Thankfully most of them would not be able to stand up to the immense might of flip-flops and/or you would have to go multi-millionaire expedition levels out of your way to encounter them.
Humans are to most terrified creatures on earth it scare me way more than the reaper leithiviath in subnautica it put chills in my back hearing the words Humans
Fun fact that has to do with the vent spider: yeti crabs are a sea creature that live around vents and have hairs covered in chemosynthetic bacteria, which they eat!
The ascender worm would have kind of been a funny one because one of my biggest issues with both games in terms of realism was the fact that not only could you ascend incredibly fast with no consequences, the air bladder was almost designed for that exact purpose! The idea of a creature doing pretty much exactly what the air bladder did would have been kind of funny and it would sort of force the developers to implement a decompression sickness mechanic. Although thinking about it a little bit more, with this game set so far in the future with phasegates, virtually infinite air supply for submersibles, and massive undersea bases, it's not so crazy to think that such an advanced civilization could possibly invent super efficient countermeasures for decompression sickness. Not to mention with constantly having to swim away from predators while performing complex tasks, especially before having a submersible, it would probably be rather annoying to not be able to get to the surface as fast as you can from any depth.
I mean it is quite popular to think that the reason o2 drains when you go deeper is because your suit uses more oxygen to keep the water out, letting you go basically as far down as your tank can allow. I would reckon nitrogen wouldn't be a huge problem
Tho on the other hand, itd be interesting to have players get hurt by a deep sea predator, and then they frantically look for a nearby squid in order to emergency-evac back up to the surface (or at least, away from the assailant). The poor squiddy would probably be thinking “Wait, you _want_ to rapidly rise to the upper levels?!?” xD
The Rotnest is an interesting idea but I feel like it's nasty enough that it should probably be the main subject of its own game, rather than being a secondary threat. That kind of virulent zombie parasite plague would be a big deal.
I also feel like it would be the natural prey to another cut creature, the Electrogami. Remember, the Crabsquid got it’s EMP ability to defend itself from the Ampeel, it would only make sense of the Pygmy Crabsquid had a similar foe.
I feel like the Ice Dragon could've been implemented into the ecological dead zone instead of a variant of the Chelicerate. One of the problems with the Sea Dragon Leviathan is that it's in an underground cave and can easily clip into the walls and ceiling. The Ice Dragon wouldn't have that problem because the ecological dead zone is just open ocean.
But then you run into yje lore problem of figuring out what it'd eat in a lifeless area I haven't actually played the game though so there might be fish there that i don't know about
@@indegomontoya244 The PDA says that the Ecological Dead Zone can only support 2 kinds of life, microorganisms and leviathan class creatures. I'm thinking the leviathans are either cannibals, or they hang by the edge to eat whatever comes too close.
@@jacobcox4565They can’t be cannibals because if they’re as big as they are and they’re like the normal sea dragon leviathans in reproduction rate that would easily cause them to go extinct.
I honestly feel like instead of using the Void Chelicerate they should have gone with the Ice Dragon. You would only encounter it at the edge of the map where it's open water so the size of the Ice Dragon wouldn't be hampered by glaciers or other environmental objects.
I don’t know why they didn’t make a void shadow leviathan, that was the most obvious choice to put in the void for me and I’m a little upset they didn’t, but ah well, cie la vie
The Rotnest is the most terrifying, the Icebreaker and Bulldog trapjaw are the ones that I think would fit in the best, the Grabsquid is the cutest, and the Shardrunner is my favorite.
My day is not being that good, a lot of problems are happening for me nowadays, but seeing that a video of yours have just come out makes my heart more happy
There's a mod that brings these scrapped concepts to life in game though only some, but I believe the devs of the mod will update it soon. But there's also a mod out there with a creature that can reach..., Gargantuan proportions
@@pacrat190 I thought it was clear and or black are you talking about a leviathan I haven't heard of? I'm talking about the one with the tentacles on it's head
@@pacrat190 and you're sort of correct only this guy or the adult is clear but I liked the black colored design and think the clear one should be the juvenile. Ya get me?
@@Masterplanfoiler found it, the one in thinking of is called the gargantuan leviathan, I don’t remember if it’s fan made but I saw it in a video, rlly cool looking It may have been black looking back on it, I think I may have saw art of it that was red or had red lighting 😅 so it’s making me think it’s red
Holy cow! I did not know there were so many cut creatures! Quick question, have you ever considered doing your own speculative biology project? With the way you cover others', I think seeing a biosphere of your design would be really cool!
Honestly, this! Maybe in the future, when CA is even more familiar with how speculative creatures are designed, they could make a small series of videos about the process of creating these wonderful possible lifeforms. Kind of like how Mark Brown from GMTK, a mostly game design analysis channel, is currently making his own game from the stuff he learned from analyzing others' work and what makes those what they are. He then makes videos talking about the design process, with all the ideas that go through his head and the struggles that come with them. It's a good way to see game design from another perspective, that of someone's first time making a game. I'd honestly love to see this kind of content in the future!
