Voyager-19 is "a short horror game where you control a decaying spacecraft exploring distant star systems." Miziziziz's channel: / @miziziziz #voyager19 #horrorgaming #gaming
There seems to be at least 2 living planets: the fake habitable planet that kills the player, and the weird heartbeat planet that follows the player (they both show up on the final mission as separate planets) the one that follows the player around seems to not be a predator unlike the other, maybe a scavenger that feeds on the leftovers of the meals of predator planets? Or maybe a highly intelligent "herbivore" that feeds on stardust and just follows the player out of curiosity?
The alternative is that the planet following the player around is also a predator, but one that recognizes that the player may return to civilization, and thus lead it to more food.
I've seen other heartbeat planets on other playthroughs, and each one looks different. I think, rather than a single one following the player per se, they're multiple ones in different stages of development. Increasing in complexity, almost like a zygote. The final system has at least two, one that's almost done (which is why it has so many little segments) but isn't quite mature. The one that finally opens up to eat you looks inhabitable, and also has the loudest heartbeat, presumably because it's already mature, signified by having fully functional camouflage.
This game reminds me of Jean Jacket from Nope and how at first the idea of a UFO abducting living things was the idea at first but then the the thing is actually a creature
Well, that _would_ be a frightening concept if not for the fact that something the size of a planet wouldn't get any significant nourishment from something the size of a space coffin ship thing. I just can't find it plausible enough to get creeped out by it. My mind is just screaming "this wasn't really thought through".
I honestly thought it eats both planets and spaceship driven things and may understand the concept of more advanced smaller civilizations to an unknown degree.
@@hatad321 Plausible if it could eat them by the trillions, but there just aren't that many out there. Now I don't know for sure, but I bet if you get a metabolic specialist to crunch the numbers, you'd find that a blue whale wouldn't get enough energy from eating a single krill to get back what it used by opening its mouth.
@@goldenrain4402 Eating planets is plausible, or Death Star-sized spacecraft. I'd find it more likely that it would be found in low orbit around gas giants or thick-atmosphere planets like Titan, siphoning organic gases from their atmospheres. If it did attack a spacecraft, it wouldn't be for food--it would be because said spacecraft did something to piss it off. Like launching a probe down to its surface. Maybe it would mistake the probe for a small meteorite that had fragmented off of a larger body that was about to hit it, and it responds by pre-emptively destroying the "larger body", I.E. the spaceship.
If this sort of cosmic (haha) horror appeals, or anybody would like an example of what the surface of such hostile and hungry worlds might look like, I suggest folks look up Junji Ito's "Hellstar Remina" manga.
The comments made me realise what a small channel you are, so I kust comment this was great. I have watched a few RU-vidr play this game and I never got the horror element. Thanks for the lovely commentary!