
[August 22, 2025 | Earthtechy Gaming News Desk]
It’s real. It’s happening. After years of memes, speculation, and that eternal “Silksong when?” spam in every Nintendo Direct livestream, Team Cherry has finally circled a date on the calendar: September 4, 2025.
I’ll admit, when I first saw the announcement, I double-checked the date like five times. This wasn’t just another fan-made “silkpost” or a clever fake leak. This time, the news is official. After seven years of silence, players around the world can finally start counting down the days instead of counting the years.
The Waiting Game Became a Meme of Its Own
If you’ve been hanging around the Hollow Knight community, you already know: the silence wasn’t empty—it was loud. Entire Reddit threads became playgrounds of “silkposting,” where the line between real news and absurd inside jokes blurred completely.
I still remember opening livestream chats during Xbox showcases or Nintendo Directs only to see them instantly hijacked by fans spamming “SILKSONG??” with clown emojis. Some people even disguised recipes or random fanfiction as fake news drops. It was hilarious, but also heartbreaking. That level of obsession only exists because the hunger for this sequel was so strong.
Now that we’ve got the release date, the tone of the fandom has shifted. The memes won’t die (let’s be honest, they’ll just evolve into “Silksong soon”), but this time, there’s a sense of relief. For the first time in years, we’re not chasing shadows—we’re looking forward to something concrete.
Why Team Cherry Could Take Their Time
Normally, an indie studio doesn’t get the luxury of a seven-year development cycle. Budgets dry up, publishers push deadlines, and burnout takes its toll. But Team Cherry wasn’t operating under those pressures—because Hollow Knight didn’t just succeed, it became a phenomenon.
By 2019, Hollow Knight had already sold millions of copies. Today, it sits at over 15 million sold worldwide. That success gave Team Cherry something most studios dream about: financial breathing room.
I love Ari Gibson’s story about surviving on leftover sandwiches during Hollow Knight’s development. Compare that to now, where the studio can afford to stay small and avoid the nightmare of corporate management bloat. They didn’t have to crunch or compromise—they could simply build.
And that’s exactly why Silksong feels like more than just a sequel. It’s not a rushed follow-up—it’s the result of years of ideas stacking up, layer after layer, until the world feels handcrafted, alive, and untouchable.
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Secrets, Spoilers, and the Joy of Discovery

Here’s something I deeply respect: Team Cherry’s restraint. They could’ve easily fed the community with monthly teasers or gameplay snippets. But they didn’t.
Why? Because discovery is part of Hollow Knight’s DNA. Think back to your first playthrough—stumbling into a hidden area you weren’t supposed to find yet, or meeting a cryptic NPC who left you with more questions than answers. Those moments worked because you didn’t already know they existed.
Team Cherry has approached Silksong with a similar mindset, keeping its secrets closely guarded. It’s frustrating in the moment, sure—but when I sit down with the game on release day, I know I’ll be grateful I didn’t see half the surprises spoiled years in advance.
What’s Waiting on Release Day
So what are we actually getting on September 4, 2025? A game that’s not just bigger—it’s sharper, faster, and bolder.
From the Gamescom demos earlier this year, players reported that Hornet’s combat feels lightning-fast compared to the Knight’s slower, deliberate style. That agility completely changes how you approach enemies. And there will be a lot of them: over 200 unique enemies and more than 40 bosses to face.
But it’s not just combat. Silksong expands the world in meaningful ways—multiple towns, layered quest systems, and more reasons to revisit old areas than ever before. Put simply, Silksong isn’t just a sequel slapped with a new title—it’s a game that rises from Hollow Knight’s roots but grows into something bold enough to claim its own identity.
Beyond September 4
And here’s the kicker: release day won’t be the finish line. Team Cherry has already teased post-launch content. They’re not exhausted by this marathon—they’re energized. That says a lot after a seven-year build.
Could that mean new quests? Expansions? Surprise bosses down the line? Whatever it is, I’m betting it’ll keep us coming back for years. William Pellen even admitted that what comes after launch excites him as much as launch day itself. That’s not a team limping to the finish—it’s a team hitting their stride.
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Final Thoughts
After following this saga for so long, I can confidently say Silksong is shaping up to be one of those rare sequels that doesn’t just meet expectations—it redefines them.
For fans, September 4 isn’t just a date. It’s the end of years of memes, the answer to “Silksong when?”, and the start of a new journey into one of gaming’s most captivating worlds.
Personally, I’ve already marked my calendar—and if you’ve been waiting as long as I have, you probably have too.