@@gribberoni My friend, have I got a surprise for you. Check his channel again. He even covered another one of Alex Ries' works on a sentient race known as the Birrin. You should definitely check it out!
I was feeling very sick last night and needed something distracting, but something I could fall asleep to, so I put on the Speculative Biology Playlist and it got me through the night. Your voice is very soft and calming without necessarily being lulling. I love all of these, keep up the good work!
This is so cool! I didn't think there would be any more Subnautica content, but we get not only that, but CUT ALIENS and ALEX RIES as well??? Thank you both for doing this, the games are breathtaking and I can't get enough extra content for them!
the design for the Architect alien are pretty cool in terms of being like a highly intelligent oceanic-like creature which sort of fit in with the subnautica theme. although we didn't get the answer to why it was change in the final game. was it probably because it didn't fit the part of those Architects were from a different planet as well, who came to do research on the planet.
@@tjarkschweizer I mean, there's the fact that the centaur design isn't actually their "true" appearance, just like how robot bodiess irl don't look exactly 1-1 with our human forms. Al-An actually confirms this when he mentions how his species' true form was actually discarded since it wasn't as useful as the biomechanical bodies they could make (meaning the centaur body is just their equivalent of a car, AKA an artificial vessel used to move around better than their true organic bodies).
@@tjarkschweizer I think honestly the point wasn't to be just creative, the point was for them to make something they deemed was appropriate for what they wanted to achieve with their idea of what the Architects wanted to achieve in their design, literally the whole point of Architect is to have no nonesense wasteful bullshit fantasies or creativeness, it's efficiency and functionality first. It having 4 legs and a corporeal body shouldn't bother anyone or make them think it's just a centaur, hell it's far from it when looked at properly. The real bodies are likely what you would wanna see, but that's not important for now.
@@raionshishi8290 "no nonsense bullshit fantasies" but that is literally all Allan's body is! It's just flashy nonsense. It is neither functional nor efficient.
I always love these Subnautica videos! Its interesting how many creatures have in depth descriptions and have so many interesting factors that could apply to in earth creatures. Love the effort you put into this!
Something that made me sad in BZ was that the Ice Worm took up one of the leviathan "slots". As cool as it was, I would have liked to see one more species of carnivorous sea-dwelling leviathan to make Sector Zero's waters a bit more diverse on the leviathan front.
The iceworm is such a cool creature in concept and theory. It's genuinely so badass. But the way it was implemented was really lackluster. It's honestly downright silly at times. The way you constantly get booted out of the hoverboard, the way it just sometimes stands there and does nothing, etc. I know this might not seem ideal, but I honestly wish that the iceworm would have been implemented as a highly scripted encounter, with actually polished cinematics and interactions, and way better animations. I know that the whole point of subnautica is that the creatures are living breathing parts of the environment and ecosystems rather than just set pieces and decorations, but I feel like the iceworm is unique enough that it could fill that slot. Maybe make the iceworm the "giant ghost leviathan" for the ice biome i.e., if you go too far into the plains, the iceworm spawns and starts violently chasing you. But like actually properly chasing you, it doesn't do that weird swan neck thing. And the longer you stay in that environment the more iceworms spawn. Imagine speeding across the glaciar wastes and having like 5 iceworms chasing you until you eventually die. It would make for a really compelling encounter, rather than just walling it all off.
Some of these creatures especially the first one are actually in the original subnautica thanks to the team behind the De-extinction project and you can indeed interact with them
The Leaf Sheep is even weirder than a symbiotic relationship with algae, which is common. In contrast to for example corals, they don't use the Algae, they eat the algae, digest it except for the chloroplasts, and then incorporate the chloroplasts into their own cells. That way they can directly preform photosynthesis, and are likely the only animal capable of that.
I'm honestly choosing to imagine these creatures are being alive in sector zero, but just not modeled in the game. Alex has such amazing design ideas and it was great to discover all of his creations in the game ♥
The below zero map is 1/6th the size of the original Subnautica’s map, and far more shallow. I’d imagine all of these could fit in a full-sized below zero map!
the problem with that is that lorewise there is no real ecosystem, like if you read the notes it literally talks about how the ecosystem shouldn't be viable so as much as i'd like to see that i don't know if itd fit the channel
I've never heard of this game before and got recommended this video for some reason, but I really enjoyed it. Both the used and unused creature designs are incredible!
This title is really enticing since there's only.. Maybe 10 creatures to encounter in the original Subnautica? It's very very cool to see other designs from someone who actually worked on the game
Probably not counting all the random prey species and plants and stuff; if you have trouble remembering all the less in your face animals/plants, a Randomizer run of Subnautica gets you to remember them real fast.
