Aloy (/ˈeɪlɔɪ/ AY-loy) is a fictional character and the main protagonist of the Horizon video game franchise, developed by Guerrilla Games. Introduced in Horizon Zero Dawn (2017) and returning in its sequel Horizon Forbidden West (2022), she is voiced by American actress Ashly Burch and modelled after Dutch actress Hannah Hoekstra. In the games’ post-apocalyptic 31st-century setting, Aloy is a highly skilled machine hunter who uses tactical intelligence and tribal weaponry to survive a world reclaimed by nature and overrun by hostile zoomorphic machines. Raised as a social outcast of the Nora tribe by her surrogate father, Rost, Aloy initially embarks on a journey to win a tribal competition and discover the identity of her mother. She soon uncovers that a benevolent artificial intelligence created her as a genetic clone of the 21st-century scientist Dr. Elisabet Sobeck, specifically tasking her with restoring the Earth’s failing terraforming systems to prevent a second mass extinction. Across the series, her narrative arc focuses on her evolution from a deeply isolated survivor burdened by her predecessor’s legacy into a compassionate leader who learns to rely on a “found family” of allies, including her clone sister Beta.
Guerrilla conceived Aloy as a strong, practical female lead who deliberately avoided the oversexualised tropes common in the video game industry. Her visual design, which prioritised athletic realism and grounded survivalism, was intended to serve as a creative shift away from the heavily masculine tone of the studio’s previous Killzone franchise. Beyond the mainline Horizon games, Aloy’s design has been adapted for virtual reality and family-friendly spin-offs, and she has been featured in crossover events for titles including Fortnite (2017) and Genshin Impact (2020). Outside of video games, Aloy’s narrative has been further expanded in a comic book series published by Titan Comics.
Aloy has been positively received by critics, with several publications citing her as a defining video game protagonist of her console generation. Critics have praised Burch’s nuanced vocal performance, the character’s complex emotional drive, and her evolution as an unapologetic feminist heroine. However, she has faced some criticism from reviewers regarding her occasionally abrasive demeanour and a tendency for her in-game dialogue to prematurely spoil environmental puzzles. Furthermore, she has been the subject of significant scholarly analysis, particularly through the lenses of ecofeminism and posthumanism.
Concept and design
The character’s origins date back to around 2010, when Guerrilla Games art director Jan-Bart van Beek pitched an early concept for a game featuring Aloy as the protagonist in a post-apocalyptic world reclaimed by nature and robotic dinosaurs.[1] Original designs had the character using a rifle, but this was changed to tribal weaponry because high-tech gunfire clashed with Horizon Zero Dawn (2017)’s natural setting.[2] The studio always envisioned the game as starring a strong female character, with game director Mathijs de Jonge citing Sarah Connor from Terminator, Ellen Ripley from Alien, and Ygritte from Game of Thrones (2011–2019) as initial influences.[3] Sony decided to conduct rigorous market testing, believing that adding a female lead might be a “risk”, but ultimately approved her for the role.[4] De Jonge noted that centring the game’s heroism around femininity was a deliberate choice, serving as a creative shift for the studio to distance themselves from the heavily masculine tone of their previous Killzone franchise.[5]
Characterisation and casting

Aloy was designed to provide many tactical options in battle. She was written with deeply ingrained survival instincts, possessing a gritty personality that rejects luxury and views machines with strict practicality. She is characterised by her fiercely direct and occasionally aggressive approach to resolving issues.[6] De Jonge explained that Aloy was conceived as the first of the game’s three core design pillars, needing to contrast against the other two; the lush natural environments and the machines, which necessitated her highly agile and fluid combat mechanics.[7] While Sony’s initial market testing proved players were excited about a female lead, the tests also revealed that Aloy’s early design felt too young and possessed a “Disney Princess, miss-perfect quality” that players found unbelievable for a machine hunter. In response, the team spent two years iterating on her concept art, bringing in freelance artists to help redesign her to look “older, tougher, [and] louder”.