Silksong vs Hollow Knight

Hornet, the protagonist of Silksong, the Hollow Knight sequel
Comparison / Hollow Knight and Silksong

Same studio, same genre, different feel. Silksong is faster, harder, and bigger; Hollow Knight is slower and more somber.

Heroes: Knight vs HornetBuilds: Charms vs ToolsPace: Slow vs fast

Silksong and Hollow Knight share a studio, a genre, and a lineage, but they play differently enough to suit different moods. Both are Team Cherry Metroidvanias; the sequel is faster and more aggressive.

The headline change is the lead. You play the silent The Knight icon Knight in Hallownest, and the swift Hornet icon Hornet in the new kingdom of Pharloom.

Underneath that, the build systems, combat speed, and difficulty all shift. Neither game is strictly better; they are two takes on the same brilliant formula.

This guide compares them category by category, then gives a clear recommendation on which to play and which to start with.

  • Hero The Knight icon Knight vs Hornet, silent vessel vs swift huntress.
  • Builds Charms icon Charms vs tools and crests.
  • Difficulty Difficulty icon Silksong is harder and more aggressive.
  • Start with Hollow Knight icon Hollow Knight first if you want the full arc.

The Quick Verdict

Both games are essential, and the choice comes down to pace. Hollow Knight is the slower, more atmospheric original; Silksong is the faster, harder, more acrobatic sequel.

If you want melancholy exploration and a gentler on-ramp, start with Hollow Knight. If you want a sharper combat challenge and more mobility, Silksong delivers that from the first hour.

Neither replaces the other. They are companion pieces, and most fans end up loving both for different reasons.

Verdict

Play Hollow Knight first if you can. In actual play, knowing Hornet from the original adds real weight to her starring role in the sequel.

Side-by-Side

Here is the high-level comparison at a glance, before the category breakdowns below.

FeatureHollow KnightSilksong
ProtagonistThe Knight icon The KnightHornet icon Hornet
SettingHallownestPharloom
WeaponNailNeedle and silk
Build systemCharmsTools and Crests
CurrencyGeoRosaries and Shell Shards
PaceMethodicalFast and acrobatic

The shared DNA is obvious, but almost every system has been reworked rather than reused.

Combat and Movement

The biggest felt difference is speed. Hollow Knight's Knight fights with deliberate nail swings, while Hornet attacks faster and moves with far more agility.

Hornet brings new mobility tools and silk-based skills that make traversal and combat more vertical and aggressive. Where the Knight is grounded and measured, Hornet darts, vaults, and tags enemies from angles the first game never used.

Both still reward pattern reading and clean dodging, but Silksong demands sharper execution. According to the wiki it keeps the same Metroidvania core with a quicker, more demanding rhythm.

Builds and Progression

This is where the two games diverge most. Hollow Knight builds come from charms slotted into notches; Silksong replaces that entirely.

In Hollow Knight, Charms icon charms and notches define your loadout. Silksong instead uses Crests icon Crests that set your needle style and slots, plus colour-coded tools you equip into them.

The result is a deeper, more flexible build system in the sequel. Crests act like classes, and tools layer offense, defense, and exploration on top, which gives Silksong more loadout variety than the original's charm grid.

Difficulty and World

Silksong is the harder game, and most players feel it immediately. Its bosses hit faster and its early game is less forgiving than Hollow Knight's opening.

Hollow Knight's difficulty spikes mostly in optional content, as covered in our is Hollow Knight hard guide. Silksong front-loads more of that challenge into the main path, so the sequel is the tougher ride start to finish.

The worlds differ in tone too. Hallownest is a quiet, ruined kingdom of bugs and void; Pharloom is a brighter, vertical realm of silk and song. Both are gorgeous, but they read as distinct places with their own moods.

Which to Play

Play both, but order matters. For the full experience, start with Hollow Knight and then move to Silksong, following release order and Hornet's arc from supporting role to lead.

You do not strictly need the first game, as our prerequisite guide explains, but it deepens the sequel. If you only want one, pick by taste: slower and somber, or faster and harder.

For newcomers worried about difficulty, Hollow Knight is the gentler entry point. For players who want the sharpest combat Team Cherry has made, Silksong is the pick.

Silksong vs Hollow Knight FAQ

Is Silksong better than Hollow Knight?

Neither is strictly better. Silksong is faster, harder, and has a deeper build system; Hollow Knight is slower, more atmospheric, and a gentler entry point.

What is the main difference between them?

The protagonist and pace. You play the slow, deliberate Knight in Hollow Knight and the fast, acrobatic Hornet in Silksong, with very different combat feel.

How do the build systems compare?

Hollow Knight uses charms and notches. Silksong replaces them with Crests that set your needle style and slots, plus colour-coded tools you equip into those slots.

Is Silksong harder than Hollow Knight?

Yes. Silksong is more aggressive and front-loads more challenge into its main path, while Hollow Knight's hardest content is mostly optional.

Do they share a world?

No. Hollow Knight is set in Hallownest and Silksong in the new kingdom of Pharloom. They share themes and a studio, not a map.

Which should I play first?

Hollow Knight, if you can. Release order is the cleanest narrative order and gives Hornet's starring role in Silksong more weight.

Can I start with Silksong?

Yes. Silksong is a standalone sequel that teaches its systems from scratch, so newcomers can begin there without confusion.

Are both games worth playing?

For most fans, yes. They are companion pieces, and the shared quality, art, and music make playing both rewarding.

More Hollow Knight Guides

Whichever you start with, these guides cover both games and the journey through their kingdoms.

Sources

Game data and screenshots adapted from hollowknight.fandom.com, used under CC BY-SA 3.0. Original content remains the property of the wiki contributors and Team Cherry.