Description

IMPORTANT!! PLEASE READ!!
I recommend installing optifine, this is the preferred version
I'd also recommend some decent memory allocation.
SUMMARY
This is a remaster of "Escape the Earth", a modpack I made focusing around the parasite mod, Scape and Run: Parasites. This new remastering adds new content, more quality of life additions, and overall a completely new (more difficult) experience. Your goal is simple, parasites have started a ruckus, and you should leave. Though surviving in the hellish world is more difficult than it seems, it is possible, and you will fail several times trying to get there.
What Will Come
- Custom Main Menu
- (Possibly) Music
- Quest/Story

"Hello? Anyone receiving this?" The machinery and computers in front of the man tell him that the message is being sent, yet no responding signal is sent back. It has been around twenty days since no messages have been sent to the station, the lights that used to decorate the planet fell dim around that time as well. The situation on the station was fraught with worry and stress, nothing- not a single sound has come back from mission control.
The man is uncertain, while the stations supplies are plentiful it does not mean they will last forever. He glances through the porthole to the blue below him, wondering what happened. That is until a noise from the machinery interrupts him, he frantically rushes over to the machine, blaring a sound which only means that something was just sent to them.
Static comes over the small intercom unit, "Hello? Is anyone there? This is Louie Bowen of the C.S.R.L, can anyone hear this?" Silence is the only responder, until an abrupt cacophony of screeches overtakes the room. He covers his ears in agony, and the noise dies down. Through the intercom, a faint noise is heard. "Hello? Is any-" the voice cuts off. "anyone hear C Louie Bowen hear Bowen S.R. this? The voice continues, mimicking trying to mimic whatever the man had said. Until finally, silence followed up by only one word. "Louie." The voice calls to the man, repeating his name- until followed by nothing but the beep of the intercom indicating the broadcast had ended.