[8] Studio co-founder Hermen Hulst noted that her clothing and physical appearance were deliberately grounded in practicality, aiming to avoid industry trends of overly sexualising female characters, which they felt would detract from the game’s core themes.[9] The developers spent considerable time refining her hairstyle so she would remain instantly recognisable regardless of the armour she wore. They retained her signature fiery red hair and tribal braids while avoiding impractical fashionable flourishes, using complex hair physics to make her movements appear more dynamic during combat.[10]
Aloy’s facial likeness was based on the Dutch actress Hannah Hoekstra,[11] and she is voiced by American actress Ashly Burch.[12] Narrative director John Gonzalez noted that Burch was cast because she perfectly balanced the three essential qualities required for the character: incredible toughness, articulate wit, and an underlying vulnerability stemming from her outcast childhood.[7] While Burch provided the voice and facial motion capture, Aloy’s parkour, combat, and traversal stunts were performed by physical motion-capture actresses, including Peggy Vrijens.[13] However, Burch took on full body motion capture duties for The Frozen Wilds (2017) expansion. To ensure her physical performance matched the established character, she extensively studied in-game footage to accurately replicate Aloy’s specific walking and running animations. Burch also noted that her vocal recording sessions were highly physical in their own right; to produce authentic combat sounds, she would actively pantomime taking different types of elemental damage.[14] To complement the physical performance, Guerrilla’s audio team recorded extensive, dynamic foley for her movements. Senior sound designer Lucas van Tol explained that Aloy’s footsteps were designed to dynamically change in weight and texture depending on the specific type of armour the player equips. Because the prologue features a young Aloy walking barefoot, the team had to record a completely separate set of audio rhythms to match the distinct pacing of the child motion-capture actress.[15]
Narrative integration
When Gonzalez joined the team for Zero Dawn, he helped flesh out Aloy’s story and psychology, intertwining her emotional development with the lore of the world so that she transcended her starting references.[16] Burch’s vocal performance heavily influenced Gonzalez’s writing, and she treated her role as a long-term creative partnership. During recording sessions, she frequently offered input on the script and worked closely with the directors to determine whether specific lines or reactions felt true to Aloy’s established personality.[2][14] While the team focused on making Aloy a fundamentally human and complex personality, they also implemented a “Flashpoint” dialogue system that allows the player to shape the nuances of her personality during key narrative moments by choosing whether she reacts with compassion, insight, or confrontation.[7] The development team aimed for her to organically grow from a figure of lowest social standing into the world’s most vital saviour.[17] Her behaviour and worldview were heavily influenced by her status as a motherless outcast at birth. Gonzalez explained that this early trauma fostered a deep compassion for others facing adversity. This cultivated both a strong curiosity about her origins and a natural drive to help those in need, which the developers used as the narrative justification for her willingness to assist non-player characters (NPC) during side quests.[6] Gonzalez also successfully pushed for Aloy to discover her augmented reality Focus device as a child rather than as an adult, allowing the game to intertwine her early emotional growth with the story of the ancient world.[16]
Evolution in Forbidden West
