Humble Bundle’s Fall VR Deal Offers 8 Games for £14 Supporting Movember

Humble Fall VR Bundle

If you’re looking for a good deal on virtual reality (VR) videogames for PC VR headsets then Humble Bundle’s latest offer is hard to beat. The Humble Fall VR Bundle provides up to eight titles depending on how much you want to spend, whilst supporting charities in the process.

Humble Fall VR Bundle

Continuing its practice of offering great collections of videogames at a price determined by the customer, this fall VR deal starts from less than £1 GBP, with A-Tech Cybernetic, Archangel: Hellfire and Killing Floor: Incursion on offer. Increase your payment to £7.73 and you’ll unlock Survios’ Raw Data. Step that up further to £11.78 and you’ll then unlock I Expect You To Die and Creed: Rise to Glory.

Finally, going for the maximum unlock price of £13.14 and you’ll get XREAL Games’ Zero Caliber and one of the best VR experiences of 2020, Skydance Interactive’s The Walking Dead: Saints & Sinners. Whichever tier you choose you’ll get Steam keys for those titles. All these prices are the bare minimum, you can donate more at your discretion.

As Humble Bundle also likes to give back, the supported charity this month is Movember, focusing on men’s health such as mental health, suicide prevention, prostate cancer and testicular cancer. You can also select other charities and tip Humble Bundle for doing a good job.

The Walking Dead: Saints & Sinners

All in all that’s a decent deal by anyone’s standards and like anything that good the offer is limited, ending in a couple of weeks. Of course, by then it won’t be long until all the winter sales start on Steam and the Oculus Store although VRFocus isn’t sure the deals will be quite this tempting.

As further bundles and VR discounts are rolled out, VRFocus will let you know.

Humble Fall VR Bundle Includes Saints & Sinners For Just $17

The Humble Fall VR Bundle just launched today and includes up to 8 great VR games like The Walking Dead: Saints & Sinners at an insane value of only $17.

Just like all Humble Bundles, you get to choose the amount you pay and customize how much of your money goes towards Humble, how much goes towards charities, and how much goes towards the developers.

humble fall vr bundle games collage

Humble VR Fall Bundle

This bundle is available in four tiers: paying at least $1 gives you A-Tech Cybernetic, Archangel: Hellfire – Fully Loaded, and Killing Floor Incursion; paying at least $10 adds Raw Data to the bundle; paying at least $12.75 adds I Expect You To Die and Creed: Rise to Glory to the bundle; and finally paying at least $17 adds The Walking Dead: Saints & Sinners and Zero Caliber to the bundle.

All games are provided via Steam keys, so they should work using an SteamVR headset such as a Valve Index, HTC Vive, Oculus Rift, Oculus Quest, or Windows MR device.

There have been lots of great VR game deals this year, but this might take the cake for sheer value. Each of the games in this bundle are quite good and worth playing, so getting them all so cheaply is a real steal. The Walking Dead: Saints & Sinners is, without a doubt, one of the best VR games to date so it’s worth the price of the bundle alone for sure. Everything else is just gravy.

Do you plan on grabbing the Humble Fall VR Bundle? The deal is live for two weeks so you have until around November 24th to pull the trigger. Let us know down in the comments below!

A-Tech Cybernetic Review: Out Of Early Access A Little Too Late (PSVR, PC VR)

A-Tech Cybernetic opens with a glaringly obvious tribute. In the game’s menu a blue-suited business man walks past a window and stops for a quick, quiet glance before calmly moving on. Only this company man carries none of the menace in his dead eyes that his predecessor did, and he’s grown a shaggy, defeated beard. G-Man, it seems, has seen better days. And so has A-Tech Cybernetic.

XREAL Games deserves a ton of credit for its effort and intention here. Well over two and a half years on from Early Access release, A-Tech arrives at the finish line as one of the best-supported, most regularly updated story-driven VR games on the market. It’s just a shame the studio couldn’t get there sooner.

This earnest attempt at Doom in VR really shows its age in 2020, especially arriving just a few days after a certain big release. In 2018, I said what I played of A-Tech was “pretty darn good“. And it’s still true that this is an impressive title from a small studio; A-Tech offers several hours of big bangs and mutant mow-downs. But it’s also true that the game is mechanically pedestrian, still stuck in the standards of VR development in 2017 rather than rising to the new bar we enjoy today.

