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Acheter VETITUM_VRC + An Ocean Game DLC BUNDLE (?)

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Dive (and emotionally drown) into An Ocean Game with The Eight Scurxs, a “professional” ocean horror experience filled with questionable stealth, forbidden footwear, and copyrighted plastic sandals with their serial numbers filed off. In this misunderstood masterpiece (and by “misunderstood” we mean not even the developer knows how the code works), you must collect the legendary Scurxs: eight pairs of cursed sandals that are definitely NOT Crocs. Legally speaking. Please, lawyers: they’re Scurxs. Made from ethically ambiguous polymer. No connection to any existing brand. We swear on the Ocean Man himself.

Yes, this is a DLC. One of those “completely essential” Steam releases that lasts about two seconds, but those will be the most emotionally confusing two seconds of your gaming life (according to this description, not reality).

As you explore this nightmare island built with zero respect for spatial logic, you’ll be relentlessly hunted by the Ocean Man — a moist, gelatinous figure who wants to drag you into the depths for reasons even he doesn’t fully understand. Or maybe it’s love. We’ll never know.

Key Features Nobody Asked For:

An Island. With a forest. And cars. And boats. And no explanations.
What kind of remote island has a lush forest, abandoned houses, rusty boats stuck in trees, and a 1993 Fiat Panda parked next to a ritual campfire? This one. Don’t ask questions. Don’t seek logic. There’s only fog, humidity, and architectural decisions that offend urban planning itself.

The Ocean Man. A creature born straight from the darkest corners of free asset stores and a mind that clearly needed sleep. This gelatinous marine entity stalks you with the subtlety of a whale on stilts. Sometimes he bugs out. Sometimes he teleports. Sometimes he sings. He always judges you.

The Scurxs. Plastic. Sandals. Of doom.
Each pair has its own personality (which is actually just a random variable assigning sound effects). Some float, others spin, one tells fun facts about mollusks. They’re the core collectibles because the developer once owned Crocs and thought, “What if these were part of an occult ritual?” The answer became this game.

Official and Ridiculous Game Modes:

Standard – The main experience. Collect all eight Scurxs while the Ocean Man breathes down your neck. It’s the most balanced version of the game (which doesn’t mean it’s actually balanced — it just crashes less).

Hardmode – Same island. Less light. More fog. Ocean Man on steroids. Delayed reactions. Moral paralysis. No checkpoints. Your choices have weight (but only emotional).

50% Health – You start with half HP. Why? Because yes. Not everything needs a reason. The Ocean Man doesn’t adjust to your weakness — he loves you whole.

VTuber Mode – A chaotic tribute to the developer (who is also a VTuber and clearly lost control of their life). Everything is brighter, louder, filled with intentional glitches, saturated filters, a ridiculous HUD, and anime voices shouting “KAWAII SCURXU DESU!” every time you pick up a shoe. There are deep-cut references no one will understand, and yes, probably a hidden ocean waifu somewhere. Suffer, but with style.
(Everything said here is fake as hell, but hey — it got your attention.)

VETITUM_VRC Style – A love letter and nightmare crossover with VETITUM_VRC, the creator’s previous game. Here, you’re hunted not by the Ocean Man, but by that game’s villain. There’s no context. No explanation. Just references only players who finished VETITUM_VRC (which you didn’t) will get. Fanservice? Horror? Self-obsession? Absolutely.

Technical Extras (as if this were a serious product):

High-Quality Ambient Audio: Mentally unstable seagulls. Wind recorded with a Nokia on vibrate. A background track composed on an out-of-tune recorder flute. Reversed voices whispering “Scurx” that may or may not awaken something in your subconscious.

Graphics: Yes, there are graphics. Not next-gen, but there are shapes, colors, questionable shadows, and textures that sometimes load. There are shaders too. What do they do? We don’t know. But they exist and eat your RAM.

Optimization: Runs on a toaster. Probably. In reality, testing was limited to the developer’s PC, which is full of files like “final_final_definitive_this_time_for_real.mp4.”

A Story As Deep As The Ocean Man (or maybe less):

You were born. You woke up on an island. There are Scurxs everywhere.
A water-based entity with unresolved trauma chases you.
The forest has cars. The houses are empty.
There’s a floating toilet in the sky.
The Ocean Man doesn’t speak. Neither do you.
What’s happening? Doesn’t matter. This game doesn’t seek to answer — only to make you ask.
Out loud. While running in circles. In fear.
Wearing illegal Crocs.

An Ocean Game with The Eight Scurxs is more than a DLC —
it’s a declaration of war against logic itself, a hymn to creative chaos, and a spiritual manifestation of what happens when someone says, “What if we make something completely stupid but act like it’s serious?”

Do you need it? No.
Do you deserve it? Also no.
Will you buy it anyway? Obviously.

If you survived and collected all eight Scurxs… we envy you. And we fear you.
Thank you for supporting this two-second-long Steam DLC that lives forever in your library, haunting your “Recently Played” list like a damp digital ghost.

Configuration requise

    Minimale :
    • Système d'exploitation et processeur 64 bits nécessaires
    • Système d'exploitation : Windows 10
    • Processeur : Intel I3-6100
    • Mémoire vive : 4 GB de mémoire
    • Graphiques : GTX 780
    • DirectX : Version 11
    • Réseau : connexion internet haut débit
    • Espace disque : 2 GB d'espace disque disponible
    • Prise en charge VR: Not VR
    • Notes supplémentaires : Low + Not Volumetric Light - 1920x1080
    Recommandée :
    • Système d'exploitation et processeur 64 bits nécessaires
    • Système d'exploitation : Windows 10
    • Processeur : Intel i7 8700
    • Mémoire vive : 8 GB de mémoire
    • Graphiques : RTX 2060
    • DirectX : Version 11
    • Réseau : connexion internet haut débit
    • Espace disque : 2 GB d'espace disque disponible
    • Prise en charge VR: Not VR
    • Notes supplémentaires : High + Volumetric Light - 1920x1080

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