back-img
Kepler 186f Biohazard

Kepler 186f Biohazard

Description

  • Rating:
    3.0
  • Technology:HTML5
  • Platform:Browser (desktop, mobile, tablet)
  • Categories:Action

The hum of the reactor core is a constant companion, a low thrumming against the silence that has gripped the Kepler-186f research facility. You awaken with a gasp, cold sweat clinging to your brow. Your memory is fragmented, a shattered mosaic of faces, equations, and the chilling whisper of failure. You know you are Dr. Aris Thorne, a xeno-biologist, and you know something terrible has happened. But the specifics? Lost in the static of your mind. Around you, the sterile white walls of your cryogenic stasis pod reflect the emergency lighting – flickering red, a stark contrast to the intended luminescence. The air tastes metallic, acrid, and the usual filtered atmosphere is gone, replaced by something thick and unsettling. Reaching for the release mechanism, your fingers brush against something sticky, something…organic. Disgust curls in your stomach. As the pod hisses open, releasing you into the chilling air, you find yourself in a containment bay. Plants, or what *were* plants, writhe in their hydroponic containers, their leaves contorted and discolored, reaching towards you with unnatural fervor. Alarms blare, a discordant symphony of warning. The displays on nearby consoles flash cryptic errors, gibberish code scrolling across cracked screens. Your objective, for now, is simple: survive. But survival in Kepler-186f is no longer a matter of scientific observation and controlled experiments. Something has broken loose. Something has mutated. And whatever it is, it doesn't recognize you as one of its own. You must piece together the fragments of your lost memories, uncover the truth behind the disaster that has befallen the facility, and most importantly, find a way to escape before you become another victim of the terrors that now stalk the corridors. Your research, your colleagues, your mission… all seem distant and insignificant compared to the immediate threat. Listen closely. Trust no one. And pray that whatever drove your colleagues to madness doesn't claim you too. The fate of Kepler-186f, and perhaps more, rests on your fragile, fractured memory. Good luck, Dr. Thorne. You'll need it.

Recommend