Silksong Best Early Game Tips and Tricks
Silksong is finally here. After seven years of patience, fan art, and “when?” jokes, Team Cherry delivered a sequel that was worth the wait. Thank you, Team Cherry, for a world that feels hand-carved, for a soundtrack that lingers, and for a game that respects players enough to be beautiful and brutal at the same time.
Hornet takes the lead in Pharloom, climbing toward the Citadel with sharper movement, tougher fights, and a different rhythm to healing. Stores crashed, timelines cleared, and a lot of us dove straight in. This piece is not a walkthrough; it is a set of spoiler-safe recommendations that make those first hours a little smoother without blunting the edge that makes Silksong special. Pick what fits your style, ignore what does not, and enjoy the climb.
1. Beat Hollow Knight first
If you are new to the series or returning after a long break, finish the original in Hallownest before starting Silksong. The sequel expects habits the first game teaches: clean pattern recognition, disciplined spacing, confident aerial control, and patient, window-based healing. That foundation matters even more here because many attacks remove two masks, binding to heal consumes your entire Silk bar and is lost if interrupted, and platforming demands tighter rhythm and mid-air adjustments.
Completing Hollow Knight helps you internalize those skills without spoiling anything in Pharloom. You will read tells instead of trading hits, heal only after clear openings, and treat airtime as a resource rather than a panic button. Exploration discipline also carries over: checking walls, following audio cues, and mapping loops turns Silksong’s denser routes into rewards rather than roadblocks. The first game further builds currency discipline in a lower-pressure setting, which prepares you for Silksong’s pricier benches, stations, and early purchases where mistakes are costly.
2. Learn to manage your money
Silksong is expensive and unforgiving. Benches, stations, and even some shop doors cost rosaries, and you will die often while learning Pharloom. Treat your money in two states: spendable and secured. Spend immediately on essentials that improve navigation and survivability, then bank the rest into rosary strings or necklaces so a bad run does not wipe you out.
Banking takes a cut. Think of it as insurance that preserves momentum. For example, an 80-rosary bracelet may return only 60 in usable value. Larger denominations usually lose a smaller percentage. Keep only a small float for benches and fast travel, and secure the rest before long pushes.
Sequence your safety nets with care. If you have a Silk Eater to recover a death cocoon, bank first so any recovered haul can be secured right away. When you need cash, avoid relying on environmental kills. Hazards can finish enemies but also destroy drops, which trades speed for lost income. Stay liquid enough to keep moving, but protect your progress every time you pass through a safe hub.
3. Use your Silk cocoon as a planned refill, not just a recovery
Every time you die in Silksong, Hornet leaves behind a Silk cocoon. Breaking it instantly restores a large amount of Silk and recovers any dropped rosaries. While most players treat this as a basic death recovery mechanic, it can also serve as a tactical resource during difficult boss fights or long traversal sections.
In boss encounters, consider leaving your cocoon untouched when you re-enter the arena. During the fight, break it during a safe moment to fully restore your Silk bar and bind for three masks. This gives you a second wind right when you need it. Similarly, during challenging platforming sequences, your cocoon becomes a lifeline. If you make it 60 percent through a hazard-filled gauntlet and drop to two masks, recovering the cocoon at a safe platform lets you heal and keep going without restarting from the last bench.
Just be cautious. If you die again before reclaiming it, the rosaries stored inside are lost. Pay attention to where the cocoon spawns and time your recovery carefully. With the right awareness, this mechanic becomes more than a setback. It becomes a backup plan that can carry you through some of Silksong’s most punishing segments.
4. Master the POGO
Pogoing is one of the most essential movement and combat tools in Silksong. By striking downward with your needle while in mid-air, you can bounce off enemies, projectiles, hazards, and even certain objects in the environment. It allows Hornet to cross spikes, extend jumps, interrupt enemy patterns, and access areas that would otherwise be out of reach.
