The Gargantuan Leviathan - Subnautica's Extinct Colossus
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 22 พ.ค. 2024
- The gargantuan leviathan was one of the most fascinating creatures to have ever lived on planet 4546B. Its status is nothing short of iconic, yet few seem to know much about it. Today, we’ll turn back time, as we explore the story of a creature whose sheer size allowed it to rise through the ranks, while cementing its eventual downfall.
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•Drives a cyclops around
•"Entering biological death zone"
•Turns of all lights and engines
•Goes to sleep
•Refuses to elaborate further
Goes to sleep.....permanently
@@SaxetGamingbed..... The void
@@ishou9437forever sleep in thy arms..
I mean, it's an ecological dead zone, right? Nothing should be out there to threaten you, right?
...right?
had to get in a quick powernap ofc
My headcanon is that all creatures have a leviathan form. The crater we play on is just a breading ground. Everything eventually swims into the void once they're too big.
Peeper leviathan
Gasopod leviathan
@@ohnoanyway6096Leviathan not Colossus
Hoverfish leviathan has the highest kill count, mostly from people trying to pet it
Boomfish leviathan most commonly know as a nuclear bomb
Looking at something that long, with bioluminescence all down its body, makes me think its hunting pattern may have involved fully encircling its prey from a distanc to confuse it, then moving in before the victim realizes where its head is.
That’s a very cool theory :)
That's is terrifying
And I love it!
I recall orcas or dolphins using bubbles to surround and disorient fish into a tight ball. Definitely something I'd see the bioluminescence being used for as well.
@@OddOtter707 Yeah, using its own body to make a bait ball of sorts, and chomping down on medium to large sized prey. Or maybe making a display to attract a mate. Imagine two of those things creating a light show in the deep ocean during mating season.
@@Breathtaker5000 1 faxed i found ou it can grow infinetly as long it has the food space and other such stuff
Given the size of the gargantuan, it could also have had a slow birth cycle. As an example the Greenland Shark, which lives in very deep cold environments and Is one of the biggest sharks of its kind. But it reaches sexual maturity at the age of 150 and higher which makes its reproductive cycle extreamly slow, although due to its slow metabolism it does move extreamly slow, but at the same time they can live for an esimated 500 years or more.
Gargantuan Leviathans could have also been assisted in its downfall by low birth rates caused by the leviathans evolution to be so large that most animals would not mess with them at most ages, so the necessity to make more young quickly and in higher numbers not necessary.
This is actually most likely what happened, based on real life examples and the lore in the game itself, basic biology and nature itself would make this the case. It's why there aren't that many Sea Dragons either, tho they are also mostly suffering from lack of nutrition, they don't tend to reproduce often, the Sea Emperor also has a similar concept.
this would leave to a genetic bottleneck with a low enough population, like, there no way this thing eats enough to sustain itself
Very must true. Maybe there are still more alive in the deep sea.
@@DrSalvadorsSack Half the reason why most things go extinct is from environmental changes or destruction or a lack of nutrition/sustainability.
@@gutembergcraft this is what people don't realize. I could believe though that due to their immense age and the size of the planet and distance between the population. That hundreds of years take place between each birth so there's still a large enough population to sustain a population without inbreeding
Some people say the garg would've feed on ghost leviathans, but I think it may have feed on huge prehistoric reefbacks a little bigger than it.
Possibly the biter leviathan?
I mean the mod version does
Well, the void isnt called the void for nothing. We know nothing about it and what could be there. modder already are on it to fill it with contend (wich i guess the dev's wanted to do for subnautica 3 and their MP part). The Garg and the few Adult ghosts we see can very well be small in comparison to what lurks there. Or the garg doesnt need that much food and would only need it to actualy grow further.
I love the idea and mostly agree with it but I do have one point to make which relates to another comment I saw, the garg is canonically the largest thing to have ever lived on 4546B so there would not have been reefbacks larger than it, however i love the idea of it hunting relatively close in size reefbacks and leviathans, and as another comment pointed out it may have gone extinct due to slowed reproductive cycles caused by it being so big and the defacto apex predator of its time causing it to not need to reproduce rapidly and eventually leading to it dying out, so I may try to learn coding and make a ancient reefback leviathan mod so i can use it with the garg mod
@@bosi1665 what if it's carnivorous only in appearance? Would be pretty golden if it was a big cute snek that feeds on microorganisms and it's own stupidity
An issue with an animal exceeding a kilometer in length is that it will run into issues with lag in its nervous system. Myelinated nerves, which are the fastest nerves and analogous to an insulated wire, can propagate a membrane potential at about 150m/s. It would take almost 7 seconds between a Gargantuan Leviathan's brain telling its tail to move, and the tail actually moving. It would have to have had hundreds of nuclei in its spinal cord to take advantage of reflex arcs to produce anything close to a coordinated, effective swimming motion, but it wouldn't have been close to agile. Alternatively, it could have been an ambush predator, spending much of its time coiled and using a number of rostral appendages to accelerate its head towards prey while the rest of the body stayed more or less stationary. It likely would have been blind, as the sheer enormity of its wake turbulence would have caused a silt-out in any environment where it would have been worth it to have eyes. It would have to have had a highly developed sense of proprioception to avoid mistaking the distal portions of its own body as prey. Or sapience.
