Subnautica 2 developer Unknown Worlds has moved to address fan concerns following publisher Krafton’s announcement that the underwater survival sequel will be a multiplayer title adopting a “game-as-a-service model”.
Krafton made the claims in its latest financial earnings report, which also brought the news Subnautica 2 – the third game in Unknown Worlds’ series, following on from the acclaimed 2018 original and its 2021 continuation Subnautica: Below Zero – would be out this year. And with fans beginning to express displeasure at the apparent swerve away from the solo, self-contained survival action of previous Subnautica games, Unknown Worlds quickly sprung into action, offering clarification on its blog.
Starting with the multiplayer announcement, that much is apparently true, with Subnautica 2 confirmed to be playable co-operatively with up to four players. However, Unknown Worlds stresses the sequel “is not multiplayer-focused”, and that co-op is “entirely optional”, with players able to play the game entirely solo if they choose.
As for the alarm bells Krafton’s “games-as-a-service” claim set ringing, Unknown Worlds insists there’s no reason to panic, saying, “We simply plan to continually update the game for many years to come… Think our Early Access update model, expanded.” That, it continues, means, “No season passes. No battle passes. No subscription”. As for microtransactions? It doesn’t say.