You’ll find that many enemies have limited or no defense against attacks from above, especially during their windup animations. Mastering pogo timing lets you deal damage safely while staying airborne and mobile. Some of the toughest platforming segments in the game are built around this mechanic, requiring precise aerial control and rhythmic bounces across moving targets, rotating hazards, or narrow spike corridors.
Practice in safer areas first, then apply it consistently. Whether you’re fighting a boss, navigating through traps, or trying to reach a hidden alcove, pogoing is often the cleanest and most efficient solution. Players who skip mastering it will find themselves locked out of entire paths and at a serious disadvantage in both exploration and combat.
5. Exploit enemy AI and combat mechanics
Silksong is difficult, so don’t feel guilty about playing smart. The game is filled with subtle mechanics and AI behaviors that you can use to your advantage. Understanding them can make the difference between barely surviving and confidently controlling a fight or route.
One common tactic is to reset a room by leaving and re-entering it. This lets you repeatedly strike weak minions to rebuild Silk for healing, especially when benches are far away. Some enemies can also be hit through floors or walls with charged or upward strikes, letting you deal damage without exposing yourself.
Environmental hazards can be weaponized as well. If you lure enemies into spikes, lava, or crushing traps, they’ll often be killed instantly. However, be aware that these kills usually destroy rosaries and Shell Shards, so use this only when survival matters more than loot. You can also place traps like mines or lingering attacks just offscreen; many enemies will still take damage even if they aren’t visible, allowing for safe clears.
Every system in Silksong is tightly tuned, but also open to manipulation. Think like a hunter, not a hero. If a tactic feels cheesy but works, it’s valid.
6. Do as many Wishes as you can
Wishes are Silksong’s version of quests, and they are worth pursuing. Some are simple tasks or optional battles, while others unlock new bosses, rare items, or entire side storylines. Completing them grants valuable rewards like rosaries, Tools, and even upgrades to your crests.
You can discover Wishes in two main ways. Some are found organically while exploring, triggered by talking to NPCs or reaching new areas. Others are posted on bulletin boards in major hubs such as Bonegrave, Bellhart, and Songclave. These boards serve as mission hubs and often offer multiple quests at once, so make a habit of checking them each time you return to camp.
Many Wishes are tied to progression. Some open new vendors, unlock shortcuts, or provide early access to powerful tools that make main path content much more manageable. If you're stuck, low on currency, or looking to strengthen your build, completing a few Wishes is one of the best ways to push forward.
7. Buy Shakra’s maps early
Getting lost in Silksong is easy. Pharloom is massive, vertical, and filled with branching paths, hidden doors, and traps that loop back on themselves. Without a map, you’re flying blind, and dying in an unknown area often means losing rosaries you’ll never recover. That’s why Shakra, the game’s main cartographer, is one of the most important NPCs to prioritize early.
As soon as you reach a new region, find Shakra and buy the area map. Her locations can vary, but she usually hums loudly when nearby, just like Cornifer did in Hollow Knight. The earlier you unlock her maps, the sooner you’ll be able to identify key rooms, find benches, revisit optional paths, and spot shortcuts that could save a run.
Don’t delay. Navigation is a core part of survival in Silksong, and even a single detour in the wrong direction can cost you everything. With Shakra’s maps, you gain control over your route, your recovery options, and your strategy. Every upgrade, vendor, or boss becomes easier to manage when you know exactly where you’re going.
8. Hit everything (walls, crates, gates, and more)
If something looks even slightly suspicious, hit it. Silksong is packed with hidden walls, false floors, and destructible objects that conceal secrets. Some lead to caches of rosaries or Shell Shards, while others unlock new Tools, challenge arenas, or critical lore. Many secret paths are completely invisible until struck, so your needle is your best exploration tool.
Team Cherry designed Pharloom with verticality and misdirection in mind. You will often find yourself circling back to an area only to realize there was a cracked wall or loose crate you missed. Some secrets are marked subtly on the map once you purchase upgrades, but the most valuable ones must be discovered manually.
Hit gates that do not open, strike breakable walls from multiple angles, and experiment with upward or downward attacks when stuck. You’ll be surprised how often progression is tied to a single hidden passage. For players who explore aggressively, this habit pays off with faster upgrades, better gear, and a deeper understanding of Pharloom’s layout.