@@hakimdiwan5101 I don't care what's it's like being dead I just want to have a way to look back at earth while I'm dead I would so totally chil around fir years watching science discovery stuff lmao well once I die in the many many coming years I'll figure out if I can really see anything still xD
I'd be curious if you'd be somehow able to do a speculative video on the horizon zero dawn games. Though they're not entirely evolution based, a lot of the machines are made to fill specific niches within ingame lore where past fauna has gone extinct. They also help terraform the planet by filling those niches so that it can be more habitable. Ex: Grazers dig through dirt and soil, possibly taking out weeds and making room for new seeds to be planted and grown. Water machines like Widemaws work to filter water, probably so stuff like algae can't grow uncontrollably. Some machines are even built to help each other or prevent pollution. Watchers and burrowers keep a lookout for herds so that they don't fall into danger. Scrappers and glinthawks collect scrap that they bring back to cauldrons to be reused to make new machines. In some cases, more aggressive machines like thunderjaws and fireclaws are made to fend off potential threats like humans trying to take down machines for parts.
16:17 You know what would've been cool? If this leviathan is so big it's eyes might've been a problem, then why not only have its head sticking out? Here's the pitch: An Ice Dragon Leviathan got stuck inside an iceberg or something, and now only its head and part of its neck are sticking out. We can place it near an important story area that is relatively easy to get to, so it makes that area more intimidating. It will still freeze any vehicles that try to pass by it, and any players that get hit by its ice directly are instantly killed. So how do you get past? Well, the creature has to sleep, right? So you just go to that area at night! Yeah, it might be a bit ambitious or annoying after you complete the story in that area, but I think it would be a neat little puzzle.
Sorry to burst the bubble, but that could cause many problems. Also, that wouldn't explain how it got "stuck" in an iceberg. it would be best to have a skeleton and a pic of what it was, to give a better sense of "show, don't tell" while letting the imagination run wild.
@@razzberysmoothie2838 yeah, and mine is called is a opinion (like the idea) mixed with a tone of something called "critism" dude. Chill. I didn't say having an idea was wrong, just that this one has holes in it.
@@razzberysmoothie2838 and I want to say I wasn't trying to be hostile, just I talk and think very critical of things causing MANY online and many irl to think I LIKE (I don't) arguing or being hostile to people.
Been an avid watcher of this channel the moment I discovered your Codex Seraphianus video and I'm very happy to see how much traction your channel is getting! Love that you got Alex Ries here too, splendid work!
The video title made me wonder something, but you went a different direction with the video topic than I thought you would. My question is, what did the full form of the creatures who left behind skeletons for us to marvel at when they extinct on 4546_b look like when they were alive? Did the dev team ever have concept art for the skeletal forms we can see in Subnautica? The leviathan (databank entry: "Gargantuan Fossil") in the lost river zone with the juvenile ghost leviathan comes to mind first, of course, but also the skeleton outside the Lost River Laboratory Architect Cache (databank entry: "Ancient Skeleton") , and any others that are in the game.
Honestly just shows the potential of subnautica games and what a let down below zero realy was, not to say it’s necessarily a bad game, it just could have been a lot cooler.
The Ascender Worm that causes decompression sickness is cool💖 Also, the Rotnest biology looks similar to that of Surinam Toads giving birth. Trypophobia trigger indeed!
This popped up in my recommendeds. I forget if I’ve watched it already and I’m saving it for later but I just gotta say: it was your videos that convinced me to buy and play the game myself! Over 24 hours each on both the original game (which I’ve finished) and Below Zero (getting into the endgame) and I gotta say, I’m thoroughly in love.
This is my new favorite channel. As an amateur artist who loves character and creature design these documentary style videos of creatures from games are MY SHIT
I am genuinely bummed we didn’t get the grabsquid. I have such a love hate relationship with it’s bigger deep sea cousin, since it was the first creature to really scare me in game. It’s actually size when you look at it from inside the degasi base shook me to my core. But the grabsquid’s so adorable!!! And a fascinating take on how environments affect the evolution of species
All of these concepts are awesome, and I would've loved to see these creatures in-game. For some reason I really love the Rotnest, maybe it's because I'm a fan of fictional parasitic organisms.
I hope you do something like this again, I know John Dunlop the realistic pokemon and prehistorica guy through a friend, he's a huge fan of speculative biology fan and would probably be up for a guest video.
This is a pretty nice mix, like many "never added" things in a good game, most don't really work. They'd be too different or too similar to the base game/out of environment. ... But some of these, they could go nicely. I think the failure of Subnautica is its game story system, it's aimless. But the art and biology is incredible. That Shadow Leviathan though.
