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Still Wakes the Deep is a 2024 psychological horror video game developed by The Chinese Room and published by Secret Mode.The story follows an electrician who is trapped on a damaged oil drilling platform in the North Sea in the 1970s, having no way to escape while being pursued by mysterious monsters under harsh weather conditions.
A Scottish oil rig in the North Sea is enveloped in an unnatural fog that cuts them off from outside communications. Spores found in the fog cause infected crew members to experience behavioural changes. After examining the spores, a scientist onboard the oil rig suspects that an ancient parasite has been unleashed from the ocean floor.
The Fisherman comes across an oil rig owned by the Ironhaven Company and meets two of its chief staff, the Foreman and the Scientist. The Foreman asks the Fisherman to recover lost supply shipments so they can complete the construction of the oil rig, while the Scientist requests that the Fisherman collect samples of the local wildlife for study.
An oil rig in the North Sea, oil production is centred in the waters off the Scottish northeast coast The oil industry in Scotland was largely created upon the discovery of North Sea oil . The country is one of the world’s leading oil producers, and in 2020, oil and gas contributed £13.8 billion to the Scottish economy and supported 100,000 ...
Roughnecks is a British television drama series, created and principally written by former Tomorrow's World presenter Kieran Prendiville, that first broadcast on BBC1 on 16 June 1994.
It started out as a joke about mutant midges - but now a team hope to film the Scottish comedy horror next year. Skip to main content. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: ...
*Warning: Minor spoilers ahead*I am an absolute wimp when it comes to gore and violence in TV shows and movies. But something about the candy-colored images and funny name of Netflix’s new Squid...
Crude: The Oil Game was originally designed by James J. St. Laurent, who founded St. Laurent Games to publish it. The game used paper and cardboard pieces, and did not sell well. After it went out of print, Hexagames published an unauthorized German edition in Europe called McMulti that replaced the cardboard counters with plastic pieces.