A-Tech makes no apologies for its various imitations; its premise is pure Doom with elements of Resident Evil and Dead Space to flesh out the gameplay. Set on a remote Mars-like planet in a facility overrun with mutants, you find yourself essentially hijacking one scientist’s body to fight your way through corridors and caves as you squabble with the mind of your unwilling captive. It may sound like a premise rich for interesting psychological VR exploration, but it’s mostly just played for cheesy jokes and exposition in a game that doesn’t really need either.

PSVR vs PC VR

A-Tech Cybernetic arrives on PSVR with all the content found in the PC VR version, but it’s a significantly blurrier experience with technical blemishes. While the game’s environments benefit from simple textures, enemies appear meshed together, removing some of the threat they should impose. I also suspect there’s been a reduction in numbers; one of the better moments in the PC version has you surviving for three minutes in a room filled with enemies. On PSVR, I sat in a corner of the room and only had three or four bad guys approach me.

More damning, though, is that the game simply doesn’t feel built for a 180-degree tracking setup, with enemies spawning in from behind and killing you before you can properly react. Plus in some environments I noticed even the geometry suddenly shifting into view. The game is still playable on console, but it’s definitely inferior to the PC edition.

In fairness, the core of A-Tech provides pulpy fun. It’s your standard VR horde massacre which, hey, is still enjoyable to this day. But it’s also just so inescapably simple; enemies are programmed to just run at you and then wave their arms in pantomime to take you down, whereas foes with rifles stand in clear sight with little concern for things so trivial as taking cover.

The game is essentially identical in design to Vertigo Games’ Arizona Sunshine, something we once awarded our game of the year, but now itself seems like a reanimated corpse just shuffling on in the face of The Walking Dead: Saints & Sinners and others.

Later chapters introduced over the course of Early Access do their best to mix things up a little and its more intense fights do still carry a certain amount of unnerving dread. A-Tech is at its best when the waves of brain-dead goons are being piled on so thick and fast you don’t have time to think about how simple the game really is. Plus there’s a limited amount of strategy involved, like shooting off enemy legs to slow them down. It’s not as deep as system as, say, Dead Space, but it does allow you to insert a welcome punch of pace into proceedings.

But even as a primitive shooter, A-Tech suffers from some strange bugs. At one point I opened a door to find two enemies running into a wall, and in another a swarm of enemies attacking me simply disappeared. One enemy type, a hulking great monster, seemed completely incapable of actually hitting me, while after one death I was teleported back to the start of the level and had to walk all the way back back to my checkpoint. It would be easier to overlook A-Tech’s simplicity if these hiccups weren’t here.

Comfort

A-Tech Cybernetic comes kitted out with the necessary options to keep you comfortable and/or immersed in VR. There’s both smooth locomotion and teleport-based movement, plus snap turning for PSVR users. Essentially, comfort shouldn’t be too much of an issue here.

A-Tech Cybernetic Review Final Impressions

A-Tech Cybernetic is a steadfast example of the trials and triumphs of Early Access development. If you bought this game back in 2017 and kept up to date with its new chapters over the ensuing years, you probably had a great time with it, at least in parts. But, arriving as one complete package in 2020, the game can’t hide its age, offering fun, flawed shooting built on overly simple foundations with too many bugs to overlook.

In 2018 I said A-Tech Cybernetic: “is a sci-fi zombie shooter that, simply put, feels great to play and has an actual campaign. That’s not something you can say all that often in VR.” Well, you can say that pretty often now, and that’s one wave of enemies A-Tech Cybernetic can’t fend off.

A-Tech Cybernetic Review

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A-Tech Cybernetic’s PlayStation VR Launch is Taking Place This Week

Last month XREAL Games announced in a developer blog that it was almost ready to release sci-fi horror shooter A-Tech Cybernetic for PlayStation VR. As it turns out that was completely correct, with the studio confirming the launch will take place later this week.

