
**The following contains spoilers for the end of Still Wakes the Deep**
It’s been over ten years since that fateful day in December 1975.
You remember, don’t you? The day the Beira D sank, and fell to rest at the bed of the North Sea.
Despite exploring this in the base game of Still Wakes the Deep – the BAFTA-winning narrative adventure from Secret Mode and The Chinese Room, many questions remain unanswered. Perhaps Still Wakes the Deep: Siren’s Rest could help?
An Active Grave
Now available on Xbox, PlayStation and PC, Still Wakes the Deep: Siren’s Rest is an expansive DLC for the 2024 original. We absolutely love Still Wakes the Deep – as evidenced by our full review – with the atmospheric psychological thriller keeping us on the edge of our seats throughout its runtime.
Siren’s Rest looks to add to this, plunging us deep into the murkiness of the North Sea, as we explore the wreckage of the Beira D – the oil rig we explored in the base game. Yet again, supernatural horrors await you down below, and you’ll need to have your wits about you if you are to remain in one piece, and alive to discover the mystery of the Beira D…
As Mhairi, a leader of a dive to the wreck of the Beira D, you’ll slowly learn of the fate of the original 1975 crew, and (devastatingly) look to recover what remains of them.
Action, Stations!
Do you have the mettle to venture back down to the deep, and get your questions answered?
Still Wakes the Deep: Siren’s Rest is now available on Xbox Series X|S, Xbox One, PS5, PS4 and PC.
As a copy of the base game is required to play this expansion, you can find that over on the Xbox Store for £29.99, or for free as part of the Xbox & PC Game Pass service.
Separately, the Siren’s Rest expansion will cost you just £9.99, or you can pick the two of them up in a bundle for £33.74 with the Still Wakes the Deep – The Complete Collection.
Still Wakes the Deep: Siren’s Rest Description
1986. The Beira D is now a groaning steel catacomb interred in the inky depths of the North Sea. What really happened that December day in 1975, when communications to the mainland were severed and the rig sank without a trace? What answers can be given to families who still grieve, ten years on?


