Camp Marshmallow Review: A Dark And Twisted Must-Play For Oculus Quest

Camp Marshmallow on SideQuest is a dark, twisted VR experience about life, death, and s’mores created by solo developer Chris Pavia that’s available for free on Oculus Quest. You can finish the whole thing in just about 10-minutes and it’s a must-play for fans of dark humor and introspective stories.

From the Camp Marshmallow SideQuest page:

“Four young Scouts and their Scoutmaster venture into the forest to sing campfire songs and assert their dominance over nature. A chill breeze pushes through the branches, carrying hushed whispers about the curious newcomers. The fire sizzles and pops as shadows dance across the trees. With sticks in hand and visions of gooey marshmallows in their eyes, the Scouts look to their leader to provide them with the forest’s bounty.”

NOTE: Spoilers for Camp Marshmallow follow. It’s impossible to talk about this experience without discussing the details, so if you are at all intrigued thus far I urge you to stop reading and go download it for yourself!

You can watch me play through Camp Marshmallow in the video above (it’s only about 10-minutes long after all) during the latest episode of our VR Roulette random-selection live VR game show. After spinning the wheel this was the game I landed on for the episode’s finale and I couldn’t be happier with the results.

In Camp Marshmallow you take on the role of the Scoutmaster, presumably an adult that’s taking a group of kids out on a camping trip — similar to something you might see in the Boy Scouts. Everyone is sitting around the campfire, singing songs, and blissfully enjoying the ignorance of childhood.

It’s nostalgic and sweet, but something feels off.

“The fire is roaring and our sticks are sharp, Scoutmaster,” one child says. “The only thing missing are the marshmallows. Here, consider this the Spear of Destiny. It can transform an ordinary marshmallow into a beautiful memory.”

The child then hands you a stick as you walk to a clearing between some trees where a collection of anthropomorphic marshmallows stand waiting, smiling, and dancing. Apparently they didn’t get the memo about why they’re here tonight.

camp marshmallow smiling

What follows can only be described as graphic violence — at least, in so far as you consider impaling a screaming marshmallow to be violent. Instead of blood gooey, sugary fluffiness drips onto your hands and splatters out. Screams of pain, pleas for mercy. It’s got it all.

And yet despite it all, it’s hard not to laugh. The way the little creatures beg for their lives is tongue-in-cheek at first and quite silly, but after the second or third mutilation it starts to take a turn. The children get creepier, the song gets stranger, and the marshmallows become more lifelike. Instead of just shivering as you cower over them they’re running away and hiding.

I don’t want to spoil things too, too much here but suffice to say you should absolutely let the marshmallows speak, listen to the children, soak in the song, and pay close attention to the small details to really enjoy this brief, but insightful VR experience.

Camp Marshmallow Review Final Impressions

Camp Marshmallow feels like an early experiment from a rare talent with an eye for atmosphere. During my playthrough I couldn’t help but be reminded of the unnerving scenarios in Accounting from Squanch and Justin Roiland and I can’t wait to see what this experience’s creator, Chris Pavia, does next. If you enjoy dark and introspective stories that make you both laugh and feel uncomfortable at the exact same time, then Camp Marshmallow has you covered.


4 STARS

 


Camp Marshmallow is available now to sideload on Oculus Quest, for free, via SideQuest. When downloading the game, you can opt to donate a custom amount to the developer via itch.io to help support efforts. Fore details on how to sideload games using SideQuest, check out our guide here.

This review was conducted on an Oculus Quest, using v1.0.0 of the game. For more on how we arrived at this score, check out our review guidelines. Let us know what you think in the comments below!

Review Scale

Watch First 17 Minutes Of Hilarious Trover Saves The Universe On Quest Gameplay

Trover Saves the Universe hits Oculus Quest today and it’s just as good as it’s ever been. Check out the first 17 minutes of Quest gameplay to see how it fairs:

When I first played Trover Saves the Universe, Tanya Watson from Squanch Games handed me a PSVR headset with googly eyes on it. I smiled and I don’t think I stopped smiling until I was out of the elevator on my way to my next GDC appointment.

