How To Read Leak Claims
A leaked development document can sound definitive, but without context it may be outdated, partial, or misunderstood. Treat leaked milestones differently from official roadmap commitments.
If a claim does not show date, source, and context, do not use it to judge the current game.
Milestones vs Roadmap
Internal milestones are project-management targets. Public roadmap updates are player-facing commitments. They can overlap, but they are not the same thing.
What Players Should Do
Use official updates to plan whether to buy or wait. Use leak coverage only as background, and label it clearly as alleged unless verified.
How To Use This Page
Use this page to separate player impact from internet noise. Legal and controversy searches need dates, named sources, official statements, and a clear distinction between confirmed facts, allegations, and opinion.
Official statements, court documents, reliable reporting, store status, and current patch notes are the best sources.
Before You Act On This Guide
- Check the publication date before trusting a summary.
- Separate court filings, official statements, journalism, and social posts.
- Look for current store status and patch activity.
- Do not treat a viral headline as cancellation evidence.
Stop relying on a claim if it has no date, no primary source, or no clear connection to current player access.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I trust Subnautica 2 document leaks?
Only with strong sourcing, dates, and context.
Are milestones the same as a roadmap?
No. Internal milestones and public roadmap promises are different.
What matters for players?
Current store status, patches, and official roadmap updates.