
Surge jelly (tentatively Staurobrachia capacitor). Large, complex jelly that hunts with electric shocks.
Health
?1,000
Health
Maximum hit points. The creature dies and drops its loot when this reaches zero. Players can chip it down with knives, harpoons or vehicle-mounted weapons.
Swim speed
?5.0 m/s
Swim speed
Top movement speed underwater, in metres per second. Used when chasing prey, fleeing threats, or migrating between territory zones. For reference: the Seaglide tops out around 11 m/s.
Food pool
?20
Food pool
Hunger meter. Drains over time, refills when the creature feeds on prey or plants. When the pool empties, the creature actively hunts, which is why hungry predators are more aggressive.
Bulk
?40
Bulk
Engine mass / weight class. Drives water displacement (so creatures push you around), the carry-weight footprint when the corpse becomes an item, and AI prey-selection heuristics (bigger bulk means bigger fight).
Scan time
?5s
Scan time
How long you have to hold the Scanner on this creature before its dossier unlocks. Move with the target, stay inside the reticle, and don't break line of sight or the scan resets.
Stats inherited from the big-creature default. Unknown Worlds hasn't shipped a per-creature override in this build.
Surge Jelly is a grand herbivore creature in Subnautica 2. It has 1,000 HP, swims at up to 5.0 m/s, and consumes from a 20 food pool. Grazing fauna. Non-aggressive unless cornered.
Behaviour profile: Herbivore, Large body.
Known fixed spawn points for Surge Jelly in the current build.
Surge jelly (tentatively Staurobrachia capacitor). Large, complex jelly that hunts with electric shocks.
1. Single animal Unlike colonial organisms such as the Portuguese man'o'war, the surge jelly is a single animal with specialized tissues—far *more* specialized and complex than Earth jellies. Proposed class name: staurobrachia (pole arms).
2. Complex internal structure Outer bell ringed with sense organs called rhopalia. A nerve net coordinates the bell's motions to swim and seek prey. The visible inner structure is the gut.
3. Feeding structure The jelly retains its stalk — a remnant of its growth in a stack of clones. The stalk draws in nutrients for the gut.
4. Charged fins Two rigid fins contain wirelike electrocytes, likely a development of ancestral tentacles. These organs build voltage to stun or kill prey. Measured power ranges from 400 to 1000 volts at 1 ampere: enough to kill a human.
5. Peculiar passengers Traces of radioactivity, high-temperature waxes and sulfuric acid imply contact with a hydrothermal vent. Composition of the jelly's tissues suggest origins in the deep ocean.
6. Former domestics? Jellies in close proximity communicate through their electric fields. Whether jellies have individual names or a grammatical language is purely speculative, but some patterns may be trained or learned—even passed down through generations of jellies.
Assessment: minor danger in close contact. Fascinating research prospect from a distance.
Last updated 2026-05-14