

You simply have to run, hide, collect clues that might help you figure out what happened and obviously, survive. You have your standard first-person shooter games controls with no guns, knives, or any other means of defending yourself from the odd being. Since any normal human hesitates to get close to something the brain can’t make sense of while also located in a blood soaked enclosure, you keep your position while the other two subjects get close. On the desk in your cell is a short note that describes your situation and as you finish reading it, two masked guards escort you to your first assignment.Ī few minutes into your walk between two very chatty guards you end up being placed into a containment area with a creepy looking being and instructed to approach it. In this game, you play the role of an inmate, or rather a test subject for whatever is going on in the secret facility you wake up in. You have no guns, no flashlight and basically nothing else but your feet and the ability to run for your life.

Please verify information on your own (ideally with professionals) for your specific needs.SCP - Containment Breach is a survival horror game in which you will have to escape from a secret facility while being hunted down by a very strange looking creature. SCP.GAMES, in conjunction with various attorneys and consultants, will be releasing in-depth findings of legal requirements for SCP game developers mid-late 2023 for free on the Resources page.ĭISCLOSURE: Information provided by SCP.GAMES or partners is not legal advice and is primarily intended for informational purposes. Intellectual Property (IP) - Creative Commons (Required) Game Engine/Middleware - Proprietary (Often Required)ĭerivative/Game-Specific Code - Proprietary (Sometimes Required) And though game technology specifically does not need to be re-released under this license (often unable to be if from third-parties like Unreal Engine), the lore and intellectual property of the SCP mythos are required to, often requiring SCP games to be multi-licensed software.

Game developers - and other industries - are able to commercially derive from this content under Creative Commons. With the SCP community, there is no official canon - and can be seen as a community-driven multiverse. The SCP community submit articles to the SCP Wiki, typically alternative-reality supernatural materials of a wide diversity that tie into various “unofficial” canons. SCP stands for “Special Containment Procedures” and the motto "Secure, Contain, Protect.”, though is typically equally valid.
