Quick summary
We Were Here is a cooperative escape-adventure available at no cost. Two players find themselves separated inside an abandoned Antarctic stronghold and must rely on each other’s descriptions and a walkie-talkie to progress. The experience mixes mystery, subdued psychological scares, and the tension of an escape-room puzzle hunt. A popular paid follow-up is We Were Here Expeditions: The FriendShip.
How the game plays
Two participants take on distinct roles (for example, an Explorer and a Librarian), each seeing different parts of the castle and holding unique clues. Success depends on listening carefully, describing observations clearly, and coordinating actions across distance. Exploration uncovers the story in small fragments; no single player has all the answers, so collaboration is essential.
- Split perspectives and complementary information
- Voice-based communication using a microphone or in-game radio
- Puzzle solving through observation, deduction, and teamwork
Technical requirements and multiplayer notes
To play, both players need a PC and a working microphone — the title places heavy emphasis on live verbal communication. Progress is tied to how well you and your partner communicate, so a reliable chat setup and a cooperative partner make the difference between frustration and satisfying breakthroughs.
Content length and extras
The main storyline is relatively brief, delivering a compact cooperative session. Additional chapters and extended scenarios are offered as paid DLC for players who want more puzzles and longer campaigns.
- Main campaign is short and focused
- Optional DLC chapters expand the experience
- There are standalone sequels and spin-offs like Expeditions: The FriendShip
Why it’s worth trying
Rather than relying on loud jump scares, the game builds unease through isolation, silence, and the pressure of depending on someone else’s words. That simple premise — two people, separated spaces, one line of communication — creates a memorable cooperative puzzle experience that blends investigation, atmosphere, and tense problem-solving.
Technical
- Windows
- English
- Spanish
- German
- French
- Italian
- Russian
- Portuguese
- Dutch
- Polish
- Arabic
- Czech
- Danish
- Finnish
- Korean
- Japanese
- Norwegian
- Chinese (Simplified)
- Swedish
- Turkish
- Free