8.5/10 – Essential for fans of SOMA or Scorn , but approach with patience and a good set of headphones.
In the landscape of independent horror gaming, few titles have managed to blend environmental storytelling with relentless survival mechanics as effectively as the Hive series. Following the claustrophobic, insectoid terrors of the first game, developer V Hollow Games returned with a sequel that swaps chitin for cinders. The Hive II: Ash (released in late 2024) is not just a continuation; it is a thematic reinvention, trading the organic burrows of its predecessor for the suffocating silence of a post-eruption wasteland. Setting and Premise Ash takes place three years after the events of the original The Hive . The protagonist, former hazmat technician Kaelen Vance , is no longer fleeing a subterranean nest. Instead, he awakens in the ruins of Fallow Station , a geological research outpost built into the caldera of Mount Gable—a volcano that erupted not with lava, but with a strange, life-quenching pyroclastic flow known as "The Grey."
Kaelen’s journey is a philosophical one: as the Grey erodes his own memories of his family, the player must decide whether to push forward to destroy the Ember or embrace the amnesia as a form of peace. This leads to one of the most nuanced endings in recent survival horror, with no clear "good" conclusion. Critics praised The Hive II: Ash for its bold atmospheric shift. IGN called it "a masterpiece of environmental melancholy," while Rock Paper Shotgun noted that "it replaces jump scares with existential dread." However, some fans of the original were divided, missing the fast-paced insect swarms for the slower, more methodical "ash-walking" simulation.
Performance-wise, the game is a technical marvel on PC and current-gen consoles, using a dynamic ash-shader system that makes every footprint and disturbed particle persistent. However, the base PlayStation 4 and Xbox One versions suffer from significant pop-in. The Hive II: Ash is not a game for those seeking simple thrills. It is a slow, suffocating meditation on loss, identity, and the things we leave behind in disaster. By swapping organic terror for geological horror, V Hollow Games has proven that the Hive series isn't about a single monster—it’s about the many ways the earth itself can turn against those who dare to dig too deep.
