You're the newest hire at Consolidated Dynamics, and your job is to help train the next generation of the workforce. Twelve days of tasks, tapes, and half-heard conversations. The longer you stay, the more you'll wish you'd asked more questions on day one.

Sign in to add this item to your wishlist, follow it, or mark it as ignored

This game is not yet available on Steam

Planned Release Date: October 2026

Interested?
Add to your wishlist and get notified when it becomes available.
 

About This Game

"Welcome to Consolidated Dynamics. Your training begins today."

You just started at Consolidated Dynamics. It's basically the bell-Labs of this world but bigger. They are making something big, and your work is what is making it possible, and your job, for now, is to show up, sit down, and get through the day.

The coffee's fine. The people are friendly enough. Every morning there's a cassette on your desk with the day's instructions on it. It's a good job, better than you expected. You should probably stop turning it over in your head.

What this is

A seated VR mystery that plays out over your first twelve days on the job. You sit at your desk with everything in reach. You pick things up, push the buttons, turn the dials, and you listen. No walking, no locomotion, no motion sickness. Four to six hours, start to finish.

The work

The days fall into a rhythm. A cassette in the morning with your briefing. A voice on the headset to walk you through the tasks. A newspaper on the desk if you want it. In the evening, a "Relaxation Protocol" tape with a game designed to make you feel "relaxed"  the company sends home, which is their idea of helping you switch off.

The tasks are hands-on and a little strange: switchboards, pneumatic tubes, banks of analog machinery that has no business still running. What all of it actually produces is something you piece together as you go.

The people on the line

You'll get to know a few of your coworkers over the two weeks, mostly over the phone. Sam's in your corner from day one. Dr. Larson answers a slightly different question than the one you asked. Dr. Chen deals only in numbers. Morgan would rather be anywhere else and doesn't bother hiding it. And Voss? Voss just wants the The numbers to go up. Listen closely. It matters more than it looks.

The world

It's the present day, more or less, just not the one we ended up with. Somewhere back in the 1930s the technology forked and never found its way back. Computers stayed analog. Phones stayed wired. The whole place is beeping, glowing and filled with tubes and spinning tape reels, and every bit of it has real weight in your hands.

How it ends

[redacted] many ways, depending on [redacted], but at one point [redacted]  the moment, and it won't ask you to [redacted] eventually You'll [redacted] most of them, [redacted] and then you live with it.

From us

We wanted to make something quiet and a little uneasy, the kind of thing that works best alone and late, headphones on, lights low. Give it an evening. We think you'll want to talk to someone about it afterward.

Thanks for clocking in.

— The team at Shababeek Labs

Features

  • A seated VR mystery across twelve in-game days, roughly two to four hours

  • multiple  hands-on analog tasks that get sharper and stranger as you go

  • Three endings, decided by a single choice

  • Full English voice acting with subtitles ( when it does not break immersion)

  • Plays entirely seated: no walking, no locomotion, no motion sickness

  • A cassette-futurism world, all analog, all tactile

  • Accessibility options: height adjustment, reach assist, colorblind friendly 

  • Runs on Meta Quest 2/3/3S/Pro (Link/Air Link/Steam Link), Valve Index, HTC Vive, Oculus Rift, Windows Mixed Reality

Content notes

This one trades in unease rather than scares: psychological themes, a slow sense that something's off, and some mild language. No jump scares, no gore, nothing sexual, no sustained loud noise. There's one optional moment with flashing visuals you can turn off in the settings.

System Requirements

    Minimum:
    • OS: Windows 10 64-bit
    • Processor: Intel Core i5-7500 / AMD Ryzen 5 1600
    • Memory: 8 GB RAM
    • Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060 6 GB / AMD Radeon RX 580 8 GB
    • Storage: 6 GB available space
    • VR Support: SteamVR, Oculus PC
    Recommended:
    • OS: Windows 10 64-bit
    • Processor: Intel Core i7-9700K / AMD Ryzen 7 3700X
    • Memory: 16 MB RAM
    • Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 / AMD Radeon RX 5700 XT
    • Storage: 6 GB available space
    • VR Support: SteamVR, Oculus PC
There are no reviews for this product

You can write your own review for this product to share your experience with the community. Use the area above the purchase buttons on this page to write your review.

Review Filters