Review · Adventure · PlayStation 4 · Xbox Series S/X · PC
Subnautica
By the LumiKin editors
Reviewed: 01 May 2026
PlayStation 4 · Xbox Series S/X · PC · macOS · Nintendo Switch · Xbox One · PlayStation 5
Unknown Worlds Entertainment · 2018
LumiScore
69/100
Good
Subnautica is an immersive survival adventure that builds problem solving and strategic thinking, but features potentially frightening deep-sea creatures.
Growth (BDS)
55
Risk (RIS)
9
Daily limit
120min
Age guidance
13+
Developmental benefits
| B1 | Cognitive | 0.84 | |
| B2 | Social-emotional | 0.00 | |
| B3 | Motor | 0.65 | |
Subnautica offers a rich and immersive survival experience that significantly challenges cognitive skills such as problem-solving, spatial awareness, strategic thinking, and critical thinking. Players must navigate a vast underwater world, manage resources, craft tools, and decipher a compelling alien mystery. The game promotes learning transfer as players adapt to new environments and threats, and its adaptive challenges keep gameplay engaging. The detailed plot provides a strong sense of purpose and progression.
Design risks
| R1 | Dopamine pressure | 0.20 | |
| R2 | Monetization | 0.00 | |
| R3 | Social risk | 0.00 | |
While Subnautica is largely free from manipulative design mechanics and monetization pressures, its deep-sea environment and encounters with grotesque alien creatures can induce fear and horror, particularly for younger or more sensitive players. The game's violence level is moderate, primarily involving fantasy creatures. There are no significant social risks or external pressures to play.
Heads up
- Monthly spendTypical real-money spend by engaged players: $0–0/mo.