Methane (CH4) can be captured in silico with a light atom molecule containing only C, H, Si, O, and B atoms, respectively. A tripodal peri-substituted ligand system was employed, namely, [(5-Ph2B-xan-4-)3Si]H (1, xan = xanthene), which after hydride abstraction (1+) carries four Lewis acidic sites within the cationic cage structure. In a previous study, this system was shown to be able to capture noble gas atoms He-Kr (Mebs & Beckmann 2022). In the corresponding methane complex, 1+CH4, a polarized Si+⋯CH4 contact of 2.289 Å as well as series of (H3)CH⋯O/CPh hydrogen bonds enforce spatial CH4 fixation (the molecule obeys C3-symmetry) and slight activation. A trigonal-pyramidal Si-CHeq3-Hax local geometry is thereby approached with Hax-C-Heq angles decreased to 103.7°. All attempts to replace the Lews acidic -BPh2 fragments in 1 with basic -PR2 (R = Ph, tBu) fragments indeed increased intra-molecular hydrogen bonding between host molecule and CH4, and thus caused stronger activation of the latter, however ultimately resulted in the formation of energetically favorable quenched structures with short P-Si contacts, making CH4 binding hard to achieve. The electronic situation of two hypothetic methane complexes, 1+CH4 and [(5-tBu2P-xan-4-)3SiCH4]+ (2+CH4), was determined by a set of calculated real-space bonding indicators (RSBIs) including the Atoms-In-Molecules (AIM), non-covalent interactions index (NCI), and electron localizability indicator (ELI-D) methods, highlighting crucial differences in the level of activation. The proposed ligand systems serve as blueprints for a more general structural design with adjustable trigonal ligand systems in which central atom, spacer fragment, and functional peri-partner can be varied to facilitate different chemical tasks.