Record fill-ups for all your cars and monitor your car’s efficiency.
Need to track business mileage? Just start auto trip and we will track all your trips in the background whenever you are on the move.
Don’t lose sight of your maintenance and services. Log your services and we will remind you when its due.
Know your vehicle's running costs and plan for your expenses.
Sign into the cloud and get easy access to all your data from anywhere and any device.
Run your reports or schedule them weekly or monthly to know more about your fill-ups , mileage and expenses.
Unlike games like Silent Hill , which use fog to obscure vision, Abyss School uses . As you progress, the school begins to flood. By the third act, you are wading through ankle-deep black water that reflects not your face, but your character’s worst memories. Part 2: Gameplay Mechanics – Stealth, Sanity, and Sinking Abyss School is not a shoot-’em-up. You have no weapons. The core loop revolves around three main mechanics that elevate it above standard hide-and-seek horror. 2.1 The Sanity Hydrometer Your most important resource is not health packs—it is your sanity. Located in the bottom right corner of the UI, a hydrometer fills up the longer you stand in darkness or stare directly at the monsters. When the meter reaches 100%, reality warps. Hallways loop infinitely, doors lead to the same classroom, and you hear the sound of screaming children mixed with whale song (a terrifying audio design choice). To lower your sanity, you must find "Stabilizer Lamps"—portable, battery-powered lights that are scarce. 2.2 Water Level as a Timer The flooding is not just aesthetic. Every puzzle solved raises the water level in the next area. This creates a paradoxical fear: you want to solve puzzles to escape, but solving them brings the Abyss (and the deep-sea monsters) closer. By the final chapter, you are swimming through submerged corridors, holding your breath (via a breath-hold mini-game) while The Warden’s tentacles scrape the ceiling. 2.3 The "Locker" Dilemma Hiding spots (lockers, under desks) are abundant, but they are booby-trapped. If you hide too often or for too long, the locker begins to fill with black water, forcing you out. This pushes players to keep moving, making Abyss School one of the most anxiety-inducing stealth experiences on the market. Part 3: The Lore – Why This School? Why the Abyss? To understand Abyss School , you must read the collectible "Sealed Notes" scattered throughout the levels. These diaries belong to students from the class of 1997—a generation before Yuna’s time.
But something is horribly wrong.
As of late 2025, the developers have confirmed a "Directors Cut" of the original Abyss School is in the works, featuring a new chapter titled "The Boiler Room," which explores what happened to the school’s janitorial staff during the initial sink. If you are a fan of psychological horror that lingers long after you turn off the monitor, Abyss School is essential. It is frustratingly difficult at times, its puzzles can be obtuse, and the water physics may tax older gaming PCs. Yet, these flaws add to its charm. It is a game that does not hold your hand; it holds your head underwater. Abyss School
Fans argue that Ending C is the most horrific because survival came at the cost of her youth and voice. In an era where horror games rely on "big streamer reaction" moments, Abyss School is a slow burn. It respects the genre’s roots in Clock Tower and Siren . But more than that, it uses its setting to critique real-world issues. Unlike games like Silent Hill , which use
The windows are sealed with rusted iron plates. The hallway lights flicker in erratic patterns. And the other students? They are gone. In their place are "The Echoes"—shambling, faceless entities that writhe with what looks like deep-sea parasites. Part 2: Gameplay Mechanics – Stealth, Sanity, and
Unlike games like Silent Hill , which use fog to obscure vision, Abyss School uses . As you progress, the school begins to flood. By the third act, you are wading through ankle-deep black water that reflects not your face, but your character’s worst memories. Part 2: Gameplay Mechanics – Stealth, Sanity, and Sinking Abyss School is not a shoot-’em-up. You have no weapons. The core loop revolves around three main mechanics that elevate it above standard hide-and-seek horror. 2.1 The Sanity Hydrometer Your most important resource is not health packs—it is your sanity. Located in the bottom right corner of the UI, a hydrometer fills up the longer you stand in darkness or stare directly at the monsters. When the meter reaches 100%, reality warps. Hallways loop infinitely, doors lead to the same classroom, and you hear the sound of screaming children mixed with whale song (a terrifying audio design choice). To lower your sanity, you must find "Stabilizer Lamps"—portable, battery-powered lights that are scarce. 2.2 Water Level as a Timer The flooding is not just aesthetic. Every puzzle solved raises the water level in the next area. This creates a paradoxical fear: you want to solve puzzles to escape, but solving them brings the Abyss (and the deep-sea monsters) closer. By the final chapter, you are swimming through submerged corridors, holding your breath (via a breath-hold mini-game) while The Warden’s tentacles scrape the ceiling. 2.3 The "Locker" Dilemma Hiding spots (lockers, under desks) are abundant, but they are booby-trapped. If you hide too often or for too long, the locker begins to fill with black water, forcing you out. This pushes players to keep moving, making Abyss School one of the most anxiety-inducing stealth experiences on the market. Part 3: The Lore – Why This School? Why the Abyss? To understand Abyss School , you must read the collectible "Sealed Notes" scattered throughout the levels. These diaries belong to students from the class of 1997—a generation before Yuna’s time.
But something is horribly wrong.
As of late 2025, the developers have confirmed a "Directors Cut" of the original Abyss School is in the works, featuring a new chapter titled "The Boiler Room," which explores what happened to the school’s janitorial staff during the initial sink. If you are a fan of psychological horror that lingers long after you turn off the monitor, Abyss School is essential. It is frustratingly difficult at times, its puzzles can be obtuse, and the water physics may tax older gaming PCs. Yet, these flaws add to its charm. It is a game that does not hold your hand; it holds your head underwater.
Fans argue that Ending C is the most horrific because survival came at the cost of her youth and voice. In an era where horror games rely on "big streamer reaction" moments, Abyss School is a slow burn. It respects the genre’s roots in Clock Tower and Siren . But more than that, it uses its setting to critique real-world issues.
The windows are sealed with rusted iron plates. The hallway lights flicker in erratic patterns. And the other students? They are gone. In their place are "The Echoes"—shambling, faceless entities that writhe with what looks like deep-sea parasites.
Simply Fleet is a simple and affordable software to help you track, monitor and analyse your fleet’s operations.