orthodoxy1095
Banned
Publisher: Uppercut Games
Developer: Uppercut Games
Composer: Jeff Van Dyck
Platform: PS4, XBOX One, PC,
Genre: Action & Adventure, Platformer
Rating: E10+
Players: 1
Price: $19.99 (20% for Xbox Live Gold and PS+ members)
Release Date: August 4th (PC, NA PS4), August 5th (EU PS4), August 7th (XBOX One)
Download Size: 1.71 GB on the XBOX store, 1.8 GB on PSN
PC Requirements
Minimum:
OS: Windows 7 64Bit
Processor: Dual Core 2.0+ GHz
Memory: 4GB Ram
Graphics: GeForce 9800GTX or ATI Radeon HD 4770
Disk Space: 3GB
Recommended:
OS: Windows 7 64bit
Processor: Intel i5 2.5 GHz
Memory: 8GB Ram
GraphicsGeForce GTX 760 or Equivalent card
Disk Space: 3GB
You take on the role of Miku, a young girl who has brought her wounded brother to the city in their small fishing boat. Navigate the flooded city streets by boat, scale the drowned buildings, and use your telescope to scour the city for the supplies needed to save your dying sibling. As you explore the city at your own pace, you encounter the habitat that flourishes in this colorful place and discover hidden objects that piece together the story of a broken world and a broken family.
Submerged is a third-person, combat-free game. The game revolves around you taking the role of Mika and exploring the flooded city. There is no combat, no health bars and absolutely no death. While you do have the goal of saving your brother, ultimately, you can explore the city however you see fit to that end. City traversal will largely be horizontal (by boat) and vertical (climbing the ruins).
During your exploration, you will be searching for materials to help your brother, but you can also find collectibles to tell you the story of the sunken city and upgrades for your boat.
- What languages is the game available in?
English, French, Italian, German, Spanish, Portuguese, Brazilian Portuguese, Japanese, Korean, simplified Chinese, traditional Chinese, Turkish. - Wasn't there a mobile version? What happened to that?
According to the devs:
Although we originally intended to release Submerged on all platforms simultaneously, it became apparent that as a small independent team we just didn't have the bandwidth to develop for PC, and Console and Mobile at the same time. So we have delayed the mobile version of submerged until after the Console and PC release to give us some dedicated time to tune the controls and graphics for touch screen devices. - What's up with the OT title?
I couldn't think of anything witty or cool, so I just chose a cheap Bioshock quote that I hoped people would recognize since the devs are former Bioshock/Bioshock 2 devs.
- NZGamer - 9/10
Submerged wont be a game for everyone, in the same way that the likes of Gone Home and Dear Esther arent for everyone, but that doesnt make it any less remarkable. But if you can hear the music that this game is playing - and Id urge you to give it an earnest go - youll find something that may just take your breath away. - XGN - 8.5/10
Submerged is a great indie-game that proves you don't always need violence in a game for it to be great. Though it's a little on the short side, it's still a great ride. - Digital Chumps - 8/10
It's fair to say not everyone will be taken by Submerged's taciturn resolve. Miku delivers the occasional (translated) monologue about what she needs to do for her brother, but the remainder of Submerged's story is either absorbed by breathing in its world, or interpreted from minimalist drawings unlocked along the way. There's a bit of excitement brought on by an unknown presence, but Submerged isn't one to over deliver its narrative. Boating around serene seascapes and challenging yourself to pick its secrets clean is its only clear drive. - Vandal Online - 75/100
It's short and it has some technical issues, but we've enjoyed it and we think that it even has some moments to remember. If you understand its flaws, it might surprise you. - Gaming Trend - 75
Submerged may not have an epic narrative arc or intense moments of action, but it never tries to be a blockbuster in the first place either. While my run of the main story clocked in at just under two hours, they were two hours that had me captivated. I would get lost in finding new heights and landmarks, sailing alongside whales and watching the weather slowly roll in, excited to see how the world changed and reacted without regard for my presence. - Playstation Universe - 6/10
Submerged is definitely not a game for everyone. Its slow pace, repetitiveness and simple gameplay will probably turn off anyone looking for diversity, but its this simplicity - coupled with the soundtrack and unfolding story - that I actually rather enjoyed. Submerged puts you in the shoes of a young girl who goes to extremes in the attempt to save her brother in a believable and well-crafted world, but it's a shame that the game doesn't have enough variety in it to help it reach headier heights. - Push Square - 5/10
Submerged is a strange game to review. It's never does anything mortally wrong, but at almost every turn you'll feel as if the developer's grand vision hasn't been fully realised. Couple this with slightly shonky controls, and you've got an experience which, while never frustrating, is never truly satisfying either.
