Deep Shift
Restore and maintain a damaged underwater station deep beneath the ocean. Repair systems, manage power and pressure, explore flooded sections, and slowly bring the facility back to life in this atmospheric first-person deep-sea simulation game.
Deep Shift is an atmospheric first-person game about an old deep-sea station slowly coming back to life.
You are a technician working deep beneath the ocean surface inside an abandoned facility. The station was once a place for research, maintenance and industrial work. Today, it is damaged, dark and only partially functional. Many sectors are shut down, locked or have become unusable due to water, power failures and technical defects.
Your task is to restore the station.
You explore abandoned areas, repair broken systems, bring power back, stop leaks, clean rooms, replace damaged parts and make the facility usable again step by step. Every repaired area visibly changes the station and gives it back a part of its function.
Deep Shift is not a fast action game and not a classic horror game. It is a calm, technical and atmospheric game about work, isolation and responsibility in a place where every mistake can be felt.
The station consists of several functional sectors. Engineering contains machines, power supply and technical systems. Storage provides you with tools, spare parts and materials. Command serves as the central overview for tasks, systems and the state of the station. The Habitat sector is a reminder that people once lived, worked and spent their everyday lives deep beneath the sea.
At its core is direct, tangible maintenance. Damage is not just an icon on a map, but a real problem in the world: a leaking pipe, a faulty power box, a damaged component, a dirty room or a system that no longer starts. You find the cause, prepare the repair, use the right tool and bring the facility back online.
Deep Shift combines exploration, repair, cleaning, technical tasks and the special atmosphere of an isolated underwater station.
The ocean is dark.
The station is old.
The systems are fragile.
And you are the one keeping everything running.