. "The same core set of dashing, jumping, and dashing down at you, plus we added the ability to evade and check you. In contrast to the Knight’s enemies, Hornet’s enemies had to have more ways of catching her as she tries to move away." So rather than nerf Hornet's powers, the devs buffed everyone else.

"The important thing for us is that we allow you to go way off the path," Gibson says. "So one player may choose to follow it directly to its conclusion, and then another may choose to constantly divert from it and find all the other things that are waiting and all the other ways and routes. Silksong has some moments of steep difficulty – but part of allowing a higher level of freedom within the world means that you have choices all the time about where you’re going and what you’re doing."

While the devs don't explicitly evoke Elden Ring here, it's tough not to think of FromSoftware's foray into open world design as following a similar ethos. If you get stuck on a hard boss in Elden Ring, you can simply go someplace else, discover some new skills, level up your character, and get better at the combat before coming back and trying again.

It's similar in Silksong, as Team Cherry sees it, since players "have ways to mitigate the difficulty via exploration, or learning, or even circumventing the challenge entirely, rather than getting stonewalled," as Gibson explains.

Silksong is way harder than Hollow Knight, and my theory is that Team Cherry became evil masterminds without even realizing it.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.