The title's biggest downfall, then, is not any one single thing, but rather its overwhelming ambition. And in the grand scheme of things, perhaps that's not the worst problem to have. Indeed, despite its admittedly frequent rough patches, it's very hard to not admire the way this humble indie game so earnestly reaches for the stars. - God is a Geek - 5/10
Despite promise, Submerged is mediocre. It entices with an interesting premise yet ultimately fails to enchant, falling flat due to a number of graphical bugs and sense of misdirection. While it boasts a wonderful soundtrack and fascinating setting concept, Submerged is a game which has been tainted by shoddy design and lacklustre execution producing a city devoid of soul and a lifeless protagonist who could play the part of a shop-window mannequin.
Submergeds problem is its failure to align its presentation and narrative with what you do. Because it hides so much of its narrative and history behind drawings you find as you climb, you search for detail in the minutiae of its world and characters. But there isnt any to find. The buildings blur together, the soundtrack repeats itself over and over, and the story of the boy and the girl doesnt resonate with the worlds visual themes of rebirth and evolution. Theres no cohesiveness to your role in the game, like your actions dont matter, which runs antithetical to the way the game doles out its narrative through your progress. - VideoGamer.com - 5/10
Submerged feels like a concept rather than a complete game. What's here is so slight, the story so flimsy, that it left almost no impression on me. I didn't enjoy it, but neither did I hate it. Looking back on the experience, I'm completely apathetic towards it. Should you play it? I really don't care one way or the other. - Slant - 2/5
While the visuals are nothing to scoff at (there's a postcard mode included for snapping in-game selfies), this nascent title is a baby that could've been thrown away with all the bathwater.
Submerged is a game that is not a game. A hollow shell. An empty box with huge ambitions, an ugly, badly designed, at times painfully dull product. There is no atmosphere, only boredom and embarrassment. There's enough good exploration games that you can simply avoid Submerged altogether. - Shacknews - 3/10
After only ten minutes in the game youve already experienced everything that Submerged has to offer. Its a rather dull and shallow title in what could have been an exciting and scary world. There is no combat, no urgency, and no chance of failure. The gameplay is boring, the landmarks and scenery are mediocre, and the story is almost nonexistent. Submerged is a rapidly sinking ship that never even left the harbor. - Gameblog.fr - 1.5/5
Submerged offers a charming atmosphere, but it suffers from repetitive gameplay, a limited world and... a lot of bugs. It was promising and we are finally disappointed. - GameStar - 30/100
There is no meaning, no point. It's just a boring game that lasts three hours. - The Jimquisition - 3/10
Submerged is a sad prime example of the vapidity people imagine when they derisively mention walking simulators its an unfair bit of elitist sneering, to be sure, but games like this dont help matters at all. Its the kind of game that believes plonking players in a brightly lit space is enough audience engagement to satisfy.
I am here to say it isnt. A game so proud of its lack of combat needs something else. Otherwise its simply a game with a great big hole in it. - Destructoid - 3/10
Sometimes games take concepts from other popular titles and combine them into a beautiful mix -- this is not one of those games...
Within under ten minutes time you'll have experienced all the game has to offer; boring boating, equally dull scaling of buildings and peering out a periscope to find the next white and green building to climb. There is no failstate, no urgency, no combat, just moving from point to point and monotonously collecting shit. The story isn't interesting, the gameplay is boring, everything looks the same aside from a few landmarks, and the whole ordeal is over in no time. - The Sixth Axis - 3/10
Ultimately, what Submerged lacks is a decent hook in both its story and gameplay. With nothing in the way of substantive dialogue, I found it almost impossible to build a connection with the games lead character. Gameplay, on the hand, has nothing to offer in the way of complexity, presenting players with a bareboned toolset to navigate the lost city.
We Got This Covered - 1.5/5
The dull and repetitive gameplay wears out its welcome quickly, while the clichéd storyline squanders its potential with unfocused presentation, plus a lack of depth and true world-building. This is nothing short of a catastrophe, but I hope that Uppercut Games can take the experience gained here and turn it into something actually worth playing. - Hardcore Gamer - 1/5
By combining nearly every bad video game trope into a package that feels like it desperately wants to be held in the same regard as Journey or The Unfinished Swan, Submerged finds a way to fail in every way imaginable