9. Customize your build
Silksong gives you far more flexibility than Hollow Knight when it comes to combat style and customization. With seven unique Crests (combat stances), and a wide selection of Tools (consumable abilities or passive benefits) you can tailor Hornet’s entire kit to match your playstyle or adapt to specific encounters.
Each Crest changes your basic attack pattern. Some, like the Wanderer or Beast, favor aggressive close-range slashes, while others, like the Witch or Shaman, specialize in regeneration or ranged blade casting. Tools add further flexibility, giving you traps, bombs, heals, or status effects. Some Tools provide passive buffs and can modify Silk gain, attack range, movement speed, or elemental resistances.
*For a complete list of Tools, check out our guide
Here are the seven Crests:
- Hunter Crest (upgraded): 1 white, 2 yellow, 2 red, 2 blue
- Reaper Crest: 1 white, 2 yellow, 2 red, 2 blue
- Wanderer Crest: 1 white, 3 yellow, 1 red, 2 blue
- Beast Crest : 1 white, 2 yellow, 2 red, 0 blue
- Witch Crest: 1 white, 0 yellow, 2 red, 3 blue
- Shaman Crest: 3 white, 0 yellow, 0 red, 2 blue
- Architect Crest: 0 white, 2 yellow, 3 red, 2 blue
Bosses in Silksong are not one-size-fits-all. Some punish aggressive melee, while others leave huge openings for ranged tools or trap setups. Instead of brute-forcing the same loadout, swap crests, cycle in new tools, and experiment with charm combinations. The more you adapt, the more the game opens up.
10. If the game is too hard, use a mod
Silksong is brutally difficult. It ramps up the challenge from Hollow Knight in every direction: tougher enemies, more aggressive bosses, fewer healing opportunities, and deadlier environments. And with no official difficulty options, some players may find themselves completely stuck. That’s where mods come in.
There is absolutely no shame in using a mod to adjust the difficulty. Whether you want more frequent benches, increased healing speed, or even invincibility to explore freely, the modding community has your back. One example is the Silksong No double damage mod on Nexus Mods
Final thoughts
Silksong was seven years in the making, and Team Cherry has delivered something truly special, a game that honors its predecessor while building a faster, sharper, and more punishing experience. Pharloom is filled with danger at every turn, but also layered with secrets, depth, and beauty for those patient and skilled enough to uncover it all.
Whether you're here for the challenge, the lore, or simply to witness Hornet’s journey unfold, these tips will help you survive the early hours and make the most of what Silksong has to offer. Adapt your build, master movement, stay curious, and don’t be afraid to lean on every trick the game allows. You’re not just playing a sequel, you’re unraveling one of the most anticipated games of the decade. Good luck out there, and remember: in Pharloom, knowledge is survival.
Hollow Knight: Silksong FAQ
When did Silksong release?
It released on September 4th, 2025, after nearly seven years of development since its 2019 announcement.
Should I play Hollow Knight first?
Yes. The sequel expects mastery of mechanics like aerial control, healing timing, and exploration habits learned in the first game.
Is Silksong harder than Hollow Knight?
Yes. Enemies hit harder, healing is riskier, and platforming is more demanding.
What are Crests and Tools
- Crests change Hornet’s attack stance and define Tool slots.
- Tools are active and passive abilities.
What are Wishes?
Wishes are side quests that reward you with items, rosaries, or unlock shortcuts and bosses.
What’s the best early tip?
Master the pogo (jump + downward strike). It’s key for both combat and traversal.
Are there difficulty options?
No official difficulty settings, but mods are available for players who need help.
How big is the game?
Expect 25–40 hours for a first playthrough. More for full completion.
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Patrick Yu is a Senior Project Manager at Level Interactive and has 8 years of experience writing business, legal, lifestyle, gaming, and technology articles. He is a significant contributor to Acer Corner and is currently based in Taipei, Taiwan.