There are clear advantages to being big. The advantages to being _that_ big are less clear.
Very interesting thoughts! Wild to think about the reality of such a creature.
I dont think direct communication would be necessary for survival. Humans with split-brain syndrome are still coordinated.
I suppose that such creature would have more than a single brain. Many smaller secondary brain were probably present around his spine over the total length of his body. His eyes were probably adapted to find particular light signal in the darkness rather than granting a "clear sight". Its also very probable that this creature used echolocalisation to find prey over large distance. They were obviously nomadic in nature and were probably drifting around the ocean most of their time until they get hungry again or mate.
It also is a game where any adaption could happen cause it’s an alien planet so very possibly it could have evolved to have none of those problems
@@shaylist5298 form is function, that's true no matter where you are.
For anyone whose ever played Monster Hunter, the Lost River essentially being an ecosystem grown around the corpse of a Garg, is very reminiscent of the Rotten Vale in Monster Hunter World, which is an ecosystem built around the corpse of a particularly large Dalamadur, which is funnily enough also a gigantic serpent, albeit one that isn't aquatic.
While on the subject, it is worth noting that, since the crater in which the game takes place is such a small fraction of 4546-B, that it is entirely possible that the Garg exist elsewhere in the deadzone, since it was stated that the only lifeforms out there are microscopic or Leviathans, and therefore if everything elsewhere on the planet is much larger, food may be easier to find.
I was actually thinking that the Lost River area reminded me of a whalefall. You should look those up, they're actually really cool. It's basically when a whale dies, its corpse sinks to the bottom of the ocean, and it gets eaten by scavengers. It's a whole ecosystem that supposedly can last up to a century!
The dead zone doesnt stretch forever. I dont know if its canon, but even excluding below zero, there are multiple large islands you can see when leaving the planet, that look to be surrounded by shallower waters.
@@tree_addict280 Not forever, sure, but it is still the majority of the planet. Those pockets are few and far between.
@@ApoxyBreath I've seen those! Those are super cool, and ofc are the inspiration for both instances.
That's exactly what I was thinking when 1st entered The Lost River.
In the world of subnatica deep sea gargantuanism actually leads to the big super predators being able to go sometimes years before having to eat again.
Edit: why the fuck is this so popular? Like wtf
Also true in real life I'm pretty sure
How would that work ? I'm curious
@@terminator9489 It isn’t viable for big things to move around a lot, and so they barely move at all.
Barely moving means low energy use, and since they’re big their meals tend to give them tons of energy. This equates to needing to eat very little.
@@terminator9489 what detectivewraith said. It’s a real world thing and it’s fascinating. Obviously it’s not years like in the game mostly few weeks at a time.
@@Succubi_bunnysome animals still can go years without eating in real life. Example is a crocodile or Galapagos Turtle,
6:33 I would personally suggest that it would go months to years without a "sustaining" meal, only snacking on smaller creatures. Much like how many reptiles do here. For example, crocodiles and alligators have been seen going upwards of 12 months without food, and was likely what dinosaurs did aswell. I believe this is what many super-apex-predators such as the gargantuan leviathan would have done.
also i dont believe you mentioned it, but my personal head cannon is that the sea dragons once lived much higher than where they do now, however conveniently had the right body structure and abilities to survive in the magma zone once forced there to survive the garg
Yeah, the garg definitely may have played a role in forcing the sea dragon into the crater
Was the garg alive during the sea dragon era? I know that you mention it in the video, but the pda on the skeleton suggests that its been dead so long that the earth changed around it. So, I would imagine the garg would have to have been around for a substantial amount of time, possibly even before the cataclysm, although im not entirely sure on that.
@@tree_addict280 both are milenial cratures, at least a early tipe of sea dragon had to survive the gargs to make the ones we knew. also, evolution takes thousands and thousands of generations to make really significant changes, and habing a life spam soo big doesnt help with that, most likely gargs didnt even have a chance of evolution to grow smaller as they reproduced extremely slow
a creature this size moving this deep would cause earthquakes every time it moves. Stop trying to find a logic to it, there is none.
I know this isn't Canon, but in the return of the ancients mod there is an animation for the sunbeam and I love the idea that there are still some in the void, waiting, lurking. Shame the farlands block it off, I would've loved to see it in game past a certain point.
Like imagine you got to a point just for the pda to say something like
Leviathan life form quickly approaching bigger then anything documented so far…. Thank you for your services
And it just goes silent and then a cutscene play of it coming and getting you
@@ECHOKINGXD the bad ending
@@ThyLord-kv5bf but an ending that would be so sick to see
Actually, from my knowledge, isn't the Return of Ancients being developed by people from the actual team behind the game itself, or at least has them involved in some way? I remember hearing that somewhere, but I may be mistaken.
@@Going4Broke2528you might be confusing it with the VA’s of the game, the actual VA’s DID act in the mod though:), I’m very excited about it, still waiting 😢
That was an amazing intro, felt just like a cheesy horror movie. I mean seriously, who goes to the middle of the void to get a nice nap!?
Apparently every horror movie character who has never watched a horror movie...
Me of course
Horror movie families be like: “great place for a swim!”