In Trover Saves the Universe you play as a Chairorpian, a being from a planet of perpetually chair-bound people. Using your handheld device, shaped like a game controller, you spin your chair around and teleport to stationary nodes to move around. Once Trover arrives he lets you take control of him using the thumb sticks and face buttons of the Touch controllers. The entire game is like this: it’s one giant, hilarious, meta experience that is fully aware it’s a video game and constantly breaks the fourth wall.

At one point in the gameplay demo above I demonstrate this by not pressing a button even though a character is yelling at me to leave. If you just linger, they’ll continue to argue. I genuinely don’t know how long this can go on,since they continue to have new and hilarious things to say for quite a while.

Like any good source of comedy, revisiting Trover still brought smiles to my face even though the jokes were no longer brand new. The bright, colorful style looks almost as good as ever on Oculus Quest. You can tell the resolution isn’t quite as sharp as the PC counterpart and some textures are a little undefined, like in the starting town when you try to read things on objects at a distance, but it doesn’t impact actually enjoying the game at all.

Here is our interview with Rick & Morty Co-Creator and Squanch Games Co-Founder, Justin Roiland from E3 2019 last year:

One of my favorite things about Trover, and Squanch Games VR content in general, is just how deep the dialogue goes. This isn’t like most games where an NPC issues you a command or response then stops. These characters will not shut up and continue to spew hilarious, vulgar, and often unrelated dribble that’s nearly impossible not to laugh at. Obviously if you don’t like Justin Roiland’s sense of humor or don’t like Rick & Morty, then sure, you might not laugh much, but I’d wager you’re in the minority.

If you missed out on playing Trover on PSVR, PC VR, or in non-VR, the Quest version is extremely solid and serves as a great way to check out the game on the go. You can watch the first 17 or so minutes of gameplay footage in the video at the top of this post.

Here’s the trailer we debuted earlier this week during the UploadVR Showcase: Summer Edition 2020:

Trover Saves the Universe releases for Oculus Quest today for $29.99.Read our full original review of Trover from when it launched first on PSVR.


Did you miss out on the UploadVR Showcase: Summer Edition? Check out every trailer, article, announcement, interview, and more from the UploadVR Showcase right here.

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Get Oculus Quest Versions Of Accouting+ And Wands Cheap Thanks To Cross-Buy

Here’s a weird one. You can get the Oculus Quest versions of Accounting+ and Wands for cheap if you buy the Oculus Rift edition instead.

Both of these games are currently on sale on the Oculus Rift store. Accounting+ is down to $4.95 and Wands is down to $10. If you look on the Quest store, both are their usual full price. But because both games support cross-buy between Rift and Quest, buying the former version will net you the latter one for free.

It’s a very strange state of affairs. You might think cross-buy games would feature price parity between stores but, unless the discounts for the Quest versions are delayed, that doesn’t seem to be the case. It’s especially curious given that, in recent weeks, Facebook has finally been running sales on Quest titles on its native store; there were no such sales for much of 2019.

Anyway, weirdness aside we’d happily recommend either of these titles on sale. Accounting+ is a short but memorable adventure in which you dive ever deeper into a maddening set of VR worlds. It’s developed by Crows, Crows, Crows in collaboration with Rick and Morty developer, Justin Roiland. That should give you an idea of just how eccentric the experience can be. We still think it’s one of the most unique experiences you can have in VR.

Wands, meanwhile, is a fun magical duelling game in which you can kit out your very own magical weapon and take it into battle. It’s a little on the old side by VR’s standards, but still one of the better wizard offerings on Quest.

Hopefully we’ll have another set of Oculus Quest weekend deals to share with you towards the end of the week, but no confirmation of that just yet.

Will you be picking up either Accounting+ or Wands on Oculus Quest? Let us know in the comments below!

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Accounting + Is Coming To Oculus Quest Next Week

Accounting + Is Coming To Oculus Quest Next Week

Yet another VR essential is making its way over to Oculus Quest next week. Crows, Crows, Crows and Squanch Games’ entirely bizarre VR mind-messer, Accounting +, touches down on July 4th.