You failed horribly as soon as you mentioned Subnautica story to be aimless, literally the game is highly praised for it's overall incredibly unsuspecting story build and also because of how it's implemented in a way that doesn't rush or force your or hinders your pace and gameplay yet still somehow follows and makes sense no matter what path you take or if you miss something or skip it or get all the info and even in a different order.
It's awesome to see you guys collaborating! I've known both of you for a good bit and love the content both of you make. Seriously great inspiration for my own world-building spec-evo project or just random doodles
I would have liked it if the ice dragon was friendly to you, knowing that a human has to little nutrients to actually eat yet does attack the vehicles but also hunt other leviathans and would choose the biggest leviathan out of whatever is near it also maybe protecting you a little bit.
Fun fact: Fungi that attack and zombify don't directly impair the brain. In fact, they leave the brain and nervous system completely untouched. This would be like slowly having a web of fungal growth slowly branch out around your body, disabling and redirecting control of all your muscles until you become little more than a puppet all while you sit there completely aware of the whole process and enduring complete agony from start to finish. :)
Was a pleasure chatting with you, mate!
Thank you... for all the nightmares and wonders.
Holy crap it’s him
@@posta-bonk-alypticweasel689 Please don't cuss with holy.
@@Blitzkrieg_Wolf Exactly.
@@purehyper124 bro just because its your religion dont mean people have to stop.
I like how every time they mention a terrifying feature of these creatures they're like "here's an example of that on Earth"
Fiction mirrors reality
Thankfully most of them would not be able to stand up to the immense might of flip-flops and/or you would have to go multi-millionaire expedition levels out of your way to encounter them.
Humans are to most terrified creatures on earth it scare me way more than the reaper leithiviath in subnautica it put chills in my back hearing the words Humans
@@theulimatecollecter7333 deez nuts
@@theulimatecollecter7333 im14andthisisdeep
Fun fact that has to do with the vent spider: yeti crabs are a sea creature that live around vents and have hairs covered in chemosynthetic bacteria, which they eat!
I was honestly surprised that wasnt brought up during that segment
I remember that from the octonauts lmao
@@Ryuu28_voidgamesSame
The ascender worm would have kind of been a funny one because one of my biggest issues with both games in terms of realism was the fact that not only could you ascend incredibly fast with no consequences, the air bladder was almost designed for that exact purpose! The idea of a creature doing pretty much exactly what the air bladder did would have been kind of funny and it would sort of force the developers to implement a decompression sickness mechanic. Although thinking about it a little bit more, with this game set so far in the future with phasegates, virtually infinite air supply for submersibles, and massive undersea bases, it's not so crazy to think that such an advanced civilization could possibly invent super efficient countermeasures for decompression sickness. Not to mention with constantly having to swim away from predators while performing complex tasks, especially before having a submersible, it would probably be rather annoying to not be able to get to the surface as fast as you can from any depth.
I mean it is quite popular to think that the reason o2 drains when you go deeper is because your suit uses more oxygen to keep the water out, letting you go basically as far down as your tank can allow. I would reckon nitrogen wouldn't be a huge problem
It is still a game
There is actually a command in game called nitrogen, it will force you to slow down when ascending or you get hurt
This gane would of been terrible if you could get the bends
Tho on the other hand, itd be interesting to have players get hurt by a deep sea predator, and then they frantically look for a nearby squid in order to emergency-evac back up to the surface (or at least, away from the assailant).
The poor squiddy would probably be thinking “Wait, you _want_ to rapidly rise to the upper levels?!?” xD
The Rotnest is an interesting idea but I feel like it's nasty enough that it should probably be the main subject of its own game, rather than being a secondary threat. That kind of virulent zombie parasite plague would be a big deal.
Imagine seeing that after curing the Khara. It would just be “Ah shit, here we go again.”
Yeah, it would make for a great DLC.
@@M0NCHY fr
So what you're basically saying is the Last of Us but underwater XD
@@thedukeofweasels6870 yes
That crabsquid is adorable. Thats just all I can say, apart from all the fact that all of these are amazing and Alex Ries’ work is inspiring.
The crab squid reminds me of crab larvae, I like to imagine the crab squid is only a baby about to grow into something much bigger
Especially the way the lower eyes look like they’re going 😗 at the battery in its claws! 😍
I also feel like it would be the natural prey to another cut creature, the Electrogami. Remember, the Crabsquid got it’s EMP ability to defend itself from the Ampeel, it would only make sense of the Pygmy Crabsquid had a similar foe.
You mean grabsquid lol
I feel like the Ice Dragon could've been implemented into the ecological dead zone instead of a variant of the Chelicerate. One of the problems with the Sea Dragon Leviathan is that it's in an underground cave and can easily clip into the walls and ceiling. The Ice Dragon wouldn't have that problem because the ecological dead zone is just open ocean.