Going out into the middle of the Void sounds like something I would do
well if you do go there , at least at some point, you gonna take a nap
Another note to the skeleton in the lost river, alongside the fact that only a third of it can be seen, it was also only a juvenile garg that is in the lost river
Edit: This is the most amount of likes I have ever gotten lol
Well yes but actually no. There is a Juvenile skeleton in the Lost River, but it’s not the massive main one you’re thinking of. That one is an adult skeleton, and only a third of it is uncovered. Nearby there is another Gargantuan skull that is much, much smaller.
Oh thats sad. Would've been cool if it was even bigger@@JC_Stone
@@JC_Stonewheres the smaller garg skull?
@@JC_StoneThe other skull/body that is in the lost river has nothing to do with the garg if thats what you are thinking. In fact there are theories that those skeletons are the opposite, the other one may have been a giant groundfeeder, around long before the gargantuan leviathan.
@@tree_addict280no there is a second garg skull in the lost river, it's much smaller and when scanned it specifically states it's a juvenile garg skull
I’ve seen people say how horrifying it would be for one to be alive in the game, but part of me wonders if it would even consider the player to be worth eating. Humans would likely be microscopic in comparison to it, so actively trying to hunt humans probably wouldn’t be worth the energy required
If there were like few hundred people grouped in one place - yea, it would make sense.
@@user-oq7xc5qp3ybut there isn’t ever a few hundred people present
@@tidxlu7595 not sure what you're trying to say, but the world population is around 8 billion.
Given the thing is implied to be sentient by the way it seemingly hijacks the PSA to tauntly ask, "Are you ready to die?" after the AI gives the Star Wars reference on the odds of survival, the reason why it even bothers is probably out malice and a sadistic sense of humor.
It knows you're there, and it'll take pleasure taking anyway any sense of hope you might still have.
@@RandoGruntWhere does this happen in the game? If you're referring to you being asked "Are you sure whatever you're doing is worth it?" I'm pretty sure that's just an automated thing.
A big problem with such a big creature is neuron conduction delay. It will take anywhere between 10s to 1 minute for signals to propagate from the brain to the tail, thus making it impractical to perform any complex movement. They will likely have a segmented body and distributed brain system and mostly lure their food instead of actively hunting them. That is unless creatures on 4546-B developed some sort of optical fiber nervous system instead of the electrochemical nervous system found on Earth, which is quite likely given the ubiquity of bioluminescence.
animals with fiber optic nerves is an interesting thought lol, gonna go replace mine with those now lol
Didn’t creature like the bronto and such have multiple brains and were assuming it’s biology is even remotely similar to what we know
kinda think, that perhaps it is like kaiju in pacific rim, 2 brain to control massive body. or perhaps more
A terrifying thought what if the big gargantuan leviathan wasn’t fully grown?
@@Runic360 where does it say that?
@@dustincausey3344In the video it was stated that there are two Gargantuan Leviathan fossils in the lost river, which is correct. One is the huge one which only one third is exposed of and the other fossil is just a skull which is much smaller, but still huge. This one is the juvenile one
@@ChunkyChungus I’m just saying what if the big one wasn’t fully grown yet
@@dustincausey3344 i was actually replying to the conversation you had with Runic30. What they said was wrong and I just wanted to put it right.
@@ChunkyChungus lol kk
Since the largest creature in Suvnautica, The Empress, is able to communicate with us, I love imagining that the Garg can too. It just never knew it could until we come swimming in it's void.
It actually does, if only to taunt us after the AI sprouts a Star Wars reference, there's a lot of static garble and another voice asks "Are you ready to die?"
@@RandoGrunt in the mod, which isnt canon
@@TheShaade And?
I hope the third game leans into the horror more as seeing this thing in the corner of you eye or with the radar tool would be terrifying
Same, fleeing some massive creature in your tiny submarine just didn’t get old!
As much as this would be good, from what ive seen and heard i dont think 3 will be taking part on 4546b.
@@tree_addict280 could be a good thing, could be a bad thing.
@@tree_addict280It will. And even if it doesn't, it'll just be focusing on the next world that the precursors visited
@@jaybarbieri8619 i dont see any reason or explanation in the lore for why they would re-visit 4546b, atleast not for a game-worthy reason. Although i do agree that it will probably focus more on the precursors this time rather than the character’s personal reasons. Seems like a promising game.
The intro was so awesome omg, i was waiting for the leviathan and got jumpscared by the roar lol. I really love these videos treating subnautica like a documentary series, it's super interesting :D!!!
Fun Fact: Did you know a similar phenomenon called Polar Gigantism exists where animals in freezing waters tend to be larger than their warm water counterparts! It's theorised that the larger size slows metabolism and preserves energy + heat and allowing them to spend less time hunting/travelling!!
I actually did some research on it while making the video, it’s really fascinating!
I got jumpscared by an ad I've blocked 500 times now
How well could something 1.3 kilometers long actually move though? Good video, certainly a crazy sized beast.
I think a bit like the Void Worms of the game rain world. A heavily streamlined form with many joints and fins for propulsion.
I'm about to sit down and do some math, I want to figure our a few things... mainly how much drag would a neutrally buoyant garg create, and their min/max drag when swimming.
Even then, even swimming like a snake, the amount of mechanical force on its bones would be extreme..
I think it would be speed limited just because I think it would rip itself apart, and I'll do the work to prove it when I get home.
