- The Chinese room announced the Always wakes up deep: the rest of the siren expansion
- The expansion will be launched on June 18 for PC and console
- The siren is deep will take place more than a decade after the events of the original history
Developer The Chinese room has announced The siren restA brand new history extension for its 2024 horror game Always wake up the deep.
Always wakes up deep: the rest of the siren should be released on June 18 for PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X, Xbox Series S, PC and Xbox Game Pass, and takes place more than a decade after the events of the original game.
In this expansion, written by Helldivers 2The deputy director of the Sagar Beroshi game, the players will sink under the waves of the North Sea as Mhairi to explore what remains of the Beira D, an offshore oil drill platform.
“1986. The Beira D is now a groaning steel catacomb buried in the ink depths of the North Sea,” said the expansion text. “What really happened that day in December 1975, when communications with the continent were cut and the platform sank without trace? What answers can be given to families who are still crying, ten years?
“You are Mhairi. And you will find these answers. As a leader of a saturation dive at the wreckage of the Beira D, you descend, a fragile light in the overwhelming darkness. Your mission: discover the fate of the crew and recover what remains of their passage.”
The players will have to swim through the underwater wreck armed with a cutting torch, a hook and a camera, reconstruct the mystery of the lost crew, while avoiding the danger that hides in the depths.
Siren’s Rest will also introduce a new vocation led by Kate Saxon, including Doctor Who“S Laws Chimimba, who will play like Mhairi, BridgertonLorn Macdonald, and David Menkin, known for Final Fantasy 16 And Alan Wake 2.
In the four stars of Techradar Gaming Always wake up the deep Review, Rob Dwiar said that the game is “an incredibly atmospheric first -person horror game”.
“With a huge sense of the place, a superb play of voice and frightening horror elements, it is a small but impactful experience that we recommend fully despite simple and simple puzzles and the story being a little too short,” he wrote.