A-Tech Cybernetic

Identical to its PC VR counterpart – which has been in Steam Early Access since 2017 – regarding gameplay elements, A-Tech Cybernetic is a nightmarish adventure set within a biomedical facility during the 23rd century where mankind is able to manufacture biologically enhanced, empty body templates that can house a consciousness.

In the Story Mode, you awake in this facility overrun by mutants and you need to clean this mess up using an arsenal of weaponry. Filled with dark corridor, caves and a heavy metal soundtrack, you are also blessed with a selection of superhuman powers to help even the fight; hoe does being able to move things with your mind or slowing time suit you?

For those less concerned with a storyline and far more interested in shooting stuff then there’s the Swarm Mode. Put your shooting skills to the test and battle through waves of mutants across a selection of maps.

A-Tech Cybernetic VR

To ensure comfort for as many players as possible A-Tech Cybernetic offers two locomotion types: smooth locomotion for full immersion and teleport for those prone to motion sickness; the videogame can also be played seated. Additionally, there are to two turning modes: smooth- and snap turn. Do be aware that when it comes to controllers, A-Tech Cybernetic only supports the PlayStation Move controllers.

A-Tech Cybernetic will see a split digital for Playstation VR, coming to EU regions on 26th March and then North America on 27th March, with a €19.99 EUR/$19.99 USD price tag respectively. As for the PC version, A-Tech Cybernetic is leaving Steam Early Access on 27th March.

This will be the first PlayStation VR title XREAL Games has released but it won’t be the last. The studio has also slated Zero Caliber for a Q2 2020 release. As further details are announced VRFocus will keep you updated. It’s going to be a busy week for PlayStation VR gamers which has seen the launch of Paper Beast today and The Room VR: A Dark Matter also due on Thursday.

Hellish VR Shooter ‘A-Tech Cybernetic’ is Making Its Way to PSVR Next Month

Hungary-based indie studio XREAL Games today announced its Early Access VR shooter, A-Tech Cybernetic VR, is headed to PSVR sometime next month.

XREAL developer Daniel Nyirfa took to the PSVR subreddit today, commenting that although translating the PC VR game to the PSVR has been challenging, the game now has a March launch window. There’s no specific launch date yet, although it’s likely one will materialize soon.

First launched on Steam in mid-2017 and then later on the Oculus Store for Rift a year later, A-Tech Cybernetic includes both a classic swarm mode against the game’s decidedly Doom-inspired mutant enemies and a story mode that takes you through a futuristic biomedical company.

The game most recently received its last two concluding chapters in a content update in October 2019 which also brought with it an overhaul of the gameplay and combat intensity throughout the whole game, making the game more difficult overall.

XREAL is also known for its Early Access VR shooter Zero Caliber VR.

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XREAL Games Detail Updates for Zero Caliber, A-Tech Cybernetic ‘Almost’ Ready for PlayStation VR Release

At present virtual reality (VR) developer XREAL Games has two videogames in Early Access on Steam, A-Tech Cybernetic  from 2017 and 2018s Zero Caliber. The studio recently released a devlog detailing plans for both titles with PlayStation VR support of top importance.

Zero Caliber

XREAL Games first mentioned plans to bring both videogames to PlayStation VR late last year with A-Tech Cybernetic slated for Q1 2020 and Zero Caliber for Q2 2020. In the latest update community manager Daniel Nyirfa has said that sci-fi shooter A-Tech Cybernetic is in: “the final, final, final state, the current version is almost release ready,” and the launch should be really soon.

In addition to work on the PlayStation VR version, the PC edition hasn’t been forgotten. The team will be rolling out an update featuring Valve Index controller support, stability improvements and smaller changes to the Swarm mode.

A-Tech Cybernetic is a nightmarish first-person shooter (FPS) set within the confines of a biomedical facility. All sorts of horrific mutants have overrun the facility and you need to use an assortment of guns and special abilities to survive. There’s a Story mode split across several chapters or the Swarm mode with a collection of maps to choose from and complete.

A-Tech Cybernetic VR

When it comes to Zero Caliber Nyirfa mentions quite a few plans for the military FPS. Slated to appear over the course of 2020 is a player customisation system, improved hand model, more maps as well as reworking current maps, weapon handling enhancements and continuing work on PvP and the dedicated servers.

As for PlayStation VR support, that work is still ongoing but the main news is that XREAL Games wants to keep the attachment system so Zero Caliber will only work with PlayStation Move controllers.

On top of all of this, the team plans on starting a new project; or as Nyirfa puts it ‘a new quest’. Could this be a cheeky hint at an Oculus Quest title? With everything else going on details might take a little time to surface.

See the full developer log below and for further updates on A-Tech Cybernetic and Zero Caliber, keep reading VRFocus.

Zero Caliber PSVR Port ‘Going Very Well’, A-Tech Cybernetic PSVR ‘Right Around The Corner’

XREAL Games has good news for PSVR fans awaiting ports of its two games, A-Tech Cybernetic and Zero Caliber.

A-Tech Cybernetic, a first-person zombie shooter that we’re somewhat fond of, is in its “final, final, final state” of development. That is according to XREAL itself, by way of the developer’s recent update video. The team is currently working on PlayStation Store information for the game and expects release to be right around the corner.

A-Tech sees players awaken in a strange facility on an alien planet, overrun with zombie-like enemies. You need to shoot your way through the base and work out what exactly is going on. We’ve always liked the game’s considered pacing.

Meanwhile on the PC VR front, the game is soon to get an update adding in support for Valve’s Index Controllers.

There was also an update on Zero Caliber, the developer’s newest shooter. 2020 will include new maps and optimizations for the game, which remains in Early Access on SteamVR. XREAL is also working on a PSVR port of that, which it says is “going very well”. In order to keep the game’s extensive weapon attachment system in place, this version of the title will only support PlayStation Move controllers. Zero Caliber is a polished modern shooter that we like to stream from time-to-time.

No word yet on possible Oculus Quest versions of either game. Will you be picking up the Zero Caliber PSVR port or the console version of A-Tech Cybernetic? Let us know in the comments below!

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Something For The Weekend: Final August Weekend SteamVR Deals

Time for another entry of Something for the Weekend, the weekly series where VRFocus bring you a number of deals on virtual reality (VR) titles. As the final weekend of August comes around it is time for us to return to the Steam store to have a look at what exciting titles are on sale this weekend.

Maybe you are looking to enter the arena and fight champions or defend a town with a bow and arrow. Then again, playing with a kitten or putting your bartender skills to the test might also be a good choice. Well, whatever you may be looking for this weekend we’ve got you covered with a number of helpful suggestions below. As always, be sure to check back every weekend for even more deals right here on VRFocus.

Elven Assassin image 1

Elven Assassin

Time to pick up a bow and take on hordes of orcs in order to defend a town. Stand along or with friends in solo or co-op mode to save the day and be the best elven assassin around. Get use to the bow and land spectacular shots from long distance as you hold off against the orcs assault. They will be coming at you thick and fast so you’ll need to not only be a skilled shot but also be quick on your feet to avoid any incoming attacks. If you think you and you’re friends have the power to hold the line then stand fast and aim true.

Elven Assassin is available now for £8.54 (GBP) down from the usual £11.39.

Island 359

Island 359

“It’s been a long wait but it was worth it. Island 359 offers a proper showcase of what can be built specifically for VR when enough time and effort is put in. It’s not 100 percent perfect in places but the videogame offers enough of everything that you won’t really care. Grab that gun and get hunting in this thoroughly enjoyable and engaging VR shooter.” – Read VRFocus’ Senior Staff Writer Peter Graham’s review of Island 359.

Island 359 is available now for only £10.72 (GBP) down from £19.49.

Konrad the Kitten screenshot

Konrad the Kitten

Immersive yourself in the virtual world of Konrad the Kitten as you play with the first virtual cat and feels like the real thing. Check on him daily and care for this kitten as though he were real by using a range of virtual toys and playing in several mini-games full of action. With over 50 accessories to unlock to dress your kitten up in and lots of fun to be hard, this title will offer plenty of furry fun.

Konrad the Kitten is available now for £5.69 (GBP) down from £11.39.

ZomDay

As a zombie crisis breaks out around the world players will become a member of the S.E.A.T team and go up against the endless hordes. This fast paced VR shooter will put players aiming skills and reflexes to the test as they fight alone or as a team against hordes of enemies and in exciting boss battles. Time to grab some guns and fight back.

ZomDay is available now for £5.79 (GBP) down from £6.99.

Robinson The Journey screenshot 2

Robinson: The Journey

“When the Esmeralda crashes on Tyson III, Robin is left stranded. He must rely on his wits – and HIGS, an AI unit from the ship – to survive. As he searches for the lost crew and comes face-to-face with dinosaurs, Robin discovers that Tyson III is not the paradise once promised.”

Robinson: The Journey is available now for £6.24 (GBP) down from £24.99.

First Person Tennis

First Person Tennis

Experience the most realistic tennis simulator going and come face-to-face with professional tennis players in an immersive experience. Put all your technical and tactical skills to the test in this true to life VR tennis title. With seven different types of courts, 13 tournaments to play through, a training mode and a full ranking plus much more, players won’t find a more detailed and feature rich experience.

First Person Tennis is available now for £14.62 (GBP) down from £19.49.

A-Tech Cybernetic VR

A-Tech Cybernetic VR

“A-Tech Cybernetic is a first-person shooter built from the ground up for VR. It features two separate game modes: a classic swarm mode to put your shooting and survival skills to the test and a story mode that takes you to a futuristic biomedical company overrun by mutants. Control everything with real-life movements, interact with your surroundings as if they were actually there, experience a new kind of gameplay that’s more immersive than ever before, thanks to VR. Be the badass guy you always wanted to be.”

A-Tech Cybernetic VR is on sale now for £14.99 (GBP) down from £19.99.

Bartender VR Simulator

Bartender VR Simulator

Ever wanted to work behind the bar? Well, in this immersive VR title you can do just that. Developed in cooperation with a six-time Bartending World Champion, Tomek Malek, Bartender VR Simulator gives plays a chance to learn all the ticks to become a master bartender. Feel like you have learned enough in the virtual world? Then take what you have learned and try it out for real.

Bartender VR Simulator is available now for £10.49 (GBP) down from £14.99.

GORN Screenshot 3

GORN

Enter the arena of this ludicrously violent gladiator simulator and fight through countless enemies to become the greatest champion there ever was. With the new Crab update having recently released as well, there has never been a better time to jump into the battle and becoming a legendary gladiator.

GORN is on sale now for £11.24 (GBP) down from the usual £14.99.

Hand Simulator

Hand Simulator

“Hand Simulator is a game in which you control your own hands. There are many different levels where you can play with spinners, plunge into the subtleties of handling weapons, milk a cow, take part in a Mexican duel with your friends, have a good time fishing, play chess or simply chat in an anonymous club. Hand Simulator is a game where everyone finds entertainment for their tastes.”

Hand Simulator is available now for £1.11 (GBP) down from £1.59.

That is all for this week but remember that VRFocus gathers all the best sales and deals every week, so check back next weekend at the same time to discover more.

Doom, Dead Space And Resident Evil Collide In A-Tech Cybernetic

Doom, Dead Space And Resident Evil Collide In A-Tech Cybernetic

If, like me, this month’s trailer for Zero Caliber caught your eye, you might be cautiously optimistic that this could be a VR shooter genuinely worth looking forward to. I say cautiously, because it wouldn’t be the first time VR developers have made big promises for first-person shooters (FPSs) and come up short, right Reboant? While I still can’t tell you if developer XREAL Games will deliver with its new game, I can at least reassure you by telling you its last one is pretty darn good.

It’s easy to pick apart the DNA that makes up A-Tech Cybernetic. Monster-ridden facility set in the wastelands of a red planet? That’s Doom. Hordes of shambling mutants that pour towards you? Hello, Resident Evil 4. Strategical dismemberment that allows you to slow enemies down and prioritize where you spend your ammo? That’d be Dead Space. And, while A-Tech obviously doesn’t measure up to the heights of these AAA inspirations, it already towers above some of its VR rivals.