Waste of dev time
@@ZephrymWOWdude wdym that would have been sick
But then you run into yje lore problem of figuring out what it'd eat in a lifeless area
I haven't actually played the game though so there might be fish there that i don't know about
@@indegomontoya244 The PDA says that the Ecological Dead Zone can only support 2 kinds of life, microorganisms and leviathan class creatures. I'm thinking the leviathans are either cannibals, or they hang by the edge to eat whatever comes too close.
@@jacobcox4565They can’t be cannibals because if they’re as big as they are and they’re like the normal sea dragon leviathans in reproduction rate that would easily cause them to go extinct.
I honestly feel like instead of using the Void Chelicerate they should have gone with the Ice Dragon. You would only encounter it at the edge of the map where it's open water so the size of the Ice Dragon wouldn't be hampered by glaciers or other environmental objects.
Personally im still mad that the shadow leviathan isnt in the void
I don’t know why they didn’t make a void shadow leviathan, that was the most obvious choice to put in the void for me and I’m a little upset they didn’t, but ah well, cie la vie
@@YourLocalWorldEater same, ive wondered about that design choice for so long
@@YourLocalWorldEater I wonder what would void chelicerates eat in the void ... those mouths are definitely not suitable for plankton ...
@@YourLocalWorldEater My guess is that they didn't want to give away the surprise. ;-)
The Rotnest is the most terrifying, the Icebreaker and Bulldog trapjaw are the ones that I think would fit in the best, the Grabsquid is the cutest, and the Shardrunner is my favorite.
My day is not being that good, a lot of problems are happening for me nowadays, but seeing that a video of yours have just come out makes my heart more happy
hope it gets better
Hope you'll be ok. Take it easy
If it gets harder everytime, take things slow and try to avoid thinking over negative things. Remember, it will get better, just trust yourself.
i feel you man i had a terrible day today but this video put a smile to my face
Hope things get better!
I love this channel. It’s cool that you got to talk to Alex Ries. He is a living legend.
same bro same
There's a mod that brings these scrapped concepts to life in game though only some, but I believe the devs of the mod will update it soon. But there's also a mod out there with a creature that can reach..., Gargantuan proportions
Is it that leviathan that looks like a huge red snake? That one is crazy
@@pacrat190 I thought it was clear and or black are you talking about a leviathan I haven't heard of? I'm talking about the one with the tentacles on it's head
@@pacrat190 please tell me more
@@pacrat190 and you're sort of correct only this guy or the adult is clear but I liked the black colored design and think the clear one should be the juvenile. Ya get me?
@@Masterplanfoiler found it, the one in thinking of is called the gargantuan leviathan, I don’t remember if it’s fan made but I saw it in a video, rlly cool looking
It may have been black looking back on it, I think I may have saw art of it that was red or had red lighting 😅 so it’s making me think it’s red
Holy cow! I did not know there were so many cut creatures! Quick question, have you ever considered doing your own speculative biology project? With the way you cover others', I think seeing a biosphere of your design would be really cool!
Honestly, this! Maybe in the future, when CA is even more familiar with how speculative creatures are designed, they could make a small series of videos about the process of creating these wonderful possible lifeforms.
Kind of like how Mark Brown from GMTK, a mostly game design analysis channel, is currently making his own game from the stuff he learned from analyzing others' work and what makes those what they are. He then makes videos talking about the design process, with all the ideas that go through his head and the struggles that come with them. It's a good way to see game design from another perspective, that of someone's first time making a game.
I'd honestly love to see this kind of content in the future!
This is actually not even half of those said creatures
There are actually more
He has a spore playthrough
@@gribberoni My friend, have I got a surprise for you. Check his channel again. He even covered another one of Alex Ries' works on a sentient race known as the Birrin. You should definitely check it out!
That's an honor, to have the artist himself tell you all about this. It's awesome.
I was feeling very sick last night and needed something distracting, but something I could fall asleep to, so I put on the Speculative Biology Playlist and it got me through the night. Your voice is very soft and calming without necessarily being lulling. I love all of these, keep up the good work!
This is so cute.
This is so cool! I didn't think there would be any more Subnautica content, but we get not only that, but CUT ALIENS and ALEX RIES as well??? Thank you both for doing this, the games are breathtaking and I can't get enough extra content for them!
The de-extinction mods adds some of these cut creatures and even some increadable original ones, defiantly check it out
the design for the Architect alien are pretty cool in terms of being like a highly intelligent oceanic-like creature which sort of fit in with the subnautica theme. although we didn't get the answer to why it was change in the final game. was it probably because it didn't fit the part of those Architects were from a different planet as well, who came to do research on the planet.
I'm pretty sure that they simply liked the centaur design more. I personally like Alex version more.
The centaur looks to human for my taste.
