

- #SUBNAUTICA VR CATCH FISH UPGRADE#
- #SUBNAUTICA VR CATCH FISH FULL#
- #SUBNAUTICA VR CATCH FISH PC#
- #SUBNAUTICA VR CATCH FISH FREE#
You also slowly upgrade your gear, so now I can breathe for nearly 2 minutes underwater without surfacing for air, and I have one of those handheld propellors which lets me go faster and explore further. If you die you respawn at the escape pod again, sometimes losing items from your inventory - but I've mostly died from running out of oxygen from staying too deep and not getting to the surface on time, or by getting lost in cave systems and running out of air.īut as you progress, by a few hours you will understand the basics and then getting food and drink isn't hard if you plan for it.
#SUBNAUTICA VR CATCH FISH FREE#
Big fish can bite you or explode on you, whatever, but you can pretty easily swim away from them, and you get free med-packs in your escape pod (they get constructed over time). I love the ambiance of it - when you see the game in motion with the shoals of fish, waving fronds, weird wildlife and lovely skyboxes or shimmering water overhead, it really transports you into the world.Īlthough the survival aspect isn't brutal your food and water runs out over time, and there's plenty of predators who will chase you - or at least you need to avoid. I hesitate to call it a chillout game but the atmosphere is really immersive and you spend most of your time exploring or scavenging. I am really looking forward to venturing ever deeper, it is super compelling and the joy of underwater exploration is real.

#SUBNAUTICA VR CATCH FISH FULL#
9/10 on Steam and I expect the reviews to be glowing once the full release comes out. If you like survivor games, exploration games, stuff like System Shock etc (the narrative has you chasing down the escape pods from your crashed mothership complete with audio logs, and resource management is kinda similar), then give this a go.
#SUBNAUTICA VR CATCH FISH PC#
This game is bloody brilliant and I can't wait to one day play it on a PC or console that will do the graphics justice as I've seen how good it looks on Youtube. I have the wreck of my mothership to explore, multiple underwater habitats to slowly expand, an island to explore and much more. Looking forward I have found some really deep cave systems and much deeper sea out farther. I have nearly got my first submarine, I have a few shitty underwater bases (just tubes basically), and I just found an island - which really surprised me because I assumed the whole game was underwater. I always have a ton of stuff to try and do, but the survival elements aren't as grindy as games like Minecraft, even so, you still feel under threat and the hostile of the deep the farther underwater you go. There are so many wow moments, like the phosphorescence at night, leviathans, new biomes, cool new equipment you can make, narrative events. But even then it still looks good enough and the great sound provides all the ambience. I managed to get it running on my shitty old PC, so the framerate is poor and the graphics are at almost the lowest settings. Combine that with the alien setting, base building, biomes and wildlife and the great atmosphere and it's a real winner.

I have never played a game that does underwater exploration so well. About 8 hours into the game and loving it! This is bloody brilliant, isn't it? I just got round to playing it, and it comes out of Early Access very soon. It's a very colourful game, as shown in the screenshots below and, watching the trailer and some streams of it, it looks remarkably polished and feature complete for an early access game. The game is currently £14.99 on Steam and coming to Xbox One at some point, too. You can build bases, explore the wreckage of your starship, craft gear and you need to eat and drink to survive. We know more about our solar system than we do our own oceans and there is some proper freaky stuff down in the depths.Ī (not that) new game seeks to address this, however, and provide all the underwater adventure and hijinks you can ask for.ĭeveloped by Unknown Worlds and currently in early access, Subnautica sees you as the lone survivor of a crash that's left you stranded on a bizarre ocean world and you need to swim, scavenge and survive long enough to be rescued. I don't know about you guys, but it always baffles me that deep-sea exploration and adventure is such an under-utilised area for games and films.
