Video walkthrough
Watch the route, then follow the written steps
Video chapters
Video references
Watch or inspect the route before you dive
Click YouTube cards to load the player. Open frame cards to compare local screenshot notes. Use the evidence to confirm landmarks, movement, and encounter pacing, then follow the written checklist below.
All equipment blueprints reference
Watch for: Equipment blueprint checklisting, databox proof, and route batching.
Scan proof frame review
Watch for: Start with Equipment blueprint locations / Full checklist at 01:14. Compare the screenshot cue, route note, and player action before following the guide in-game.
Blueprint menu frame review
Watch for: Start with Equipment blueprint locations / Full checklist at 02:29. Compare the screenshot cue, route note, and player action before following the guide in-game.
Video watch notes
What to pause, compare, and write down
Do not watch the video like entertainment only. Use these notes as a second-screen checklist: pause on landmarks, confirm the player action, then return to the written route.
Watchlist
Pause on Databox check and identify the landmark, depth band, or objective state before following the next step.
Use Scan proof to confirm what changed; if the video only shows a close-up, rebuild the route from the previous landmark.
Treat Blueprint menu as the exit rule: finish the objective, return, and update storage or crafting before adding side goals.

Databox check
Equipment routes are easier when databoxes and fragments are separated by purpose.
Action: Sort equipment by the route blocker it solves.

Scan proof
Scan proof prevents repeated searches through the same wreck or room.
Action: Scan fragments and check progress immediately.

Blueprint menu
Use the blueprint menu as the final confirmation before moving on.
Action: Craft the next useful tool before chasing optional blueprints.
Video route timeline
Turn the video into playable checkpoints
Use this section like a second-screen route sheet. Open each checkpoint, compare the frame, do the action, then stop if your route no longer matches the video evidence. It keeps the guide useful even when Early Access shifts small placements or creature behavior.
00:25Checkpoint 1: Sort equipment by the route blocker it solves.Equipment routes are easier when databoxes and fragments are separated by purpose.Expand

Databox check
Equipment routes are easier when databoxes and fragments are separated by purpose.
Player action
Sort equipment by the route blocker it solves.
Proof before moving on
Equipment routes are easier when databoxes and fragments are separated by purpose.
Watch this timestampIf this fails
Reset to the last confirmed landmark or objective state, then repeat only the route-critical step.
01:14Checkpoint 2: Scan fragments and check progress immediately.Scan proof prevents repeated searches through the same wreck or room.Expand

Scan proof
Scan proof prevents repeated searches through the same wreck or room.
Player action
Scan fragments and check progress immediately.
Proof before moving on
Scan proof prevents repeated searches through the same wreck or room.
Watch this timestampIf this fails
Use the video frame as evidence, but record entry, proof, and exit as separate notes.
02:29Checkpoint 3: Craft the next useful tool before chasing optional blueprints.Use the blueprint menu as the final confirmation before moving on.Expand

Blueprint menu
Use the blueprint menu as the final confirmation before moving on.
Player action
Craft the next useful tool before chasing optional blueprints.
Proof before moving on
Use the blueprint menu as the final confirmation before moving on.
Watch this timestampIf this fails
Return, craft, sort storage, or retest the route before turning this page into a longer objective chain.
00:25Checkpoint 4: Return for cleanup after core progression tools are ready.Equipment routes are easier when databoxes and fragments are separated by purpose.Expand

Databox check
Equipment routes are easier when databoxes and fragments are separated by purpose.
Player action
Return for cleanup after core progression tools are ready.
Proof before moving on
Equipment routes are easier when databoxes and fragments are separated by purpose.
Watch this timestampIf this fails
Reset to the last confirmed landmark or objective state, then repeat only the route-critical step.
Gameplay evidence
Screenshots to match before you keep swimming
Use these frames as visual checkpoints. If the terrain, lighting, or landmark does not match, slow down and re-check the route instead of forcing the next step.

Databox check
Equipment routes are easier when databoxes and fragments are separated by purpose.

Scan proof
Scan proof prevents repeated searches through the same wreck or room.

