inherit
1040
0
3,228
Vortex13
2,202
Aug 17, 2016 14:31:53 GMT
August 2016
vortex13
Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, KOTOR, Jade Empire
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Post by Vortex13 on Feb 3, 2017 15:59:35 GMT
Well if you are looking for a video game strictly about science fiction and taking place almost entirely under water, then I would point you towards Subnauctica. A survial/sandbox game wherein your spacecraft crash lands on an alien water world and you have to uncover the mysteries of the crash and the planet in general.
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inherit
Darth Dennis
111
0
Jul 27, 2022 16:20:32 GMT
9,146
masterwarderz
8,113
August 2016
mastermasterwarderz
19,824
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Post by masterwarderz on Feb 3, 2017 16:47:27 GMT
then I would point you towards Subnauctica. I wouldn't but then again I play games that are actually finished before purchasing them.
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inherit
1040
0
3,228
Vortex13
2,202
Aug 17, 2016 14:31:53 GMT
August 2016
vortex13
Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, KOTOR, Jade Empire
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Post by Vortex13 on Feb 3, 2017 17:32:21 GMT
then I would point you towards Subnauctica. I wouldn't but then again I play games that are actually finished before purchasing them. Good pont. Though Subnauctica is pretty par for the course as far as survival games are concerned. At least it's not as bad as ARK Survival, charging people 40 bucks for an expansion for a game still in early access.
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inherit
802
0
5,260
B. Hieronymus Da
Unapologetic Western Chauvinist. Barefoot. Great Toenails
3,616
August 2016
bevesthda
Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, KOTOR, Baldur's Gate, Neverwinter Nights
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Post by B. Hieronymus Da on Feb 3, 2017 23:27:23 GMT
The problem with the oceans and underwater as an environment, is that there really isn't much you can do in them. That is realistically, I mean.
They're a sort of desert. There's almost only water.
While the oceans are on average something like 4000-5000 m deep (I don't know exactly, but it's thereabout), it's very difficult to descend deeper than 30-40 m. And extremely, extremely difficult and demanding to go deeper than 250 m, due to pressure. And then I'm speaking of both divers and submersibles/submarines. And light quickly goes away. It depends on the quality of the water, of course, but it should be pretty dark at, say, 60 m.
And it's a very hostile environment for technology. Very, very different from space or on land.
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