Yes that’s right, the most American of all games arrives on the most American of all days. Accounting + is a surreal descent into madness from the mind of Rick and Morty creator Justin Roiland. It sees you putting on VR headsets to travel deeper and deeper into strange and twisted realities where you’ll meet uncomfortably aggressive characters and, uh, play the xylophone with some bones.

Check out the trailer for the Quest port below. It also confirms the game’s getting support for Valve’s shiny new Index headset and controllers.

VR veterans will remember Accounting first released for free on PC VR headsets in 2016. It then came to PSVR as the expanded Accounting +, which also arrived on PC late last year. We’ve long been fans of the app’s distinct tone. Accounting + excels at making you feel awkward and uncomfortable in fascinating and funny ways. Plus it’s littered with easter eggs and secrets to uncover, encouraging you to explore every inch of every scene. Trust us when we say there’s nothing quite like it out there right now.

Meanwhile, outside of Quest town, Limited Run games is also launching a special edition of Accounting + on PSVR. It’s got a special coin, soundtrack and a Talking Tree Guy plush that we really, really want. Squanch also recently launched another VR game, Trover Saves The Universe.

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Viveport Offering Five Games for £1 Each to Subscription Members

From today things take a turn for the worst as retailers start to offer early Black Friday deals ahead of the supposed main discount day next week. Either online or instore there are going to be plenty of deals going on, all of which VRFocus will try to keep you updated on. For those virtual reality (VR) gamers who use Viveport and its subscription service, the platform has a limited time offer running where five big-name titles have been massively discounted.

Arizona Sunshine screenshot

It doesn’t matter whether you’re an existing subscriber or if you start a free trial today, from now until 19th November, subscribers will be able to purchase Arizona Sunshine, The Wizards, SUPERHOT VR, Accounting+ and Sairento VR for £1 GBP/$1 USD each.

If you buy all five then you’ll save yourself £120 on their normal total price. There is a small catch, however, and that is there’s only a limited number of every videogame available at this price, so its first come first served.

To add an additional enticement into the mix, if you do so happen to start a free trial or fully subscribe, all Viveport Subscription members will be given $10/£8 in Viveport Wallet credit on 20th November, sent via email.

The Wizards: Trials of Meliora

That’s all the deals Viveport has available for now, but that won’t be the end of them. Its official Black Friday sale starts on 20th November – yes that is a Tuesday – with plenty of discounts on videogames and apps expected. When those are revealed, VRFocus will let you know.

Viveport Is Offering Superhot VR, Arizona Sunshine, Accounting+, Sariento, and The Wizards For Just $1 Each

Viveport Is Offering Superhot VR, Arizona Sunshine, Accounting+, Sariento, and The Wizards For Just $1 Each

HTC’s Viveport PC VR app store is currently offering an incredible dealSuperhot VR, Arizona Sunshine, Accounting+, Sariento, and The Wizards for just $1 each.

Viveport is unique amongst VR app stores in that it offers a subscription option instead of just regular purchasing. For $8.99 per month, subscribers can play 5 games per month from a selection of hundreds of titles.

This offer is technically only for Viveport subscribers, but anyone can access it by signing up for the free 14 day trial.

Superhot VR – 96% Off


Superhot VR is a unique shooter experience where the faster you move, the faster time moves. If you keep completely still, time will freeze. It is a perfect blend of mental and physical challenge, and perhaps one of the best VR games ever made.

Buying it at $1 saves $24 over the regular Viveport price. When we reviewed the game, we gave it 9/10, concluding:

SUPERHOT VR is a pure, distilled, injection of unadulterated adrenaline that will get your blood pumping just as quickly as time stops in the game itself. With every movement you make, time creeps forward ever so slightly, and everything from the level design to the way it feels to dodge a series of bullets in slow-motion is orchestrated to reinforce the core ideals of the experience. From start to finish it plays out like a fantasy ripped from the screen of every action movie; an indulgent cacophony of visual and gameplay excitement.