Blueprint menu
Use the blueprint menu as the final confirmation before moving on.
Route decision lab
Decide if this route is worth running now
This section turns the video into a practical in-game decision. Use it before leaving base, after the first landmark, and again before entering a deeper or darker area.
Route purpose
Clear equipment blueprints by priority: oxygen, scanner, repair, mobility, station upgrades, then optional comfort. Check progress after every scan and stop when the next route blocker is solved.
Visual checkpoint
Equipment routes are easier when databoxes and fragments are separated by purpose.
Map anchor
All Equipment Blueprints Anchor in Equipment checklist route. Use it for use this when multiple tools are missing and you need to batch scans by progression value.
Abort rule
Trying to collect every blueprint before crafting key tools.
Field manual translation
Clear equipment blueprints by priority: oxygen, scanner, repair, mobility, station upgrades, then optional comfort. Check progress after every scan and stop when the next route blocker is solved. Use this completion route manual as a second-screen checklist: identify the entry condition, confirm the objective with a visual proof point, then stop when the return rule is met. This keeps the article practical for Early Access patches without pretending every coordinate or state is final.
Primary job
Equipment - Sort equipment by the route blocker it solves.
Best entry habit
Scanner - Scan fragments and check progress immediately.
Stop condition
Trying to collect every blueprint before crafting key tools. - Craft the next useful tool before chasing optional blueprints.
Patch-safe reading
Exact item positions can shift during Early Access. The useful part of this page is the route logic: what to prepare, what visual cue to confirm, what objective to finish, and when to turn back.
Updated
2026-06-12 / tracking / Early Access
What this guide covers
Requirements
- Scanner
- Blueprint checklist
- Upgrade priority
Use this if
You want a route you can follow from video evidence without needing exact official coordinates. The screenshots and steps are written to help you recognize areas, landmarks, and decisions while playing.
Early Access can move details. Treat this as a video-based walkthrough and verify landmarks in your own build.
Step-by-step walkthrough
Follow the video route without guessing
Sort equipment by the route blocker it solves.
Use this step as a route checkpoint, not as a promise that every object spawns in one exact coordinate. Match the landmark, compare the screenshot, then continue only if the return path is still clear.
If your game build looks different, stay with the same decision: keep oxygen safe, scan or collect the current blocker, and return before pushing into the next unknown area.

Equipment routes are easier when databoxes and fragments are separated by purpose.
Scan fragments and check progress immediately.
Use this step as a route checkpoint, not as a promise that every object spawns in one exact coordinate. Match the landmark, compare the screenshot, then continue only if the return path is still clear.
If your game build looks different, stay with the same decision: keep oxygen safe, scan or collect the current blocker, and return before pushing into the next unknown area.

Scan proof prevents repeated searches through the same wreck or room.
Craft the next useful tool before chasing optional blueprints.
Use this step as a route checkpoint, not as a promise that every object spawns in one exact coordinate. Match the landmark, compare the screenshot, then continue only if the return path is still clear.
If your game build looks different, stay with the same decision: keep oxygen safe, scan or collect the current blocker, and return before pushing into the next unknown area.

Use the blueprint menu as the final confirmation before moving on.
Return for cleanup after core progression tools are ready.
Use this step as a route checkpoint, not as a promise that every object spawns in one exact coordinate. Match the landmark, compare the screenshot, then continue only if the return path is still clear.
If your game build looks different, stay with the same decision: keep oxygen safe, scan or collect the current blocker, and return before pushing into the next unknown area.