@@tjarkschweizer I mean, there's the fact that the centaur design isn't actually their "true" appearance, just like how robot bodiess irl don't look exactly 1-1 with our human forms. Al-An actually confirms this when he mentions how his species' true form was actually discarded since it wasn't as useful as the biomechanical bodies they could make (meaning the centaur body is just their equivalent of a car, AKA an artificial vessel used to move around better than their true organic bodies).
@@mrreyes5004 I know that. I just think that they could have come up with something more creative than a fucking centaur.
@@tjarkschweizer I think honestly the point wasn't to be just creative, the point was for them to make something they deemed was appropriate for what they wanted to achieve with their idea of what the Architects wanted to achieve in their design, literally the whole point of Architect is to have no nonesense wasteful bullshit fantasies or creativeness, it's efficiency and functionality first. It having 4 legs and a corporeal body shouldn't bother anyone or make them think it's just a centaur, hell it's far from it when looked at properly. The real bodies are likely what you would wanna see, but that's not important for now.
@@raionshishi8290 "no nonsense bullshit fantasies" but that is literally all Allan's body is!
It's just flashy nonsense.
It is neither functional nor efficient.
Either I just died and gone to heaven… or Alex Ries is truly in a Curious Archive video!
I always love these Subnautica videos!
Its interesting how many creatures have in depth descriptions and have so many interesting factors that could apply to in earth creatures.
Love the effort you put into this!
Something that made me sad in BZ was that the Ice Worm took up one of the leviathan "slots". As cool as it was, I would have liked to see one more species of carnivorous sea-dwelling leviathan to make Sector Zero's waters a bit more diverse on the leviathan front.
The iceworm is such a cool creature in concept and theory. It's genuinely so badass. But the way it was implemented was really lackluster. It's honestly downright silly at times. The way you constantly get booted out of the hoverboard, the way it just sometimes stands there and does nothing, etc. I know this might not seem ideal, but I honestly wish that the iceworm would have been implemented as a highly scripted encounter, with actually polished cinematics and interactions, and way better animations. I know that the whole point of subnautica is that the creatures are living breathing parts of the environment and ecosystems rather than just set pieces and decorations, but I feel like the iceworm is unique enough that it could fill that slot. Maybe make the iceworm the "giant ghost leviathan" for the ice biome
i.e., if you go too far into the plains, the iceworm spawns and starts violently chasing you. But like actually properly chasing you, it doesn't do that weird swan neck thing. And the longer you stay in that environment the more iceworms spawn. Imagine speeding across the glaciar wastes and having like 5 iceworms chasing you until you eventually die. It would make for a really compelling encounter, rather than just walling it all off.
So happy to see new content from this channel! ❤️
Some of these creatures especially the first one are actually in the original subnautica thanks to the team behind the De-extinction project and you can indeed interact with them
The Leaf Sheep is even weirder than a symbiotic relationship with algae, which is common. In contrast to for example corals, they don't use the Algae, they eat the algae, digest it except for the chloroplasts, and then incorporate the chloroplasts into their own cells. That way they can directly preform photosynthesis, and are likely the only animal capable of that.
So interesting, I didn’t know that! I recognize them from the mobile game Abyssrium (like an aquarium in the ocean)
Nope, there are also Emerald Sea Slugs that can also photosynthesise.
@@toubi4316 Ah, right, still bot that unrelated from each other being in the same superorder of sea slugs.
Both you and Alex are huge inspirations in my art, this is a great collab. Amazing work as always.
I'm honestly choosing to imagine these creatures are being alive in sector zero, but just not modeled in the game. Alex has such amazing design ideas and it was great to discover all of his creations in the game ♥
The below zero map is 1/6th the size of the original Subnautica’s map, and far more shallow.
I’d imagine all of these could fit in a full-sized below zero map!
No 1/6 it’s closer to 2/3
* Looks at thumbnail *
"Oh cool looks like something Alex Ries would draw."
* Reads title *
"FEATURING ALEX RIES"
Alex Ries is truly a great and inspirational creative designer.
This is amazing that you were able to get with him
That rotnest idea is insane! Might be a good idea for a dlc where you have to wipe out the disease as it rages the crater or arctic
That architect concept art looks like a nice guy to geek out about a book series in a coffee shop with.
I hope we see more of Alex Ries'es designs in future subnautica games, or in other titles. I love his work.
just a quick suggestion for a future video, the fantasy creatures of ARK: Survival evolved. some of them are very unique and a few are literal aliens.
Yesssssss
the problem with that is that lorewise there is no real ecosystem, like if you read the notes it literally talks about how the ecosystem shouldn't be viable so as much as i'd like to see that i don't know if itd fit the channel
the wait has finally paid off, this is a great video
I looove the idea of fighting off cute little grabsquids. Giggling little cackles as they take your seamoth batteries
The ice dragon needs a mod, it looks amazing
I've never heard of this game before and got recommended this video for some reason, but I really enjoyed it. Both the used and unused creature designs are incredible!
