- The Chinese space has announced Still wake up the deep: Siren’s rest enlargement
- The expansion is launched on June 18 to PC and Console
- The sir is deep taking place over a decade after the events of the original story
Develops the Chinese space has announced Sirens restA brand new history expansion for his 2024 horror game Still wake up the deep.
Still wake up the deep: Siren’s rest Must be released on June 18 to PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X, Xbox Series S, PC and Xbox Game Pass and are set over a decade after the events in the original game.
In this extension, written by Helldivers 2‘s Deputy Waste Director Sagar Beroshi, the players will sink under the waves of the North Sea like Mhairi to explore what is left of Beira D, an offshore oil drilling platform.
“1986. Beira D is now a moaning steel catacomb connected in the North Sea in the North Sea,” reads the expansion blør. “What really happened on December day in 1975, when communication to the mainland was cut off and the rig sank without a trace? What answers can be given to families who still grieves, ten years at?
“You are Mhairi. And you will find these answers. As the leader of a saturation dive to the wreck to Beira D, you fall down, a fragile light in the crushing darkness. Your mission: Uncover the fate of the crew and restore what is left of their passing away.”
Players will have to swim through the underwater wool armed with a cutting torch, clutch and camera, piece together the mystery of the lost crew, all of avoiding danger that lurks in depth.
Siren’s rest will also introduce a new voice -molded instructed by Kate Saxon, including Doctor Who‘s lois chimimba who will play like mhairi, Bridergon‘s lorn Macdonald and David Menkin, known for Final Fantasy 16 and Alan Wake 2.
In the Techradar Gamings four-star Still wake up the deep Review, Rob Dwiar said the game is “an incredible atmospheric, tense and gripping first-person horror game.”
“With a huge feeling of place, excellent voice acting and creepy horror, it is a small, but severe experience that we fully recommend despite some handheld, simple puzzles, and the story is a little too short,” he wrote.