Aloy’s design and game mechanics evolved to reflect her growth and experience in Horizon Forbidden West (2022). Lead character artist Bastien Ramisse explained that to take advantage of the advanced hardware of the PlayStation 5, the team heavily increased the polygon density and skeletal joints of her character model. This allowed for enhanced facial capture accuracy and realistic surface details, right down to the fine vellus hair visible on her skin.[5][18] Lead combat designer Dennis Zopfi stated that her mechanics were built around traits like being smart, fast, agile, precise, and resourceful. To emphasise that she does not rely on brute force, the team blended melee and ranged combat and updated her animations to show she is more comfortable traversing the environment. New tools, such as a Pullcaster grappling hook and a Shieldwing glider, were introduced to increase her vertical mobility.[19] Writer Benjamin McCaw noted that the immense pressure Aloy faced to live up to Elisabet Sobeck’s legacy was a significant part of her character arc. Her unique upbringing initially caused her to push her friends away, feeling she had to accomplish her tasks alone. Over the course of the game, her narrative focused on learning to integrate into society, accept help, and realise that the people in the world were worth saving, rather than saving the world in the abstract.[20] Aloy’s evolving relationship with her clone sister Beta was described by the development team as the emotional core of the game’s story, and was considered the most difficult aspect to write.[20][21] The writers created Beta to serve as a “dark reflection” of Aloy, embodying her internal conflicts about wanting to connect with others while still feeling isolated.[20] Beta was originally envisioned as an optimistic character before being rewritten as sullen and withdrawn to better fit the emotional tone of the story.[22]
In Burning Shores (2023), McCaw explained that the team wanted to push Aloy beyond the trauma of her outcast childhood and explore her capacity for vulnerability and love. This narrative arc culminated in her meeting the Quen warrior Seyka, a character specifically designed to be Aloy’s physical and emotional equal who could uniquely understand her perspective.[23] To cement this dynamic, the team equipped Seyka with a Focus to mirror Aloy’s past and ensure she felt like a genuine match. This culminates in an optional “Flashpoint” dialogue choice where the player determines whether Aloy kisses Seyka. McCaw and Burning Shores lead writer Annie Kitain explained that regardless of whether the player accepts or rejects the romance, the choice remains valid to Aloy’s character, reflecting her ongoing struggles with social intimacy and the immense weight of her mission.[24]
Musical theme
Aloy’s journey is represented by “Aloy’s Theme”, a recurring motif featuring the lyricless vocals of singer Julie Elven.[25] When crafting the theme, composer Joris de Man was instructed by the developers to avoid traditional sci-fi tropes; they specifically requested an “anti-blockbuster” sound for the protagonist that was intimate and organic. The theme was initially intended as a placeholder for the game’s E3 2015 trailer; however, overwhelming audience response led the team to adopt it as the main menu theme. The instrumentation was deliberately kept minimalistic, using sparse arrangements of analogue synthesisers, cellos, and contrabass flutes to reflect Aloy’s isolated upbringing as an outcast and her underlying loneliness.[26] Elven was originally recommended to the team by composer Ian Livingstone; de Man asked to “tack on” to their recording session to have Elven sing a short, minute-and-a-half phrase he had written. This anti-blockbuster approach relied heavily on soloistic performances and improvisations.[27] Elven’s vocalisation acts as Aloy’s “musical voice”, communicating the vulnerability the guarded character refuses to say out loud.[28] Throughout Zero Dawn, the composition team dynamically wove variations of this central motif into cutscenes, triggering specific permutations of the theme to underscore key emotional shifts in Aloy’s personal journey and the unfolding revelations about her origin.[26]
For Forbidden West, the musical focus shifted to reflect Aloy’s growth from a frustrated outcast to a character with clear purpose.[27] Composers sought to further evolve her musical presence, with Niels van der Leest ensuring the world’s score was written “through the eyes of Aloy” to reflect the burden of her new mission.[29] The score introduced vocal duets between Elven and Melissa R. Kaplan to represent Aloy’s interactions with a new significant character; in these duets, Elven’s voice was used to signify Aloy’s strength and persistence, contrasting with the vulnerability of her companion.[27] Additionally, the vocal track “In the Flood”, co-produced by Lovisa Bergdahl and Oleksa Lozowchuk and sung by Ariana Gillis, was chosen for the game’s opening title sequence because developers felt it perfectly captured Aloy’s journey as she gallops into the West.[30]
Spin-off adaptations