@@ATBatmanMALS31 They won't move much at all, big creatures tend to barely move in their life time, only to eat and even than they only go for easy quick meals and than they are back to sitting almost completely still.
@@raionshishi8290 You aren't an exobiologist.
@@ATBatmanMALS31 I never said I was and it wouldn't matter if I was or not, it's common knowledge that large creatures do not move frequently or quickly throughout their life to conserve energy and also to no overheat their body through their motions over a long period of time.
can i just say that this guy is one of the best subnautica lore person ive seen in years! keep up the good work man!!
You could say he’s… breathtaking
@@Ghost_DivisionLMAO YES
punssss
Yes, le puns
Puntastic
That intro scene was very well done with the effects and the music and everything
Thank you :)
So here’s a very horrifying fact about the skeleton in the lost river, it may only be a juvenile or adolescent.
I would also probably pay someone to make a fight between the garg and jourmangandr from God of War
Neat, source?
@@user-oq7xc5qp3y source: I made it the fuckup
Wrong. The juvenile's skull is found elsewhere in the lost River, and doesn't have a ribcage exposed, unlike the adult. While the adult would be around 1300 meters long, the juvenile would be roughly 200 meters long
@@cartersmith8904good boy
I dunno if I should say thankfully but mods have brought this beast to life and it’s terrifying
i have really bad intrusive thoughts with the ocean to the point of me believing that thinking about it will make me teleport into it, this video is so good that i watched it despite my fears lmfao
Bruh sameee sometimes I can't even like close my eyes in the shower without thinking that 😱
Don’t play Subnautica then.
Cthulu might teleport you there to clown you.
Scp 1128 be a bitch like that
i used to have intrusive thoughts as a child and one of those were that i’d be sucked down the drain in the bathtub, just to be spat out into the bottom of the ocean somewhere 💀
For not being afraid of deep sea when i was a kid. This game is a prime example of current me being just afraid enough that i never want to touch this game. The loneliness of space is less terrifying than the concept of running into something your entire vision cant comprehend within the depths of your own planet and that fucking concerns me.
So one thing I find most interesting is the stuff in our ocean that live really deep down trend to be snow feeders and the biggest known ocean creature is actually a filter feeder not a hunter.
Tbf there is the fact that only a small part of the overall planet shown to us, a few kilometers is by no means a good enough example to show full ecosystems, there may still be one or two truly colossal creatures in the deepest oceans we didn't see in the game
The game already confirms and proves that to be impossible, while these creatures could probably last a year without eating, they have to eventually find a proper food source, to which there isn't anything in the void as the PDA scan suggest, which is also basically confirming that there aren't any Garg Leviathans around, only Ghost Leviathans and micro organisms.
@@raionshishi8290the void does eventually end, we know this, but also the garg lived so long ago the crater’s environment would have been plenty different. I would even say the garg may have lived around the time of the other skeleton in the river.
And also the deepest oceans are the void, which cant sustain ecosystems.
@@tree_addict280 I mean game limitations exist
There is a theory that subnautica takes place on a huge volcano which kind of makes sense
I've waited a video about the gargantuan leviathan for very long! Haven't watched it yet but I'm sure I won't get disappointed!
By the way the intro is amazing! It felt like a horror movie.
Edit: Finished watching it, it's amazingly well done! Also thanks for clarifying some of the gargantuan leviathan's lore!
No problem! Glad you found it enjoyable
My theory is that it likely some form of a super predator which would hibernate for years before remerging from the depths to consume more food and then against hibernate this would explain how it could even survive on 4545B as it didn't need that much food due to hibernation this would also explain how life on 4546 B didn't go extinct because of the garg as it was only a seasonal predator
If this theory is correct then there's a chance a garg is stil alive and since it was hibernating it could have survived the khara which only seems to spread by contact and a sleeping garg wouldn't be disturbed by anything
A gigantic superpredator like this i doubt would stop moving. This is not to say it would always hunt, but like sharks, i doubt the gargs could stop moving, otherwise they’d die.😊
@@tree_addict280 well the reason sharks can't stay still is because of their special gills however 4546-b's inhabitants don't have gills I don't think so anyways
By contact...
...with water.
When dinosaurs ruled the earth, there was a giant preparator called Mapusaurus, which preyed on Argentinosaurus. It’s theorised that Mapusaurus just ripped off chunks of Argentinosaurus flesh without killing it. I’m wondering if something like this could’ve happened with the leviathan. Other creatures could just snack off of it
Flesh grazing is stupid and disproven
The only issues with that statement is that the Garg is an oversized electric eel; not only does its roar deliberate and damage prey because soundwaves travel faster in water than air and can quite literally rip people apart akin to a Sperm Whale, the electromagnetic nature of it makes it quite dangerous to touch. It uses that electric ability to drain your cyclops' power and also when it eats the Ghost Leviathans.
My headcannon is that the gargantuan leviathan lived in the void but some of them found themselves in the lost river and died because they were too large
I found your videos yesterday and binge watched because they're so nicely done! They are just so good, keep up the awesome work! It's so relaxing to listen to your lore videos and so exciting to watch your other format videos (like the 100 days ones) 😍✨️
Glad you enjoy em! I’ve got plenty more video ideas in the works : D
Nahhh, the Intro was like a start to some professional movie bro. Great job
Thanks! I’ve never tried something like that before, so I’m glad you liked it :)
There's no proof that the gargantuan Leviathan does not still exist on the planet in the void we also do not know what other creatures may still be down there that might be still its food source.