For starters, common issues with current VR shooters are circumvented (though not resolved) with context. The game’s spooky mutants, for example, can be forgiven for being brain dead because they’re, well, brain dead. Most of the early encounters consist of two or three enemy types charging at you in hopes of ripping your face off, and you’ll need a fast trigger finger to stop them. XREAL uses brute force to distract from the simplicity; it’s not long before enemys tally in the double digits and you’ll be too busy using everything in your arsenal to slow them down to think about the similarity of these encounters.

A-Tech is a game about having your back against the wall, biting your lip, keeping one eye closed and firing as quickly and efficiently as you can. It’s a game that wants to push past that initial thrill of holding a virtual gun in your hand and deliver some actual content. There are moments in which you’re locked in rooms with super mutants, or begging gates to open as a swarm surrounds you. In one particular highlight, you have to keep one hand pressed on a button while holding off a crowd of approaching enemies directly behind you. It makes for a deliciously nail-biting scrap.

There’s a genuine sense of invention to A-Tech’s campaign, and a real desire to deliver something different around every corner, be it those twists on mechanics, new weapons or deadlier enemy types. With so many VR shooters coasting by on dual-wielding motion controls, it’s a relief to play something that can adhere to at least the basic rules of engaging videogame design. In fact, while the influx of new missions is great to see, I’d also welcome expanded editions of existing chapters that retread some of these scenarios.

If XREAL really wants to make you sweat, though, it needs to go back and do some difficulty tuning. The current build of A-Tech is generous with its ammo count and enemies topple too quickly. My favorite moments in the game had me gripping one controller with two hands for hard-hitting, steady pistol shots, controlling the crowd Leon Kennedy-style. But, in truth, almost every combat encounter is made all too easy the moment you grab a shotgun and let loose.

It’s true the existing content could be refined, then, but XREAL is doing a marvelous job of adding to the campaign, too. While they’re both a little on the short side, chapters 3 and 4 of the Early Access version break out of the game’s somewhat repetitive facility and explore the planet’s surfaces and mines whilst adding new enemy types and weapons. With the foundations laid, XREAL is having fun designing new puzzles and missions types. They don’t all fit well (a simple archery minigame makes one appearance in the campaign so far), but you can tell the developer is determined not to tire players out before the credits start to roll.

Outside of the campaign, there’s also a swarm mode which, yes, plays pretty much like a wave shooter. It gets by on the strength of the game’s mechanics; shotguns, pistols and machine guns all feel great to fire and melee combat packs punch as a last measure-option. With plans to implement co-op later down the line, I’d expect this mode to grow into a worthy side-feature come full launch.

A-Tech Cybernetic is a sci-fi zombie shooter that, simply put, feels great to play and has an actual campaign. That’s not something you can say all that often in VR. Oddly, it’s an Early Access game can could currently benefit from revisiting its existing content rather than adding new stuff. Suffice to say it’s a little rough around the edges in its current state and is in definite need of a tune-up, but there’s a diamond in the rough here that I really hope XREAL manages to seize. This is never going to be VR’s very own Resident Evil 4, but with it a little more work it could be painstakingly close.

A-Tech Cybernetic is available now in Early Access on Oculus Rift and HTC Vive for $19.99.

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Something For The Weekend: Pre-E3 Oculus Store Deals

With the Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) 2018 show almost here it is time for another entry of Something for the Weekend, where VRFocus brings you a number of deals on virtual reality (VR) titles. It is time to look at the Oculus store this weekend where there are a number of deals on titles that are ensure to be your next favourite. From intense gunfights to some puzzle solving titles, there is something for everyone this weekend. As always, be sure to check back every weekend for even more deals right here on VRFocus.

Archangel: Hellfire

Archangel: Hellfire

Looking for some action packed mech fights this weekend? Then look no further than Archangel: Hellfire. This multiplayer deathmatch title will drop you into intense, free-roaming matches where you control one of six building-sized mechs equipped with massive weapons of death. Fighting in an apocalyptic landscape, there is even a single player campaign to experience should you need a break from the online battles.

Archangel: Hellfire is available now for £14.99 (GBP) down from the usual £22.99 for Oculus Rift.

Gunheart Screenshot Hero

Gunheart

Gunheart has a lot going for it, visually well designed with decent gunplay mechanics and enough content to keep most players happy for several hours. There are bugs and some optimisation issues – just having a better than min spec PC might work – yet the overall experience is still very enjoyable.” – Read VRFocus’ Senior Staff Writer Peter Graham’s review of Gunheart.