Aloy’s design has also been adapted to suit the different tones of the franchise’s spin-offs. In the virtual reality title Horizon Call of the Mountain (2023), she appears as an NPC encountered by the protagonist, Ryas. McCaw explained that because the game was built specifically for virtual reality, the team felt they needed a new protagonist, a master climber, whose skill set offered the perfect viewpoint to experience the towering vertical scale of the world, rather than reusing Aloy.[31][32] Conversely, the 2024 spin-off Lego Horizon Adventures reimagines her for a younger, family-friendly audience. Frédéric Andre, Creative Lead at The Lego Group, noted that Aloy’s in-game model and physical minifigure feature a more expressive face to capture the lighthearted, playful tone of the adaptation, contrasting with her typically serious demeanour.[33]
Appearances
Video games
In Horizon Zero Dawn, Aloy is introduced as an outcast of the Nora tribe, raised in the wilderness by her surrogate father, Rost. Shunned from birth for lacking a mother, a young Aloy discovers an ancient augmented reality “Focus” device that grants her insight into the ruined Old World. Hoping to uncover her origins, a teenage Aloy wins the tribe’s Proving ritual, but the ceremony is attacked by the Eclipse cult. Their leader, Helis, specifically targets Aloy due to her physical resemblance to a 21st-century scientist named Dr. Elisabet Sobeck; Rost sacrifices himself to save her. Declared a Seeker by the Nora elders, Aloy forms a reluctant alliance with a mysterious researcher named Sylens. Her journey reveals she is not a natural-born human, but a genetic clone of Sobeck created by GAIA, the artificial intelligence governing “Project Zero Dawn”, an autonomous terraforming system that restored life to Earth after its eradication by self-replicating military machines. GAIA cloned Sobeck so Aloy could use her genetic signature to access restricted facilities and reboot the system after a rogue sub-function named HADES attempted to cause a second mass extinction. While in the city of Meridian, Aloy also assists Talanah Khane Padish, a noble hunter, by providing trophies from various machines to prove her worth to the Carja Hunters Lodge. The pair later collaborate to defeat the legendary Thunderjaw “Redmaw”, allowing Talanah to supplant the bigoted leadership of the Lodge and be named its first female Sunhawk. Returning to her primary mission, Aloy successfully defends Meridian from the Eclipse and uses a master override to purge HADES, securing the region.[34]
In Horizon Zero Dawn: The Frozen Wilds, Aloy temporarily detours north into the Cut, a snowy region corresponding to the ruins of Yellowstone National Park, to assist the Banuk tribe. She investigates rumours of a “Daemon” corrupting local machines and causing a volcano named Thunder’s Drum to violently smoke. She teams up with the local chieftain Aratak and his sister, the shaman Ourea, to stop the Daemon, which is revealed to be HEPHAESTUS, another rogue GAIA sub-function. HEPHAESTUS has taken over an ancient facility and enslaved a benevolent AI named CYAN, originally designed by the Old Ones to prevent the Yellowstone Caldera from erupting. The trio infiltrates the facility’s core, where Ourea sacrifices herself to complete an override. This allows Aloy to free CYAN and halt HEPHAESTUS’s immediate threat, though the rogue sub-function manages to escape into the global network.[35]
Set six months later, Horizon Forbidden West follows Aloy as she travels to the uncharted western coast of the United States to find a working backup of GAIA, hoping to reverse a toxic red blight and catastrophic supercell storms degrading the biosphere. Burdened by Sobeck’s legacy, Aloy initially attempts to shoulder the mission alone. However, she soon becomes entangled in a tribal civil war between the Tenakth Chief Hekarro and the rebel leader Regalla, and clashes with Far Zenith, who are a group of immortal billionaires who fled Earth during the apocalypse and have returned to claim GAIA for themselves using impenetrable energy shields. Realising she cannot defeat them alone, Aloy establishes a covert base of operations and forms a coalition of allies from various tribes, including her friends Varl and Erend, the Utaru gravesinger Zo, the Tenakth warrior Kotallo, and the Quen diviner Alva. She also reunites with Talanah to track a missing hunter named Amadis. Aloy’s coalition eventually rescues Beta, a younger, traumatised clone of Sobeck created by the Zeniths, whom Aloy accepts as a sister. After Varl is murdered by the Zeniths’ enforcer Erik Visser, a grief-stricken Aloy leads her allies in a final assault on the Zenith base. Forced to reluctantly collaborate with her adversarial ally, Sylens, she unleashes HEPHAESTUS into their machine-printing matrix to bypass their shields. They defeat the Zeniths, only to discover the billionaires were not planning to save Earth, but were actually fleeing a vengeful, highly advanced gestalt intelligence named Nemesis, which is now en route to destroy the planet. Aloy chooses to remain on Earth, working with her assembled allies to prepare for Nemesis’s arrival.[36]
