For fans of the adult visual novel genre, specifically those revolving around the DC Comics universe, few titles command as much attention as Something Unlimited. Developed by Gunsmoke Games, this game has carved out a massive following due to its intricate management mechanics, high-quality artwork, and "harem" style storytelling.
The game is currently distributed as an "Ongoing" project, with frequent patches refining the experience. The Version 2.4.6 update marks another significant step in the game’s evolution. While the version numbering can sometimes be confusing between the "Ongoing" public builds and the patron-exclusive builds, v2.4.6 represents a stable milestone in the current development cycle.
Here is everything you need to know about the current state of the game and what Version 2.4.6 brings to the table. something unlimited ongoing version 246
Who maintains an unlimited ongoing something?
The community of SUO defies easy categorization. There are software engineers who contribute protocols. Poets who submit evolving stanzas. Painters whose canvases are designed to fade and be repainted. Musicians who compose for instruments that don’t exist yet. Philosophers who argue that SUO is the only honest art form, because it admits it will never be finished. Something Unlimited: Ongoing Version 2
There are also the skeptics. Critics call SUO “a procrastination machine” or “the illusion of progress without product.” One prominent tech blogger wrote: “Version 246 is just feature creep without a roadmap.”
The Continuators’ response was characteristically elegant: they incorporated the criticism into Version 246 as a new layer called “The Skeptic’s Echo.” Now, every time you open SUO, you see the harshest critique ever written about it. And then you see it again, slightly altered. And again. Until the critique becomes part of the creation. What’s New in Ongoing Version 246
This is the core of SUO: nothing is external. Everything is material.
One of the most controversial additions in Version 246 is the “Unreliable Archive”—a database that intentionally forgets 1% of its contents every day, then regenerates them differently. Historians hate it. The Continuators love it. “Memory should be alive, not accurate,” reads the archive’s manifesto.
The "Ongoing" moniker is crucial. Unlike a traditional "final" release, Version 246 is a living update, designed to patch, expand, and refine. Here are the headline features of this release: