Welcome to —the most nerve-shredding, adrenaline-pounding rescue simulation to ever trade helicopter fuel for a pair of backcountry skis.

But the execution? That’s where panic sets in. Every rescue begins with a frantic 911 call filtered through static. A snowboarder’s garbled scream. A lift operator’s choked report of a snapped cable. Then, your HUD lights up: Victim core temperature: 89°F and dropping. Avalanche risk: Extreme. Time to whiteout: 90 seconds.

You command a squad of elite patrolers—each with unique flaws and strengths. There’s , a former Olympic downhiller who can reach any victim in record time but ignores his own frostbite. There’s Dr. Elara Voss , a trauma surgeon who can field-amputate a limb in a blizzard but freezes up around heights. Choosing the wrong responder for the wrong job doesn’t just cost you a medal—it costs a digital life that you will remember. Every Choice Carves a Scar What makes Slope 911 terrifyingly addictive is its dynamic injury system. This isn’t a simple health bar. A victim doesn’t just “die.” They fade.

You will lose people. The mountain will take them. But in the moments you succeed—when you pull a half-frozen teenager out of a crevasse, or when you hear a heartbeat through the snow— Slope 911 delivers a rush no other game can touch.