In Horizon Forbidden West: Burning Shores (2023), Aloy prepares for the arrival of Nemesis by tracking Walter Londra, the final surviving Zenith, to the volcanic archipelago of the ruined Los Angeles. She partners with Seyka, a Quen marine searching for her missing people, to dismantle Londra’s cult and stop his planned escape from Earth, which would irradiate the region. Together, they stop Londra from fleeing the planet by destroying his reactivated Horus “Metal Devil” war machine. Following their victory, the player is presented with a “Flashpoint” choice to determine the outcome of their relationship; selecting the “Heart” option allows Aloy to reciprocate Seyka’s feelings and the two share a kiss.[23][37]
Outside of the mainline series, Aloy appears as a non-playable character in Call of the Mountain and as the primary playable character in the comedic retelling of Zero Dawn, Lego Horizon Adventures.[31][38] Beyond the Horizon franchise,Aloy has also made cameo appearances in other games. She was first added as a playable character in the PlayStation 4 version of Monster Hunter: World (2018)[39] and makes an appearance in Astro’s Playroom (2020)[40] and in Astro Bot (2024), with a full level based on the Horizon universe in the latter.[41] Aloy was added to Fortnite Battle Royale (2017) on 15 April 2021, for the Chapter 2, Season 6 “Primal” event.[42] That September, Aloy was given out as a free character for PS4 and PS5 players of Genshin Impact (2020), while players on other platforms received her for free in October.[43] Giselle Fernandez voiced her in the game.[44] In December, Aloy was added to Fall Guys (2020) as an unlockable costume during a limited-time event.[45]
Comics
Aloy’s narrative is further expanded in the Horizon Zero Dawn comic book series published by Titan Comics. In the first volume, The Sunhawk (2020), set after the events of the game, Aloy makes a supporting appearance. After she disappears from Meridian to continue her mission, Talanah ventures into the wilderness to find her, ultimately meeting Amadis and battling a new machine known as a Clawstrider.[46] Aloy returns to a co-starring role in the second volume, Liberation (2021—2022), which takes place during the events of the game. The story follows Aloy as she assists Erend in tracking Korl, an accomplice in the murder of Erend’s sister, Ersa. While they fend off machines, Erend recounts the previously untold history of the “Liberation of Meridian”, detailing how Ersa and the Oseram vanguard helped overthrow the tyrannical Mad Sun-King Jiran.[47]
Reception
Critical response
Aloy has received largely positive reception across the Horizon franchise, with reviewers frequently highlighting her pragmatic yet compassionate personality and complex emotional drive.[12][48][49][50] Critics praised her grounded emotional core and her relatable quest to discover her origins;[49][50][51][52] Writing for The Guardian, Keith Stuart observed that Aloy’s journey is driven by “intellectual curiosity” rather than a traditional heroic obligation; her fascination with ancient technology and the game’s machines grounds her narrative, making her interactions with the world feel deeply personal rather than epic.[53] Kotaku' Peter Tieryas stated that optional gameplay mechanics, such as speaking at the grave of her surrogate father, Rost, effectively demonstrated her humanity and vulnerability.[49] Conversely, writing for Polygon, Malindy Hetfeld argued that Aloy’s “flawless” and superhero-like qualities occasionally made her less relatable than the game’s supporting female cast.[54] Despite this, her refusal to let a rigid tribal society dictate her life led Polygon to name her one of the best characters of the 2010s.[48] Critical retrospectives have similarly identified her as a defining protagonist of her console generation; PC Gamer's Michael Caruso highlighted her as one of the most interesting new leads in years,[55] while TheGamer ranked her among the most iconic characters introduced last decade.[56] GamesRadar+ additionally named her one of the most inspirational female characters in gaming.[57] Push Square's Sammy Barker compared her to legacy action heroines such as Lara Croft and Katniss Everdeen,[58] while other reviewers noted that Aloy evolved the archetype by prioritising tactical intelligence and survivalist wit over brute strength.[50][59][60] Reviewers also consistently commended the franchise’s subversion of traditional gender roles;[48][60][61][62] Game Informer's Javy Gwaltney specifically praised Aloy as an unabashedly feminist heroine whose outsider perspective allows her to effectively challenge the bigotry and tribalism of her world.[62]
As the franchise progressed, reviewers focused on Aloy’s evolving emotional core, particularly her struggle to balance her independence with the legacy of her predecessor, Elisabet Sobeck.[60][63][64] Critics across outlets such as The Guardian, Polygon, and GamesRadar+ broadly praised her narrative arc of learning to accept help from a “found family” of allies in Forbidden West;[59][65][66] however, her initial distant attitude towards those companions proved polarising among several reviewers.[67][68][69] VentureBeat argued that her reluctance to accept help occasionally “bordered on the extreme”,[67] while GameSpot criticised her as often too brooding and Eurogamer found her abrasive demeanour to be grating.[68][69] This emotional growth was further explored through her alliance with the pragmatist Sylens; critics widely praised the ideological clash between Aloy’s compassionate morality and Sylens’s ruthless pursuit of knowledge, noting how the dynamic forced her to refine her own leadership and ethics.[52][70][71][72] This growth was further tested by her relationship with her clone sister, Beta; critics wrote that Aloy’s initial lack of empathy towards Beta’s trauma served to deconstruct her hardened survivor persona, illustrating the friction between their shared genetics and different upbringings.[20][22][59] Her journey progressed naturally in the Burning Shores when she was given the option to share a player-determined romantic kiss with the Quen marine Seyka. Despite critical praise for allowing the traditionally stoic hunter to display awkwardness and self-doubt,[a] the inclusion of the same-sex romance, regardless of its optional nature, subjected the franchise to a coordinated review bombing campaign on Metacritic.[78][79][80][81] Coverage of the backlash was highly critical: PC Gamer's Fraser Brown explicitly described the campaign as homophobic,[78] Hirun Cryer of GamesRadar+ condemned users for railing against LGBTQ+ themes,[79] and Eurogamer's Victoria Phillips Kennedy highlighted the anti-gay rhetoric driving the negative scores.[80] Conversely, LGBTQ+ media advocacy group GLAAD heavily praised the expansion for explicitly confirming Aloy’s queer identity rather than leaving it to subtext, calling her a rare and important milestone for authentic representation in blockbuster gaming.[82]
Critics also heavily analysed how Aloy was executed through performance and gameplay mechanics. Multiple outlets highlighted Ashly Burch’s vocal delivery, praising her for bringing genuine humanity to the role, effectively capturing Aloy’s transition from an isolated outcast to a confident leader.[52][64][72][83] However, early reviews for Zero Dawn observed that her performance was occasionally undermined by stiff facial animation technology, an issue that reviewers noted was significantly rectified in Forbidden West and the 2024 Remastered version of Zero Dawn.[63][84][85][86] Conversely, her in-game dialogue has faced gameplay criticism for excessive hand-holding; multiple outlets expressed frustration that her habit of constantly talking to herself would prematurely spoil environmental puzzles.[64][69][87]
