When you die for the 7th time after not finding any bladderfish.
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I always made sure to keep at least 3 (or it might have been 2) bottles of water on me at all times, and usually several in reserve, too. If I couldn't find a bladderfish by the time I ran out of my entire supply I think I'd have a bigger problem than the bladderfish. :p
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My problem with Subnautica is that the MC has an obsessive snacking disorder and has to drink enough water in a day to kill a man. It's bad enough that it disrupts the other gameplay.
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My issue is basically the opposite, honestly. I thought it was too easy to stay topped off on food and water. Like, so much so that it was barely even an afterthought. I have a harder time managing my thirst and hunger irl than I do in Subnautica.
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I guess mine works out more than yours.
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In what way? My problem leaves me totally capled out on my resources. :p
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He gets hungry all the time. I guess you are just a better player than I.
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To be fair, I usually play Don’t Starve. Food is [i]a lot[/i] harder to get in Don’t Starve, so moving to Subnautica was like child’s play.
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Never played that game, so I'll take your word for it.
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If you like survival games, then (imo) Don't Starve is [i]the[/i] best one. It blows everything else out of the water by a long shot. I've actually had a harder time playing new survival games ever since playing Don't Starve, because nothing is even remotely as good. :p Though, that should come with a warning that it does have non-optional permadeath. Every time you die, your world is toast. I personally think that's a good thing, but for some that is a major turn off. Though, that also comes with a disclaimer, that there are in-game ways to get around death.
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I haven't done a lot of survival games. My experience has been kinda limited to Minecraft, Subnautica, Ark, and No Man's Sky (if that could even be considered a survival game). Honestly, I'd love to find more Sci-Fi survival games. Unfortunately, that realm of gaming is not well developed, aside from maybe Subnautica.
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I would actually argue that Subnautica and Minecraft aren't survival games. They're sandboxes. This probably applies to NMS, too, but I haven't played that one. In a survival game, you explore in order to survive. In a sandbox you survive in order to explore. I don't know where Ark would fall, because I haven't played it, but that does seem a little more survival oriented, from what I've seen. I agree on wanting there to be more sci-fi ones, though. That's actually the biggest thing I like about Subnautica. Most sci-fi games are all action oriented, it's so rare to see one that's about surviving, or exploring. Well, that and the submarines. I love me some submarines. I remember when I used to play Minecraft, one of my favorite texture packs was Mass Effect, even though I've never played Mass Effect. I loved it because it transformed the world to feel like it was a once-great sci-fi civilization and we were reclaiming the lost technology or whatever.
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Lol, I literally just wrote a miniature essay to reply to this comment. I explained the features of Ark and discussed the foundational pillars of NMS, but the internet cut.