This title is really enticing since there's only.. Maybe 10 creatures to encounter in the original Subnautica? It's very very cool to see other designs from someone who actually worked on the game
Only 10?
Dude, did you ever explore the whole game? There are WAY more creatures on the original game
10? What?
Probably not counting all the random prey species and plants and stuff; if you have trouble remembering all the less in your face animals/plants, a Randomizer run of Subnautica gets you to remember them real fast.
are you stupid
It would be interesting if humans beings actually find different from of life on a different planet one-day
Only thing is none of here would be alive to see it.
@@hakimdiwan5101 I don't care what's it's like being dead I just want to have a way to look back at earth while I'm dead I would so totally chil around fir years watching science discovery stuff lmao
well once I die in the many many coming years I'll figure out if I can really see anything still xD
This is some really good work !
You actually went out and inteviewed the guy
This video is quality and it was a pleasure to watch. Thank you !
It would be super cool to see similar videos on the biology of Roshar (the planet from Sanderson's stormlight archive)
I like how the bobbit worms are just alien looking enough to not have its design changed at all for an alien planet version of itself
I'd be curious if you'd be somehow able to do a speculative video on the horizon zero dawn games. Though they're not entirely evolution based, a lot of the machines are made to fill specific niches within ingame lore where past fauna has gone extinct. They also help terraform the planet by filling those niches so that it can be more habitable.
Ex: Grazers dig through dirt and soil, possibly taking out weeds and making room for new seeds to be planted and grown.
Water machines like Widemaws work to filter water, probably so stuff like algae can't grow uncontrollably.
Some machines are even built to help each other or prevent pollution. Watchers and burrowers keep a lookout for herds so that they don't fall into danger.
Scrappers and glinthawks collect scrap that they bring back to cauldrons to be reused to make new machines.
In some cases, more aggressive machines like thunderjaws and fireclaws are made to fend off potential threats like humans trying to take down machines for parts.
I love this artist and his designs much tbh
I want a land-based game with some of this guy’s creatures. I really love his big terrestrial one he uses in his profile picture
I was blown away when you are going through the biology of the cut Subnatica creatures. Keep these studies up! 👍👍👍
You should do a video on the biology of aliens in Mass Effect. That would be interesting, I feel.
This never gets old, keep making them!!
its great when new vids get uploaded
I loved the idea for the precursors/architecs. They look cute.
16:17 You know what would've been cool? If this leviathan is so big it's eyes might've been a problem, then why not only have its head sticking out?
Here's the pitch: An Ice Dragon Leviathan got stuck inside an iceberg or something, and now only its head and part of its neck are sticking out. We can place it near an important story area that is relatively easy to get to, so it makes that area more intimidating. It will still freeze any vehicles that try to pass by it, and any players that get hit by its ice directly are instantly killed.
So how do you get past? Well, the creature has to sleep, right? So you just go to that area at night!
Yeah, it might be a bit ambitious or annoying after you complete the story in that area, but I think it would be a neat little puzzle.
Sorry to burst the bubble, but that could cause many problems. Also, that wouldn't explain how it got "stuck" in an iceberg. it would be best to have a skeleton and a pic of what it was, to give a better sense of "show, don't tell" while letting the imagination run wild.
@@zionthedragon8866 bro it's called an "idea"
@@razzberysmoothie2838 yeah, and mine is called is a opinion (like the idea) mixed with a tone of something called "critism" dude. Chill. I didn't say having an idea was wrong, just that this one has holes in it.
@@zionthedragon8866 sorry. I didn't mean to sound rude.
@@razzberysmoothie2838 and I want to say I wasn't trying to be hostile, just I talk and think very critical of things causing MANY online and many irl to think I LIKE (I don't) arguing or being hostile to people.
Ok, the ice dragon is by far my favorite leviathan design ever.
I hope Alex has some idea of how inspiring his work is
Been an avid watcher of this channel the moment I discovered your Codex Seraphianus video and I'm very happy to see how much traction your channel is getting! Love that you got Alex Ries here too, splendid work!
I love your videos!!! Keep up the good work!
the Ascender Worms are my absolute favourite! I've never seen such a creative concept before
I do t know why, but I think the Crested Reaper is one of the cutest critters in the video.
The grabsquid is absolutely adorable!
The video title made me wonder something, but you went a different direction with the video topic than I thought you would.
My question is, what did the full form of the creatures who left behind skeletons for us to marvel at when they extinct on 4546_b look like when they were alive? Did the dev team ever have concept art for the skeletal forms we can see in Subnautica? The leviathan (databank entry: "Gargantuan Fossil") in the lost river zone with the juvenile ghost leviathan comes to mind first, of course, but also the skeleton outside the Lost River Laboratory Architect Cache (databank entry: "Ancient Skeleton") , and any others that are in the game.