In addition to her mechanical and technical execution, critics heavily discussed Aloy’s visual representation. Reviewers praised Guerrilla Games for grounding her physical design in athletic practicality rather than catering to traditional oversexualised tropes.[62][61] This commitment to realism became a major focal point prior to the release of Forbidden West; the game’s character model, featuring natural skin textures and visible vellus hair (“peach fuzz”), sparked a vocal backlash from a subset of Internet users who argued her design was overly masculine.[5][88][89] Calling out the hypocrisy of the backlash, TheGamer wrote that Aloy’s contextually realistic, sun-worn appearance was a positive rejection of the expectation that female characters must always cater to the male gaze.[89] Other industry outlets mocked this backlash as misogynistic, praising the developers for normalising authentic female bodies in high-fidelity gaming.[5][88][90] Her popularity has cemented her as one of the PlayStation brand’s leading figures; executives at Sony have explicitly referred to her as a “key icon” for the brand,[91][92] a status reflected by her crossover appearances in titles like Fortnite, Genshin Impact, and Fall Guys.[42][43][45] Her transition into family-friendly media has also been praised; reviewing the comedic spin-off Lego Horizon Adventures, outlets consistently wrote that stripping away her brooding demeanour in favour of an exaggerated caricature was endearing, bolstered by a lighter vocal delivery from Burch.[93][94][95][96]
Thematic analysis
Aloy’s characterisation and narrative arc have been the subject of significant scholarly analysis, particularly through the lenses of ecofeminism, posthumanism, and gender studies. Lauren Woolbright identified Aloy as a distinctly ecofeminist protagonist; her quest pits nature against out-of-control technology, challenging the gradual violence of capitalist exploitation and environmental collapse. Woolbright argued that Aloy represents a rejection of patriarchal heroic tropes, guided instead by an environmental ethics of care that seeks to restore balance to the ecosystem.[97] This rejection of traditional power structures is also reflected in the game mechanics; Natalie J. Swain wrote that the franchise subtly subscribes to standpoint theory by forcing the player to inhabit the worldview of a social outcast, the game privileges the perspective of the marginalised and encourages a perspective shift in the player.[98]
This intersection of biology and technology is further explored through the framework of posthumanism. Jesús Fernández-Caro identified Aloy as a “feminine posthuman”, noting that her unique origin, a clone birthed from a machine facility into a matriarchal society, positions her as a vital bridge between the biological and the technological.[99] This relationship with knowledge evolves over the series; while she initially hoards data out of a distrust for others, she eventually transitions into a socially responsible archivist who shares her technology to educate her allies.[100] The conflict between this grounded posthumanism and corporate transhumanism serves as a primary theme in Forbidden West; Andrei Nae and Eirini Bourontzi argued that Aloy’s struggle against the immortal Far Zeniths represented a rejection of technological elitism in favour of an embodied connection to the Earth.[101]
Aloy’s origin as a clone has also led to deconstruction of traditional motherhood within the franchise’s matriarchal setting. Sam Loveridge wrote that she breaks generational trauma by reconciling with the legacy of Elisabet Sobeck as a flawed individual rather than an idolised maternal figure, a process that mirrors real-world adoptive and mother-child relationships.[51] Melissa L. Allen noted that the franchise further challenges gender expectations by resisting amatonormativity; the assumption that a central romance is necessary for a fulfilling life, forcing the player to engage with her non-traditional role as an outsider first.[102] This disruption of traditional romance extends to Aloy’s queer identity; scholar Jasmyn Connell highlighted how the “queering” of Aloy, later formalised by her romance with Seyka, was heavily explored by fans for years through virtual photography, making her a rare AAA protagonist whose online persona was co-curated by both developers and the community.[103]
Despite these progressive elements, researchers have debated the cultural dissonance of her journey. Nae and Bourontzi argued that the games’ core mechanics actively force Aloy into the role of a “colonial entrepreneur”. They asserted that her Focus[b] superimposes a capitalist colonial gaze that reduces the ecosystem to loot and exchange value, ultimately requiring her to uphold a Western scientific worldview to “save” the Earth at the expense of non-Western, indigenous belief systems.[101] Furthermore, cultural critic Jonathan Ore suggested that Aloy occasionally falls into the white saviour trope; as a white protagonist who alone possesses the genetic key to “save” the world, she is often positioned as an enlightened outsider resolving the conflicts of indigenous-coded tribes.[105] Conversely, scholars such as Ian Faith argued that her hunting represents a healthy “hybrid ecology” where harvested components are used for cultural connection and survival rather than strict capitalist exploitation.[106]
