KEROGEN Emerges as Deep-Sea Horror Game Rivaling SOMA, BioShock
BREAKING: KEROGEN Announced
Indie horror game KEROGEN has been officially announced, and early comparisons place it alongside iconic dread-inducing titles like BioShock, SOMA, and Iron Lung. The game plunges players into an oil-drenched oceanic nightmare where they must retrieve bodies from a sunken rig.

“The ocean is essentially an alien world right here on Earth,” said Dr. Amelia Vance, a researcher specializing in game-based anxiety. “KEROGEN weaponizes that primal fear of the deep by forcing players to confront it without any escape.” The first teaser shows a diver descending beneath black waves, pulling up what the developers call “corpses from an oil-drenched nightmare.”
Developer studio, Depth Dwellers Interactive, has remained tight-lipped on release dates, but confirmed the game will feature first-person exploration, minimal UI, and an environment that evolves based on player actions. A full reveal is expected later this month.
Background
Ocean-horror games have a long history of unsettling players. BioShock trapped players in the underwater city of Rapture, while SOMA forced them to question their own identity in a flooded research station. Iron Lung confined users to a tiny submarine.

KEROGEN enters this niche with a focus on claustrophobia and procedural terror. The player is alone, miles beneath the surface, with only a diving suit and a tether. The game’s name is a reference to kerogen—a waxy, fossilized organic material found in oil shales, hinting at the unnatural substances players will encounter.
What This Means
For horror enthusiasts, KEROGEN promises to deliver one of the most visceral experiences in years. “If you can keep your eyes open while playing this, you’re stronger than most,” one early tester noted. The combination of deep-sea isolation, body recovery mechanics, and psychological dread positions it as a potential genre benchmark.
Industry analysts see this as a sign that indie studios are dominating the “fear of the unknown” subgenre. With roots in titles like SOMA, KEROGEN may set a new standard for maritime horror. Fans should prepare for a game that doesn’t just scare—it suffocates.
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