Mysterious Soma tweet leads to new videos and other secrets
Something interesting is happening with Soma , the upcoming psychological horror game being developed by Amnesia creator Frictional Games.
, the upcoming psychological horror game being developed by Amnesia creator Frictional Games. Earlier today, the studio retweeted a partial URLoriginally posted by the PathosII Twitter accountthat, when completed, leads to a PathOS computer terminal hiding some secrets.
Pathos-2, as the Soma Wikiexplains, is the name of the underwater research station in which the game takes place. The terminal at somagame.com/YuXIm5/pathos2_cnsl/also appears as though it could be running an operating system of the same name, although the logo on the screen may belong to the facility and not the OS. In any event, it effectively runs under DOS, and if that doesn't ring a bell for you, it's also possible to get acquainted with its use via the "help" command.
Buried not too deeply in the system are a couple of videos, including the one playing above (which was included in the original tweet, and so I don't feel bad about reposting it here), as well as a very dark, distorted image, and a block of what appears to be encoded text, although my minimal efforts at decoding it haven't gone anywhere. Two of the folders on the system are currently inaccessible, although it's a safe assumption that Frictional will unlock them later to tease the game further.
Frictional Games, in case you've forgotten, is responsible for setting a new high-water mark in videogame horror with the magnificently awful Amnesia: The Dark Descent. In a March 2014 post on the PlayStation Blog, Frictional co-founder Thomas Grip explained how the studio is using the lessons it learned from that game to make Soma even better—which is to say, worse. Or maybe it's the other way around? Soma entered betain April and is expected to be out later this year.
As expected, some of the previously restricted directories have been unlocked, revealing new images, a number of audio files, and a new video, playing below. Three more directories have also been revealed, but for the moment are inaccessible.
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