That's very true, the pda does say only micro species and leviathan class exist, what if it was classing the ghost as micro sized.
@@lizardlord6560 Highly doubtful it would classify the Ghost as a micro-organism by definition of each of those words and classes in general.
There is plenty proof. The garg species is millions of years old, and also it cannot live off of ghost leviathans and microscopic plankton, thats biologically impossible.
And the “other creatures” couldn’t be any bigger than the plankton, since the void cant support ecosystems.
@@lizardlord6560That is an absolutely stupid theory. The PDA classifies reaper leviathans as leviathans. It'd mark ghost leviathans as leviathans
I wish subnautica would indulge the fans on these world sized entities. I rememver the exact feeling of terror and intrigue i felt when i first saw the imprisoned sea emperor. Ever since ive been looking for other creatures that large in other games. If the modders of this game can create these giant things and have them look and animate kinda good, imagine what the subnautica devs could do with their tech, imagine how horrifying the game could truly be.
That introduction was so cinematic holy shit
The cinematic shots make this intro all the creepier, and the rest of the video more interesting. Amazing job!
I love how when you go far enough into the void the ghosts don’t follow. Sure when actually looking at the code it’s just cause the void as a biome ends, but it really does make it seem like there’s something out there, and that that ghosts know something we don’t, they’re afraid of something…
Top tier video, love the quality and lore.
Super high effort, love it!
Thank You :)
These type of videos are just allways really good and entertainig 👍
It's a very good day when BT uploads! Underrated youtuber!
It’s an even better day when Bobbbytt comments ;)
But it’s the best day when Bobbbytt comments on a fresh BT upload!
If we're gonna examine this from a biological standpoint, it seems to me that the gargantuan leviathan is unrealistically long. Its skin would have to be insanely thick and durable / be capable of shocking (which is locally I suppose, otherwise charge is easily lost) / poisonous, since otherwise it would be sort of defenseless for most its body. Furthermore, as the gargantuan leviathan is a snake-like creature, the propulsion in water would mean having to move absolutely massive amounts of water.. and is therefore at best quite slow.
It isn't unrealistic considering the fact that there planets with oceans of tar in real life, plus it is as different planet with a completely different ecosystem. The creatures have vastly physiology.
You can't use how creatures evolve in Earth's ecosystem for a completely different planet.
@@masternabber5560 yeah but you can use it as a baseline, if the ecosystem is similar enough you kinda have to compare it to Earth since Earth is the only place for light-years around that can sustain life.
@@l0sts0ul89 No, you can't use earth at all, humans don't know everything about the universe. Earth isn't a baseline for everything, there are planets in our galaxy with acid rain, diamond rain and seas full of tar so clearly every planet has its own ecosystem that operates by its own laws.
Earth is definitely not the only place that can sustain life, the universe is incredibly vast and ever expanding so if the cosmos can generate a sustainable planet like Earth as an example then there are clearly other hospitable planets. The galaxy humans know is grain of sand that blows against cosmic winds, it's hard to comprehend how vast the cosmos is.
@@masternabber5560 I mean, there might be different ecosystems, but we all use the same physics.
@@Neion8 No, that's just your assumption about using the same physics.
Awesome video!! The gargantuan leviathan is horrifying😭
Tell me about it 😟
Just discovered you and You are so underrated, This is a Good Video
Glad you think so! : )
Hey Its me but From another Account
Trust me, this is an amazing video.
This is a literal gargantuan leviathan, you have to believe him
Nice video. I really dig the nature documentary angle.
Bro it felt like I was watching the discovery channel. Awesome video 🔥🔥
Thanks :D
This makes me think, the reaper its actually a small leviathan compared to others, in the leviathans word he is that small angry friend
It's like I'm watching a national geographic documentary, very well done ❤
Thank You! Glad you liked it :)
I'd like to imagine there's three classes of giants on 4546B
Leviathan:
The beasts we get to see within the crater. Reapers, Ghosts, Dragons, etc.
Colossus:
Gargantuan Leviathan.
Titan:
Whatever apex predator killed the Gargantuan in the Lost River.
NOTHING killed it, it died to a cave. it shares ancestory with reapers. so they seem to likely, be both dumbfuck shit for brains. there was no predator that killed it. it probably got stuck in a cave while chasing ghost leviathans around, and it died. its proven that a cave probably collapsed on it, because most of its skeleton is covered by debris, it probably got injured from falling, and a ton of ghosts/other leviathans, came to feed on the corpse till it was bone, and the rest of the corpse decayed. likely it died below 20 years ago, since bones decay after 20 years.
@@user-oc3sp4lh8o PDA entry clearly states that there was no cave.
@@user-oc3sp4lh8othere was no cave
That was an amazing intro!
Thanks lol, halfway through making it I was wondering if I should just scrap the whole thing
Commenting before watching video. Subnautica mentioned, I am summoned, pretty hyped about it.
Watched the video, That intro went hard, and I LOVE the speculative biology and life cycle of The Garg. I've always wondered how such a spectacular titan of biology ended up entombed in the lost river, whether it be by entering willingly or the world growing and enclosing around them as time passed.
