The Hollow is a Canadian animated adventure mystery[3] television series created by Vito Viscomi.
[7] Adam, Mira, and Kai are three teenagers who awaken in a room with no memories of themselves or each other; the only clue to their identities are their names written on small slips of paper in their pockets.
Each region, however, harbors dangers and obstacles that the group struggle to overcome, while also discovering that they each possess superpowers; Adam has both super strength and agility, Mira can communicate with animals, breathe underwater, and swim like a mermaid, and Kai can cast and manipulate fire, as well as being a technical whiz.
The trio encounters a large, talking tree who offers to send them home if they can retrieve a stolen branch of hers that has been turned into a dangerous weapon called the Ishibo.
While attempting to retrieve it, they also encounter another trio of teens: Vanessa, Reeve and Skeet; each with their own superpowers who compete with them for possession of the Ishibo.
They realize that all of their greatest fears, the bullies for Adam, a giant chicken for Kai, and a Victorian-era doll for Mira, have been manifested into the real world.
While Mira is on her way home, she sees Skeet, and decides to go to Hollow Games Headquarters without Adam and Kai.
Vanessa reveals to everyone that she cheated in the tournament by using special contact lens to retain her memories to have a better shot at winning the game, which caused the glitch and made their copied consciousnesses self-aware.
Vanessa rejoins the group and, at the same time the other team wins, the Weird Guy tells them he's finished and opens a portal.
The second episode featured a Hispanic boy named Adam who was revealed to be gay, as he said that Mira, a female protagonist, is "not his type".
[9] Prior to this, in the trailer for Season 2 the LGBT pride flag was seen in his room, leading some fans to speculate he was gay.
"[9][14] Rafael Motamayor of Bloody Disgusting also made the comparison to The Maze Runner, and noted similarities with Gravity Falls, and said that while he found the show's tone "a bit childish," and said it sets up a "mystery that actually pays off without any cliffhanger.