Arizona Sunshine – 97% Off


Arizona Sunshine is a zombie FPS with a full voice acted singleplayer campaign and co-op multiplayer. Buying it at $1 saves $39 – this is a staggeringly good deal. When we reviewed the game, we gave it 8.5/10, concluding:

Vertigo Games proved that even in the most saturated genre we’ve seen for VR games this year — shooters with zombies — there was still room for something fresh. Arizona Sunshine combines the narrative power of a fully-featured 4+ hour campaign mode, with the intensity of a wave-based horde mode, and then adds multiplayer to both experiences. The protagonist’s witty humor make it worth recommending on his charming personality alone, with enough depth and variety to keep people coming back for several hours. By doing so many things so well, Arizona Sunshine quickly rose to the top of the pack as the best overall zombie shooter we’ve seen yet in VR.

Accounting+ – 92% Off


Accounting+ is a unique comedy game with the voice acting of Rick and Morty star Justin Roiland. Buying it at $1 means saving $11. When we reviewed the game, we loved it, concluding:

I wish there were more VR experiences like Accounting+. I’d sooner take another 20 rides on its unpredictable emotional rollercoaster than suffer another wave shooter. But its individuality is ultimately what makes it so memorable, and I believe that as developers gain a tighter grasp on what really makes VR tick, this will be seen as a key cornerstone of what helped us get there.

Sariento – 97% Off


Sariento at $1 means saving $29. While we haven’t yet formally reviewed the game, it currently sits at 90% positive reviews on Steam, and is a frequently recommended buy in the VR community.

The Wizards – 95% Off


The Wizards at $1 means saving $19. When we reviewed the game, we gave it 7/10, concluding:

On the gamut of magic-based first-person action games, The Wizards is definitely one of the better ones. Its spell-casting system is interactive without being too cumbersome and the campaign mode packs a decent amount of content. Plenty of collectibles, a replayable Arena mode, and lots of mission augmentations add up to this being one of the best ways to live out your most fantastical magical fantasies in VR. We just wanted more and preferably multiplayer of some kind.

Viveport Is Hitting Its Stride

Viveport originally only (officially) supported the HTC Vive, but in September the company added support for the Oculus Rift. HTC has been enticing developers to its store by providing them with 100% net revenue share for Q4 2018.

While some may prefer to have all their VR games on Steam, this deal is simply too good to avoid no matter what your store preferences. We highly recommend snagging these prices while you can – HTC may have just launched the best offer in VR gaming history.

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Accounting+ Is The Best Way To Visit One Of VR’s Most Memorable Experiences

Accounting+ Is The Best Way To Visit One Of VR’s Most Memorable Experiences

I’m really bad at throwing things in VR. Like, really bad. I had a very humiliating demo at an Oculus event in 2015 where the developers of Sports Champions learned that their football mechanics weren’t as generous as they thought, and I recently held up my Escape the Lost Pyramid team trying to lob a weight into a bucket. But my worrying lack of hand-eye coordination actually paid off in Accounting+.

In the opening menu of Crows, Crows, Crows expanded surrealist take on VR, which is just a secret-laden as the rest of the game, I find a ball and a hoop. Naturally, I pick the former up and attempt to shoot. I miss, and miss, and miss. All the while a godly voice goads me into trying one more time. Upon what must be the 20th attempt, however, I receive a divine message.

“Look, I’ll just give you the trophy,” it says. “No one will know.” And an achievement pops up.

And that just about sums up the brilliance of Accounting+. Sure there’s Justin Roiland’s eccentric brand of brute force humor, but it’s a design philosophy centered around anticipating the darker desires of the player’s mind and their ability to follow through with actions that makes it more than an interactive episode of Rick and Morty.

You can think of Accounting+ as a sort of director’s cut of the original experience, though it’s absolutely worth throwing down $11.99 for if you already went through the free version. It’s an even deeper rabbit hole than it was before, packed with new levels and interactions that triple the size of the original whilst retaining its assault on both sense and sensibility. At one moment I’m being subjected to inexplicably heavy profanity from a hideous angry creature living in a tree, the next I’m in a getaway vehicle firing weaponized seeds at cops that will grow into plants and crash their cars. All the while a driver is shouting “It’s virtual reality! It doesn’t matter! You can kill anyone!”