Glad you liked the into, I’ve never tried something like it before, so I was curious what people would think
You did super good on the intro, don’t regret subscribing
Welcome aboard! 😁
Hi i really liked your videos and i wanted you to know as someone who played subbautica years ago, you made mr want to install and play the game 1 more time. Your videos are really well made and im sure you will get the attension you deserve in a couple weeks
Glad I could help you get back into it :)
Keep up the good work.😊
Thanks ☺️
Great cinematic shots in the begining
Glad you enjoyed it :D
This intro gives me real 'Only the eel remains'vibes well done
What a intro nice job and I love it
i clicked on this video thinking it was about return to the ancients mod instead i got lore and was invested. without knowing it i watched the whole video.
Maybe I’ll do a video on the mod lore once it fully releases 🤔
my head canon is that they aren't extinct, just simply hunt in super deep waters, the crater really isn't that big in comparison to the world as a whole, since the two skeletons are big, but still juvenile, i believe that they simply got trapped in the lost river when they were hunting and either outgrew the entrance or simply didn't find a way out. i believe the Garg is still a species that is alive, just in much deeper waters
That would be so cool!
"since the two skeletons are big, but still juvenile" - lie.
@@user-oq7xc5qp3y could be, i dont know full, i thought it said in the pda entry that they were juvenile, but they could be fully grown. But you have to think, a planet that big with skeletons that big, you really think that whole species died out?
@@itsbojac5579 pda doesn't say anything about it.
Also, there is a smaller skeleton, implying that bigger one is adult.
@@user-oq7xc5qp3y My god, here you are yet again, on another comment. "implying that the bigger one is adult" - lie. There is nothing implying one is an adult, just that one is bigger than another. YOU are making that assumption. Since you're acting like you know literally everything about a video game that was NEVER stated, I'll take the time to point out that you're talking out of your ass and don't know a damn thing. It's all made up bullshit, and you're running through these comments like you know absolutely anything.
Fun fact for you little guy - there aren't simply 2 sizes to an organism. Something isn't born at one size, and then one day just transforms into another size. There is a slow growth from birth until full maturity, meaning every size in between exists. If 2 humans die, one at 4 years old and another at 12, that means one is a juvenile and another is an adult? No, it does not. It means they both died, at different sizes. The logical stupidity in your comments is just painfully annoying. Acting like you know shit about made up theories in a video game is the lamest thing I've ever seen.
If whalefalls are impressive, imagine how would be a gargantuarfall.
One thing that absolutely terrifies me is the fact that the skeleton in the game has battle scars on its head.
Something killed it.
probably it getting stuck in a cave, and something might have struck it during that, it probably died of starvation. it probably didnt have enough nutrients to sustain it, and the scar? from possibly debris from some caves underwater. or another garg killed the juvenile.
@@user-oc3sp4lh8o the skeleton isn't juvenile.
There's literally nothing that points to that.
On the other hand, level designers do imply that it is adult.
@@user-oq7xc5qp3y im pretty sure when you scan it the pda will tell you that it's a juvenile
@orrie1911 No. The large skull is not a juvenile. However, a smaller skull, is indeed the juvenile, the smaller skull is somewhere nearby, can't remember exactly where though
@@orrie1911 can you give direct quote?
PDA entry is on the wiki by the way.
I could be wrong about this but, the Ghost Leviathans were considered bottom feeders in the void, basically they used to be the krill, while the Gargantuan Leviathan was the Whale.
To Do NOT want to know what the hell else is out there if a Ghost is a little bottom feeder.
6:23, which animals that we've seen that i would say are a distant descendant of this monster, are shadow leviathan, sea dragon, ghost and probably river prowler. each have a distinct feature that match a part of the garg.
Player: “Enter’s new area”
Also player: “immediately takes nap”
Reminds me of the Ouroboros from God eater. In game, they are the biggest, but nothing too crazy as they still have to fit in the maps, but the silhouette of one was seen in the anime, and it was titanic, almost as if seeing an actual mountain
We need a giant robot mod so we can have a pacific rim kaiju fight lol
U know it’s bad when leviathan is just the best way u can describe something so huge and is just a title given to anything inexplicably huge
You are one of the TH-camrs that makes the highest level of videos but just not getting the support that you deserve
One thing I never see people mention that you actually did is the gaps in the teeth. I think they are sheathing for the other teeth so that they interlock with eachother and stop creatures from being able to escape their jaws. This can be seen in the real world on the barracuda which lends to the theory that the gargantuan is an ambush predator which can move itself at a fairly high speed despite its size. It being an ambush predator also makes sense for its size as it would have to expend far less energy for its food and making it able to quickly eat packs of animals or even multiple leviathans at once if they’re close enough
Holy shit, that intro gave me genuine chills
That intro is chefs kiss
How to know something is big? Most creatures are named after a part of them both in game and real life with examples being the bone shark and peeper.
The gargantuan leviathan is so massive its name is just two prefixes for large and yet so fitting, no one notices.
Did u made multiple youtube channel?
