{"type":"location","location":{"title":"The Descent - 200 Meters","description":"You float in the darkness of the Banda Sea, your diving suit's external lights cutting through the black water in a narrow cone ahead. The pressure gauge on your wrist reads steady, but your instruments are behaving strangely—the depth readout flickers between 200 and 340 meters, though your dive computer insists you're exactly where you should be. Below, the vague silhouette of the cargo vessel emerges from the gloom, its hull encrusted with coral and sediment. The wreck looms larger as you descend, a ghostly monument to six months of ocean silence. Your air supply is full. Your contract is simple: retrieve the navigational instruments from the bridge and return topside. No one mentioned why a routine salvage operation warranted such generous compensation. The corroded superstructure of the ship grows closer, and you notice something odd—deep gouges along the hull, as if the vessel had scraped against something massive. The scratches don't match any reef formation you know of. Your regulator's steady rhythm is the only sound in the crushing darkness.","suggestedActions":["Swim toward the bridge to locate the navigational instruments","Examine the strange gouges along the hull more closely","Check your instruments and see if you can stabilize the depth readings","Swim toward the cargo hold to get an overview of the wreck","Search for the captain's quarters to locate the dive log mentioned in your briefing"],"conversation":"m726j220y4ocvt5996p3m"},"conversationLength":1,"maxFreeConversationLength":10}