There’s something very knowing about all of this, as if Accounting+ is some absurd precursor to the inevitable attention-grabbing VR slaughter simulators. In some respects, it’s an even dafter version of Virtual-Virtual Reality; just like Tender Claws’ intriguing experience, Crows, Crows, Crows knows what springs to mind when you pick up anything even remotely capable of causing destruction in VR. But, instead of awkwardly shying away from that disturbing fact, it makes the unavoidable result so emotionally confusing and hilarious you can’t help but laugh. Unexpected interactivity, the kind that would likely be swept under the rug in other VR games, is at the heart of Accounting+.

This is VR at its most fascinatingly awkward. As I return to the angry tree monster, I light a bomb fuse only to discover that the explosive is also sentient and just as furious. Suddenly I’ve got two voices screaming directly at me while everything’s on fire, their rushed cries gelling into an inaudible mess. It’s the virtual embodiment of this:

Most of all, though, it’s the intrigue of genuinely not knowing what’s around the next corner that makes Accounting+ such a trip. Rather than conforming to set mechanics, the game throws out the rulebook in each and every scene in a quest to constantly surprise you. It’s one of the first apps to really embrace the idea that with VR you can do pretty much anything and be pretty much anywhere.

And then there are the rewards, secrets that congratulate you for exploring the morbid possibilities of swallowing a mysterious pill or pointing a gun at your head and pulling the trigger. If you’re the type to pick through every aspect of a scene in hope of finding some hidden bonus then this is an experience built for you. A 30-minute straight run is ready to be dissected as soon as you finish. Don’t look up guides and videos; go back and explore environments for yourself. Pick up objects, shake them about, knock on doors and pay special attention to the level select menu. Your curiosity is bound to be satisfied.

I wish there were more VR experiences like Accounting+. I’d sooner take another 20 rides on its unpredictable emotional rollercoaster than suffer another wave shooter. But its individuality is ultimately what makes it so memorable, and I believe that as developers gain a tighter grasp on what really makes VR tick, this will be seen as a key cornerstone of what helped us get there.

Oh and I don’t know if the secret zoo level actually exists, sorry.

Accounting+ is available now on Oculus Rift, HTC Vive and PlayStation VR.

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[Update]: Accounting+ mit großem Update für Rift und Vive veröffentlicht

[Update]:

Accounting+ ist ab sofort auf Steam für Oculus Rift und HTC Vive für knapp 10 Euro erhältlich. Das neue Content-Update bringt zudem zahlreiche neue Level, Charaktere und weitere Inhalte für sämtliche VR-Brillen in das humorvolle Abenteuer.

[Originalartikel vom 24. September 2018]:

Entwicklerstudio Squanch Games veröffentlicht gemeinsam mit Studio Crows Crows Crows den skurrilen VR-Titel Accounting+ für Oculus Rift und HTC Vive. Bereits 2017 erschien der VR-Titel exklusiv für PlayStation VR (PSVR), nun schafft das humoristische Spiel im Zuge eines neuen Updates den Sprung auf die PC-Brillen auf Steam. Mit der kommenden Erweiterung sollen zudem zahlreiche neue Inhalte ins Spiel integriert werden. Die Besitzer/innen der PSVR-Version erhalten den Content kostenlos.

Accounting+ – Release für Oculus Rift und HTC Vive angekündigt; Neues Update verdreifacht die spielbaren Inhalte

Accounting erschien erstmals 2016 kostenlos für HTC Vive auf Steam und brachte damit den verrückten Humor von Justin Roiland (bekannt für Rick and Morty) in die VR. Ein Jahr später wurde mit Accounting+ eine aufgeputschte Version exklusiv für PlayStation VR (PSVR) veröffentlicht. Seitdem sorgten die Verantwortlichen von Crows Crows Crows mit fortwährenden Updates für neue Inhalte für den VR-Titel.