Coz i guess i ve heard ur voice on another several channel
So I've always subscribed to the theory that the Garg primarily functioned as an Ambush predator the way Angler fish and alligators do. My main reason for this is the luminescent tentacles and the elongated jaw. Assuming jaw muscles similar to an alligator, the Garg would have only needed one bite before dragging and death rolling prey into submission and eating them. It also proposes a theory for why it was so big. If its ancestors were all ambush predators, their pool of prey would have been much smaller than the other giants in the ocean. Over time, size would be the most favored gene as all the smaller creatures would be starved out, eventually leading to the garg.
As for hunting strategies, it would simply need to have an open mouth with luminescent tentacles floating inside, and wait for prey to come nearby before chomping down. alternatively it could spread out these tentacles allowing it to have a much larger net. It would also give a reason for it to have multiple eyes, even though it does not make any sense. The lights along the body could be a warning to competing predators to stay away by illuminating the entire body for display. There would be no better warning than showing just how large it is. Most predators would never wager their lives on this meal no matter how substantial, effectively securing the gargs safety
You are one brave bastard to go that far into the void
My take:
Deep sea gigantism indicates that the larger a creature is, the less energy it costs to operate overall.
Life that would evolve to support leviathans like these would not have started in the inky black void. Life starts in locations of abundant energy. There were likely many shallow places where sunlight and primordial ooze gave way to first simple phytolifeforms, then microscopic plants, then herbivorous bacteria, then carnivorous, and thus the race was on.
The most important factor here is the length of the juvenile.
It most likely lived by circling the subnautica volcanic plataeu, and occasionally hunting leviathans in the deep biomes near the edge. If it wanted, it could prop itself up lengthwise against the plateau and just sat with its mouth open, like a snapping turtle, bating its food in by wriggling its tongue. Or, it would occasionally cross over the shallower sections, pluck a reaper (the best eating on the plateau, its body mass being majority flesh).
What is very clear is how it died. At some point, one of its prey critters pulled an absolute gigabrain move, and fled into a cave system. Since the Garg and Reaper both likely shared an ancestor, it didn't have much brains. It dove in after, thrashing and crushing its way through the cave trying to reach it a food, until it finally became stuck. Based on the orientation, it used the lost river cave entrance in the bulb zone, north of the Aurora and east of the mountain island. I would guess it was hunting a Ghost, since the natural life cycle of Ghosts demands they re-enter that cavern to lay eggs. It might have retreated to ancestral waters, someplace that represented safety to the Ghost. It's death would have been slow and agonizing, and the whalefall of a kilometer long creature created a permanent macrobiome.
could be, it probably fed off ghost leviathans, since those things are the only things that it could feed off. its eyes are n the side of its head, like a prey animal. it probably fed on ghost leviathans, like a whale feeding off or on krill. or they maybe lived off of eating other injured gargs/juveniles, since they could probably eat a garg with their massive size, not to mention how big gargs are, feeding off eachother would have probably provided them years worths of food.
"Its sheer size would have prohibited it from entering such an enclosed space, suggesting the geography of the planet has shifted around it over time."
PDA entry, that describes gargantuan fossil.
@@user-oq7xc5qp3y That entry is old, from before the river was finished. It would absolutely have fit coming the other way, and it's even about a kilometer from the bulb zone adjacent entrance to the river.
@@Xahnel Oh, so that entry is old? So developers updated the lore of garg? And changed PDA entry to a new one?
May I see this new entry?
@@user-oq7xc5qp3y First off, the PDA entry is pure speculation. Secondly, there are multiple entrances and the intended entrance is the one that leads from the degassi habitat, so _that path_ would be impossible. But you can then _follow_ the path behind the garg, and see that it's more than wide enough. _Third,_ I would like to point out that despite being a volcanic _mountain,_ shaped vaguely like a cone with the highest points in the center and the lowest points towards the edges (excepting the mountain island), the playable area of subnautica is called a _crater,_ which is shaped the exact OPPOSITE, with the lowest points towards the center, and the highest points being the ridge that surrounds the impact site. So let's not pretend like the PDA can't be _wrong_ on topics of geology. A volcanic plateau mountain with caves is not a crater.
4th, considering this _is_ a conical volcano, the geology violates the general physics one sees in building up a volcano over time. The mountain of land above the skeleton could not have formed without magmatic activity. There is no indication the garg was built in any way to be immune to lava flows. The creature could not have settled there, fossilized, been buried by a volcanic eruption, _then_ uncovered, and finally created a whalefall microbiome. That violates physics. Bones don't handle lava, period, which means it's not buried post eruption, and a fossil of that size would not have survived so marvelously intact through a violent enough eruption to deposit that much mass above the caves. Nor could the skeleton survive the erosion of the cave that would have uncovered it. Fossil is more fragile than the surrounding rock, it would have eroded _faster,_ not slower. And yet the skeleton sits almost completely exposed, as if it died, settled to the floor, and the world built a cocoon around it.
The formation of the caves and placement of the garg skeleton out in the open indicates the cave must have existed when the Garg died, trapped inside it. Because it literally could not exist in any other way on a volcano. And here is the kicker! There is a dead end location deep in the lost river that has a smaller SECOND gargantuan leviathan skull! And you can trace portions of the ribcage of the bigger one to the lost river intersection. Why would the cave follow the body? Why is there more than one?