Equipment routes are easier when databoxes and fragments are separated by purpose.
After-action plan
What to do after the guide works
Bank the result
Return for cleanup after core progression tools are ready.
Clean the inventory
Move route-critical materials into labeled storage so the next dive starts with empty space and a clear job.
Pick the next guide
A blueprint route guide for equipment unlocks, databox checks, scanner stops, and post-route crafting priorities.
Next route queue
Use these as the next blockers to solve after this route. Each queue card keeps the same evidence style: source video, gameplay frames, and a written checklist.
Best immediate follow-upEquipment Blueprint Locations
A blueprint route guide for equipment unlocks, databox checks, scanner stops, and post-route crafting priorities.
Use if the route branchesRepair Tool Blueprint Route
A Repair Tool blueprint route for fragment progress, Sulfur dependency, early repairs, and avoiding mixed scan-and-material confusion.
Save for the next diveModification Station Fragments Route
A Modification Station fragment route for upgrade crafting, blueprint progress, and deciding which tool or module should be improved first.
Detailed notes
equipment blueprint checklist route plan
All Equipment Blueprints Guide is useful when the route is treated as a focused job instead of a full-map sweep. Start by naming the blocker, checking the loadout, and matching the first landmark before copying the video. The player goal is not to memorize every second of movement; it is to understand why the route begins there, what proves progress, and when the route should stop.
Route type: equipment blueprint checklist
Proof to confirm: tool, station, or module blueprint completion
Primary blocker: Scanner
Best follow-up: Return for cleanup after core progression tools are ready.
How to use this in-game
Turn this note into one action before leaving base: decide the objective, keep only the materials or tools that support it, then stop the route once the scan, pickup, or landmark is confirmed. This keeps the guide useful even when Early Access patches move small details.
How to use the video evidence
Watch for the entry frame, the proof frame, and the exit frame. The entry frame tells you whether you are in the right terrain band. The proof frame tells you whether the scan, pickup, blueprint, puzzle state, or build decision actually happened. The exit frame protects the run from turning into a panic search after the objective is already solved.
Entry frame: match terrain before diving deeper
Proof frame: confirm tool, station, or module blueprint completion
Exit frame: return before adding side goals
How to use this in-game
Turn this note into one action before leaving base: decide the objective, keep only the materials or tools that support it, then stop the route once the scan, pickup, or landmark is confirmed. This keeps the guide useful even when Early Access patches move small details.
Stop rule
Stop after the equipment item that solves the current blocker is crafted. If the route fails, change one variable before trying again: bring the missing tool, empty inventory, approach from a clearer landmark, or wait until oxygen, vehicle depth, or defensive options match the route. That makes the next attempt safer and gives the page useful field notes instead of repeated guesswork.
How to use this in-game
Turn this note into one action before leaving base: decide the objective, keep only the materials or tools that support it, then stop the route once the scan, pickup, or landmark is confirmed. This keeps the guide useful even when Early Access patches move small details.
Video route notes
All Equipment Blueprints Guide should be followed as a completion route, not as a memory test. Start by watching the first route movement and naming the entry condition before copying the path in-game. Sort equipment by the route blocker it solves. Then pause again when the video reaches the first visible proof point, because that is where the guide changes from general advice into an action you can repeat. Scan fragments and check progress immediately. If the route starts to feel different in your build, keep the same player goal: finish the unlock cleanly and know whether a return trip is needed.
Entry check: Scanner
Route action: Sort equipment by the route blocker it solves.
Proof to look for: scan or pickup proof
Version note: Early Access / tracking
How to use this in-game
Turn this note into one action before leaving base: decide the objective, keep only the materials or tools that support it, then stop the route once the scan, pickup, or landmark is confirmed. This keeps the guide useful even when Early Access patches move small details.
Screenshot checkpoints
Use screenshots as checkpoints instead of decoration. The first image should answer where the route begins, the second should show what confirms progress, and the third should explain what to do after the scan, pickup, puzzle state, or threat read is visible. Craft the next useful tool before chasing optional blueprints. This is especially important in Early Access because exact positions can drift while landmarks, depth bands, room states, and player decisions stay useful. A good screenshot lets you say, "I am at the right kind of place," before you risk oxygen, storage space, or vehicle safety.
Entry frame: match the landmark before moving deeper
Proof frame: confirm scan or pickup proof
Exit frame: know the return direction before adding side goals
Loadout frame: check Blueprint checklist
How to use this in-game
Turn this note into one action before leaving base: decide the objective, keep only the materials or tools that support it, then stop the route once the scan, pickup, or landmark is confirmed. This keeps the guide useful even when Early Access patches move small details.
Stop rule and next dive
The most useful part of this page is the stop rule. Trying to collect every blueprint before crafting key tools. Ignoring progress checks after scans. When the objective is confirmed, return and convert it into progress: craft the upgrade, sort the material, save the route note, or mark the blocker as solved. If the route fails, do not repeat the same swim blindly. Change one variable at a time: enter from a clearer landmark, reduce inventory clutter, bring the missing tool, or wait until oxygen and vehicle support match the route. That turns a failed completion route into better field knowledge instead of another untracked cleanup sweep.
How to use this in-game
Turn this note into one action before leaving base: decide the objective, keep only the materials or tools that support it, then stop the route once the scan, pickup, or landmark is confirmed. This keeps the guide useful even when Early Access patches move small details.
Common mistakes
Trying to collect every blueprint before crafting key tools.
Ignoring progress checks after scans.
Mixing equipment routes with cosmetic base sweeps.
FAQ
Is this guide for the current Subnautica 2 build?
This page is written for Early Access and includes a visible update date. Treat exact values as tracking notes until the current build is field-tested.
Does this page use official screenshots?
Pages combine attributed official Steam / Unknown Worlds media, local gameplay frame captures, and source-video evidence cards. New player-submitted captures should keep the route, timestamp, and build context attached.
Community notes
Add a field report
Player reports enter a moderation queue. Approved notes can load from Supabase; pending drafts stay visible in this browser for follow-up.
Near starter shallows
Approx. 70-120m from pod
Confirm oxygen before leaving the first landmark. The route is much safer when you mark the return path before collecting side materials.
Guide-wide
N/A
Creature patrol ranges and fragment placement can shift between builds, so treat exact distances as field estimates until multiple players confirm them.