
Here you just teleport from station to station using a few different cleaning methods to uncover what exactly the lost item may tell you about the ship and its passengers and pushes the narrative along. This section of the game is substantially duller but does give some insight into the work that went into recovering these lost items and from an educational stand-point I appreciated what this section entailed. With this drone you have a couple of arms that can be used to grab items too be brought back to the sub for restoration and analysis.

Thankfully you have a ROV, a smaller remote-controlled drone that you can use to reach the smaller sections of the ship. There is a campaign here that will require you to find and retrieve items from inside the ship from areas inaccessible from your sub. The DS4 assigns those controls to the thumbsticks, which is truthfully way easier to drive the sub, but does take away from the immersion factor. With the Moves, you physically grab the levers in front of you to move the sub up/down, left/right and forward/backward which is a really cool and immersive way to explore the ship.


The bulk of the game involves you piloting a 1 man submersible as you explore the exterior of the Titanic as it would have looked in 1985. There are 2 main sections in the “game” portion of this experience with both supporting the Move Controllers or DS4.