And the final piece of evidence, a microbiome that evolved around decay. Just like how whalefalls and elephant graveyards create a microbiome of the dead being recycled by scavengers, the lost river is a microbiome of scavengers and predators. A microbiome the Garg created with its death, the scent of decay drawing critters in to feast in a self perpetuating cycle that has lasted 3 million years. Now, tell me, how does a fossil with no meat on it cause the formation of a whalefall microbiome?
No, based on the evidence, the devs clearly have no idea about geology. They can't tell the difference between a mountain and a crater, they don't know how volcanoes form, they don't get how cave erosion works, they don't know how fossils work, and that all, combined with the microbiome, creates a giant mess of wrongness in the Garg skeleton placement.
See, the Garg is a setpiece. They set the piece, then tried to justify it, and failed, utterly.
Imagine they made Subnautica-Prehistoric edition.
Epic video! I do have one question: Where did we get the whole head tendril idea? It's never really mentioned in the PDA, so there's no possible way to confirm it as canon, yet the majority of people think it is. What's the deal there?
I may be wrong, but I believe it comes from a specific piece of Subnautica concept art showing the Cyclops being grabbed by a huge mass of tendrils. Thats probably where the idea came from but I'm not sure. It could just be because tendrils are off-putting and somewhat scary on their own.
The gargantuan is complete speculation anyway, not even the name is said in the PDA, let alone its appearance. The only thing that we know mostly for certain is its size and what it would have done.
I don't know is it's was said in the audio log, but that size is only it's juvenile size, not only that but they never truly stop growing... Ever... The time stamp for the known garg is around 4:50
Theres no proof that its a juvenile. Also i doubt they would get much bigger than the full size of the skeleton in the river, especially in modern 4546b.
@@tree_addict280 last time I checked the description of it literally says that only about a third of the skeleton is exposed
@@jn-jeffdg0076 exactly, and exposed part is 402 meters.
Not a word about this thing being juvenile, nor about it growing infinetely. Do you know why?
Because that's a lie, and you help spreading it.
Im surprised he didn't walk about the Return of the ancients mod which adds this creature in the void
It makes no sense why it would still live, let alone in the void. The mod is cool dont get me wrong, but it just doesnt make sense.
Im gonna guess the garg was an ambush predator that basically didn't really move and lured in prey with its appendages, only striking when it was sure of the kill. You gotta take in account that when a creature doubles in size, its volume quadruples. So it becomes harder and harder for it to move.
Ah, the feeling of existential dread is it?
oh its defintely unable to be forgotten , now thata dedicated team of modders have brought it back to life in the void, and holy crap is it big
Lol imagine if the gargantuan bones we saw is a juvenile gargantuan leviathan
It isn't
@@user-oq7xc5qp3y it is.
it is a juvenile. an adult garg wouldnt be in the lost river nor would the lost river be able to sustain an adult garg. most adul gargs probably live far beyond the void feeding off ghost leviathans, like a whale eating krill.
@@user-oc3sp4lh8o what part of "the geography of the planet has shifted around it over time" didn't you get?
Level designers said it was an adult.
Subnautica 3 gonna be lit
you know, i really, REALLY did not need to know the true size of a blood crawler this late at night
This reminds me of the mother serpent from toriko and i like to think that some prey didnt even notice it got eaten until they started to get digested.
The remains in the lost river are 3 adult ghosts long yet that’s only a 1/3 of its entire body
Only thing missing is that, due to their slow metabolism, the rate of their growth would likely make it need decades or even centuries to reach full size, or perhaps they never stopped growing.
In that case, all the predators around it would evolve to specialize in locating and eating the juvenile to prevent them from growing up.
Nothing tells us that garg stops growing, yes. But, this isn't an argument to consider it true.
Thalassalphobia my beloved.
nice
I only have one tiny nitpick with this video which is the comment about the Garg being able to go "days or weeks without food". There are creatures on earth that can live like that like snakes and almost identically to this: deep sea creatures. We obviously don't have anything even remotely close to the size of the Garg (and if anyone tries to say "it's down there we just haven't seen it" is going to give me an aneurysm lmao), but given that most of THOSE creatures can go up to months without food I genuinely wouldn't be surprised if something as big as the Garg would be able to go years (or maybe even decades but I'm not informed enough to make that big of a leap) without food. So long as they conserve their energy that is.
edit because I meant to ask this before commenting but does anyone know where the idea of the Garg having the head-tentacles came from? Is that something that was implied in the game or just what someone in the fandom came up with? I'm not complaining because it looks cool but I'm just curious.
I'm not sure but the gargantuan leviathan should be bigger than Aurora
1:50 a Lowes ad immediately played as soon as the screen went black😭😭💀💀💀
Truly the most terrifying foe 💀
bro this game has good water levels man
I’d say there wound be like, one or two at a time, like they are giant and each meal would also be large. Mere competition would keep it hidden, though I feel there might be one left, feeding off Reaper Leviathans, down in the deepest of the void. Just a random theory
That would be awesome!
Can someone please tell me what mod he used for the submarine and where to get it?
If you are piloting the cyclops and enter freecam, it still allows you to manipulate the vehicle up to a short distance, which is how I got those shots
@@Breathtaker5000 thanks I’ll see it when I hop back on subnautica :D
I always liked that word, gargantuan. I so rarely get to use it in a sentence.