Gunheart is available now for Oculus Rift for £19.99 (GBP) down from £22.99.

Cube Puzzle

Cube Puzzle

Cube Puzzle is a VR first person puzzler game with classic controls and intuitive shape matching gameplay.
You need to control a group of cubes and rotate it to fit through a hole in the wall and each time you fit through a hole without clashing, more blocks will be added on your cluster. As you cluster gets bigger, you will need to hide the cubes by clicking Eye-Closing button to see the hole and determine what rotation to make. Stay as long as possible and unlock more levels, it’s time to go beyond yourself!”

Cube Puzzle is available now for on Oculus Go for £0.79 (GBP) down from £1.49.

Clazer screenshot 1

CLAZER

Experience the thrill of sport shooting in this title that transports players to authentic environments with realistic shotgun physics. Not only will you get to use a shotgun and learn the proper way to lead a target so you can accurately shoot them, but do so in an immersive experience. The title also features a competition leaderboard so player can go up against eachother to claim the top spot.

CLAZER is only £2.29 (GBP) down from £3.99 for Oculus Go.

Remnith

Remnith

Experience chaotic first-person shooter (FPS) action where enemy units will feed off the energy of ever shot that isn’t lodged directly into them. The more shots you miss the stronger your enemies will get. Every battle is a boss battle in this action packed title where enemies can grow and evolve, using different tactics as the battle progresses. With five difficult levels, twenty five arenas, and a number of enemies to fight. There is plenty of action to enjoy within Remnith.

Remnith is available now for £2.29 (GBP) down from £7.99 on Oculus Rift.

Sprint Vector Final screenshot1

Sprint Vector

“There’s very little to dislike in Sprint Vector. Sure there will be times when that competitive edge over takes you, getting annoyed when you fudge a jump but that’s to be expected. The single-player has enough to get you started with a few hours of gameplay, yet it’s the multiplayer that’ll have you coming back for more. Here’s hoping that Sprint Vector draws in enough of a crowd to sustain it, rather than becoming another multiplayer focused experience that gets forgotten about. Which would be a shame, because from where VRFocus is standing Sprint Vector is another hit for the studio.” – Read VRFocus’ Senior Staff Writer Peter Graham’s review of Sprint Vector.

Sprint Vector is available now for Oculus Rift for £14.99 (GBP) down from £22.99.

VormHoles

VormHoles

“Armed with a firework rocket launcher, you must defend your temples from hordes of snake like creatures. The snakes come from another dimension with one aim in mind, to destroy temples and harness the energy of your world. But these creatures have a weakness, fireworks!”

VormHoles is currently £0.79 (GBP) down from £1.49 for Gear VR.
Adventure Of Ice Cream

Adventure of Ice Cream

Welcome to the snowy ice-cream world. Can you shoot all the interactive obstacles to collect as many coins as possible including the super-power cards, which will unlock hidden power. With high scores to earn and a world wide leaderboard to climb, it is all about landing those shots in this title.

Adventure of Ice Cream is currently on sale for £0.79 (GBP) down from £1.49 for Gear VR.

SWAT Academy

SWAT Academy

SWAT Academy puts you to the test as you master the weapons and tactics needed to become the best of the best. Hone your skills in the intense combat training simulations, face off against waves of hostile targets, and survive the onslaught of the zombie horde.”

SWAT Academy is currently available for £3.99 (GBP) down from £5.99 for Gear VR.

A-Tech Cybernetic VR

A-Tech Cybernetic VR

In this story driven FPS, players can experience the action in a classic swam mode against an endless horde of enemies or in the story-driven campaign mode. Taking place in a futuristic biomedical company overrun by mutants, players will need to put their shooting and survival skills to the test. With real-life movements, players can interact with their surroundings and feel like a action hero in this immersive title.

A-Tech Cybernetic VR is available for only £12.99 (GBP) right now on sale from £18.99 for Oculus Rift.

That is all for this week but remember that VRFocus gathers all the best sales and deals every week, so check back next weekend at the same time to discover more.