Accolades
Ashly Burch’s performance as Aloy has been recognised by several industry awarding bodies. For her debut in Zero Dawn, she won “Best Gaming Performance” and “Breakout Performance” at the Golden Joystick Awards,[107] and received a nomination for “Performer” at the British Academy Games Awards.[108] She additionally earned nominations for “Best Performance” at The Game Awards for both Zero Dawn and Forbidden West.[109][110] The Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences similarly nominated the character twice for “Outstanding Achievement in Character” at the D.I.C.E. Awards across both mainline games.[111][112] For her work in Forbidden West, Burch received an additional nomination for “Best Acting in a Game” at the New York Game Awards,[113] and ultimately won “Best Voice Performance” at the Game Audio Network Guild Awards.[114]
Cultural impact and merchandise

Aloy’s visual design resonated with the gaming community immediately; following her reveal at E3 2015, she inspired a notable cosplay presence prior to the game’s release.[115] In response to this early interest, Guerrilla released a series of official cosplay guides to actively support the community.[7][116] Her characterisation has also been noted for bridging demographic gaps; a study by Deakin University found that playing as Aloy fostered profound empathy among a predominantly male player base, successfully disrupting traditional barriers of cross-gender play.[117] Driven by this widespread popularity, Aloy has become the subject of extensive merchandise. To coincide with the 2017 launch of Zero Dawn, a “Collector’s Edition” was released featuring a 9-inch statue of her sculpted by Gentle Giant.[118] That same year, she was featured as a plush toy in the PlayStation Stubbins line,[119] while Funko launched a series of Pop! figurines that later expanded with a new variant in 2020.[120][121] Additionally, Prime 1 Studio produced a highly detailed 1:4 scale premium statue of her.[122]
The merchandising line expanded significantly alongside the release of Forbidden West in 2022. Both the Collector’s and Regalla Editions of the game included custom-sculpted statues of Aloy,[123] paving the way for further high-end collectibles. Notable releases include a 1:9 scale premium statue of Aloy riding a Clawstrider and a 1/8 scale PVC figure, both produced by Dark Horse.[124][125] Good Smile Company also translated her into a stylised Nendoroid figure,[126] while Spin Master added her to their “The Shapes Collection” line of action figures in 2024.[127] She appears as a minifigure in multiple Lego sets, including a 2022 Tallneck build and a 2025 set tied to Lego Horizon Adventures.[128][129] Furthermore, in late 2025, Wizards of the Coast featured her in a Magic: The Gathering Secret Lair Drop titled “Into the Forbidden West”, which included an alternate-art reskin of “Farseek” and a mechanically unique legendary creature card named “Aloy, Savior of Meridian”.[130]
Notes
References
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- ^ a b Minor, Zac (12 April 2017). “Coffee and Horizon: Neil Druckmann Talks with Hermen Hulst”. PlayStation Blog. Sony Interactive Entertainment. Archived from the original on 31 May 2020. Retrieved 31 January 2026.
- ^ Blain, Louise (28 July 2015). “Horizon's Aloy Is Ripley Meets Ygritte. “That’s Where We Started” Says Guerrilla”. GamesRadar+. Future plc. Archived from the original on 11 September 2015. Retrieved 18 March 2026.
- ^ Williams, Hayley (8 March 2017). “How Horizon Zero Dawn Moves Beyond the Strong Female Character”. Kotaku Australia. Gizmodo Media Group. Archived from the original on 2 March 2018. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
- ^ a b c d Clark, Meredith (15 February 2022). “Internet Hits Back at Gamer Who Questioned Female Video Game Character’s ‘Peach Fuzz’“. The Independent. Independent Digital News & Media Ltd. ISSN 1741-9743. Archived from the original on 15 November 2024. Retrieved 18 March 2026.
- ^ a b Wallace, Kimberly (14 September 2016). “All About Horizon Zero Dawn's Aloy”. Game Informer. GameStop. ISSN 1067-6392. Archived from the original on 31 October 2021. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
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