Honestly just shows the potential of subnautica games and what a let down below zero realy was, not to say it’s necessarily a bad game, it just could have been a lot cooler.
Holy cow THATS SO COOL!
The Grabsquid is my favorite here. Also, incredibly fascinating to talk to the mastermind behind the creatures.
Love it! Engaging content as usual. Have you ever thought about any Monster Hunter beasts?
The ventspider is so sick! Nice job, Alex!
The Ascender Worm that causes decompression sickness is cool💖
Also, the Rotnest biology looks similar to that of Surinam Toads giving birth. Trypophobia trigger indeed!
This popped up in my recommendeds. I forget if I’ve watched it already and I’m saving it for later but I just gotta say: it was your videos that convinced me to buy and play the game myself! Over 24 hours each on both the original game (which I’ve finished) and Below Zero (getting into the endgame) and I gotta say, I’m thoroughly in love.
Thanks for the vid i love these
Glad you like them!
12:30
Really cool natural defense mechanism idea, probably my favorite concept in the video
Can you try De-extinction Mod for Subnautica? It has Thalassaceans and other Lost Aliens. It even has full lore in the PDA.
considering how absolutely massive 4546b is it’s possible in universe these things are out there somewhere
I love the style of your videos, super cool to see Subnautica this way!
This is my new favorite channel. As an amateur artist who loves character and creature design these documentary style videos of creatures from games are MY SHIT
I would have actually quit if i encountered the rot nest
I am genuinely bummed we didn’t get the grabsquid. I have such a love hate relationship with it’s bigger deep sea cousin, since it was the first creature to really scare me in game. It’s actually size when you look at it from inside the degasi base shook me to my core. But the grabsquid’s so adorable!!! And a fascinating take on how environments affect the evolution of species
I could see people creating mods of these creatures.
i think this might be one of my favorite videos from you!
All of these concepts are awesome, and I would've loved to see these creatures in-game. For some reason I really love the Rotnest, maybe it's because I'm a fan of fictional parasitic organisms.
Always happy when I see a new uploaded video of yours
WHOOOO A GUEST STAR
The Architects looking more like warpers is SO SO SO MUCH BETTER than what we got, it makes so much more sense then the weird horse we got
Someones gotta mod the game to add these in 😂
There is a mod that adds a lot of the cut fish and fauna back I forgot the name of it though.
Excited to see what Alex concocts for the next title. He's the GOAT, no denying it.
I hope you do something like this again, I know John Dunlop the realistic pokemon and prehistorica guy through a friend, he's a huge fan of speculative biology fan and would probably be up for a guest video.
Another amazing video as usual, and with the man himself being in it, thats even better!
This is a pretty nice mix, like many "never added" things in a good game, most don't really work. They'd be too different or too similar to the base game/out of environment. ... But some of these, they could go nicely. I think the failure of Subnautica is its game story system, it's aimless. But the art and biology is incredible.
That Shadow Leviathan though.
You failed horribly as soon as you mentioned Subnautica story to be aimless, literally the game is highly praised for it's overall incredibly unsuspecting story build and also because of how it's implemented in a way that doesn't rush or force your or hinders your pace and gameplay yet still somehow follows and makes sense no matter what path you take or if you miss something or skip it or get all the info and even in a different order.
It's awesome to see you guys collaborating! I've known both of you for a good bit and love the content both of you make. Seriously great inspiration for my own world-building spec-evo project or just random doodles
You should do an analysis on the Rhinogrades AKA: the Snouters
And/or on the speculative creatures from Capcom's Monster Hunter game franchise!
My only complaint with Below Zero is it needed about 20% more content. These creatures could help that problem a lot!
Curiosity archive has to be one of my most favourite channels at this point
Alright, this is now officially beyond awesome!
I love the idea of some kind of rot nest leviathan
That's the mammoth from the BC museum! Amazing! Such a great exhibit! 8:47
This is an awesome video 👍🏾 I’m nerding out on the toilet 🤓
I would have liked it if the ice dragon was friendly to you, knowing that a human has to little nutrients to actually eat yet does attack the vehicles but also hunt other leviathans and would choose the biggest leviathan out of whatever is near it also maybe protecting you a little bit.
I need a Grabsquid plush now! I don’t care what it takes it’s too precious!!!
I really want to see a third Subnautica. not even fully because of a new story, I wanna see what new creatures they come up with.
You're in luck
Very cool!
Alex teased this on his Patreon a couple days ago but I'd never expected the video to be ready so soon! 😅
Fun fact:
Fungi that attack and zombify don't directly impair the brain. In fact, they leave the brain and nervous system completely untouched. This would be like slowly having a web of fungal growth slowly branch out around your body, disabling and redirecting control of all your muscles until you become little more than a puppet all while you sit there completely aware of the whole process and enduring complete agony from start to finish. :)
Alex Ries is such a fantastic artist