

This gentle drifting giant is a massive whale-shaped creature that comes in at a respectable 30 meters long, but despite its intimidating size, its completely harmless. If you find a door you can't get through, keep looking for another. The Glow Whale is by far the biggest friendliest fish in the freezing cold depths of Subnautica: Below Zero. You have to get out and go up the "ramps" that come down into the water, then find your way inside from there. One of the biggest openings in their patrol is near the front where the entrance is. However we do thank them for feedback and suggestions.
#Subnautica reaper leviathan mod
This mod is NOT directly affiliated with Space Cat Creations. As you discovered, hugging the port side of the ship is NOT one of those paths. The De-Extinction Mod adds 15 (from small to leviathan sized) new creatures to the world based on scrapped or unused Subnautica and Subnautica: Below Zero concept art. It just doesn't get old.Īs far as the Aurora goes, there are 3 of them right next to it, and there are paths to the ship between them where they almost never appear. It's still terrifying though, even at the 100th time. Later on, you can get hull upgrades that reduce his damage, and a Perimeter Defense module that shocks him into letting you go immediately, before he does hardly any damage at all. It's faster than your Seamoth in a straight line, but less maneuverable. The instant it lets you go, start running, and try to put terrain (including creepvine) between you and it ASAP. Reapers are buggy and clip through terrain to strike at you from inside it without warning.Įven an unmodified Seamoth can survive one (usually only one, but sometimes up to 2) grapples from a Reaper. If you know one is nearby, stay well away from rocks, cliff faces, and the sea floor UNLESS it's very shallow water in the first place (75m or shallower), or you are already actively fleeing an attack (see below). You're safer at 10m than you are at 100m. This is not 100% foolproof, but a rule of thumb. When you STOP hearing the roar, it's right behind you. If you can hear the roar, it knows you're there and is coming for you. My advice is to use a Seamoth (not the Seaglide you will die), and RUN AT THE FIRST ROAR. You may have a few ugly encounters figuring out where these are. They stick around a specific spot, often not super-huge depending on how open the area is. I don't wanna spoil things by giving you specifics, OP, but the bottom line is that, like many video game mobs (and, fortunately for realism, some IRL predators), they're "territorial".
