DLC vs Early Access Updates
For an Early Access game, new biomes, systems, creatures, and story content may arrive as part of development rather than paid DLC. That makes traditional DLC speculation less useful early on.
Watch the roadmap first. DLC questions make more sense once the 1.0 plan is clearer.
How To Verify DLC
Look for official announcements, store pages, pricing, and named expansion details. Rumors or wishlist posts are not DLC confirmation.
Buying Advice
If you are deciding whether to buy now, judge the current Early Access build and announced roadmap, not imaginary expansions.
How To Use This Page
Use this page to check whether a feature is live, rumored, cut, delayed, or simply misunderstood. These pages should avoid fake certainty because cut-content searches often mix old files, mods, myths, and Early Access changes.
Current build evidence, official roadmap posts, and trusted mod pages are the strongest sources.
Before You Act On This Guide
- Look for current build evidence before treating a feature as live.
- Separate mods, myths, cut files, and official roadmap items.
- Check whether a feature is useful for your current playthrough.
- Avoid installing files or following routes from untrusted sources.
Stop if the only evidence is an old screenshot, a nickname, or a mod page pretending to be base-game content.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will Subnautica 2 have DLC?
No DLC should be assumed until official announcements confirm it.
Are Early Access updates DLC?
Usually no; they are part of ongoing development unless stated otherwise.
Where should I check?
Check official news, roadmap posts, and store pages.