Nun kündigten die Entwickler/innen an, eine PC-Version für Oculus Rift und HTC Vive von Accounting+ auf Steam zu releasen. Im Zuge eines neuen Content-Updates erhalten die Spieler/innen dreimal so viele Inhalte im Vergleich zur Originalversion aus dem Jahr 2016. Innerhalb der verstörenden Comicwelt gibt es jede Menge zu entdecken. So warten zahlreiche Geheimnisse, verwinkelte Ecken mit obskuren Kreaturen und natürlich der gewohnte Angriff auf die Lachmuskeln. Justin Roiland und weitere bekannte Comedy-Urgesteine übernehmen selbst das Voice-Acting und hauchen den Charakteren dadurch Leben ein.

Accounting+-Steam-Oculus-Rift-HTC-Vive

Als neues Feature bringen die Devs den Level Loader ins Spiel. Dieser ermöglicht es, an jede gewünschte Stelle zu springen und dadurch ohne große Umwege spezielle Momente erneut zu erleben. Zusätzlich erhält der VR-Titel Untertitel für zahlreiche Sprachen.

Wann der Release-Termin für Oculus Rift und HTC Vive sowie das neue Update von Accounting+ für PlayStation VR (PSVR) anstehen, ist derzeit noch nicht bekannt.

(Quellen: Road to VR | Steam Announcement Accounting+ | Video: Crows Crows Crows YouTube)

Der Beitrag [Update]: Accounting+ mit großem Update für Rift und Vive veröffentlicht zuerst gesehen auf VR∙Nerds. VR·Nerds am Werk!

PSVR’s Weirdest Game ‘Accounting+’ Now Available on Vive & Rift with New Levels

Squanch Games, the studio founded by Rick and Morty creator Justin Roiland, and Crows Crows Crows today released Accounting+ (2017) on HTC Vive and Oculus Rift. Launched first on PSVR back in late 2017, the game also got a big content update that brings new levels to all supported platforms.

Update (October 18th, 2018): Accounting+ is now live on Steam (Vive, Rift). Fair warning from the creators: “Accounting+ includes: Sexual Themes, Violence, Crude Humor, Strong Language, Blood, and Drug References!!”

The studios also put out a five-minute ‘Director’s Cut’ launch day announcement which lets you see the gritty aftermath of the death of Harold Jenkins, the wacky little guy who made an appearance in the pre-order announcement – linked above and in the article below.

Original Article (September 21st, 2018): In short, Accounting+ is madness incarnate, featuring the sort of offbeat characters you’d expect to leak out of the Justin Roiland’s addled brain. You’re coerced into joining a gang, stabbing and killing “The King of VR”, and many other wacky experiences that make you question what you’re doing with your life.

First released as a free game on HTC Vive and Oculus Rift, dubbed simply Accounting (2016), the deliciously bizarre fever dream of a game expanded with a few news levels, launching as Accounting+ exclusively on PSVR.

Accounting+ includes a host of crazy characters voiced by Justin Roiland, Reggie Watts, Rich Fulcher (The Mighty Boosh), Cassie Steele (Degrassi: The Next Generation), and Arin Hanson (Game Grumps) to name a few.

After a recent content update, which included a new water park level, the developers said Accounting+ has grown to double the size of the original Accounting. The next update is said to triple the size of the game, with at least a space level coming in tow.

The studios haven’t released word on exactly when Accounting+ will launch, although they say “very soon” (see update). In the meantime, you can follow along by adding it your Steam wishlist.

The post PSVR’s Weirdest Game ‘Accounting+’ Now Available on Vive & Rift with New Levels appeared first on Road to VR.

Accounting+ Brings Three Times More Content To Rift, Vive And PSVR

Accounting+ Brings Three Times More Content To Rift, Vive And PSVR Soon

Get ready to be shouted at some more in VR!

Accounting+, the expansion to Crows, Crows, Crows hilariously eccentric VR experience (which itself was born from a collaboration with Rick and Morty co-creator Justin Roiland), is now out for HTC Vive and Oculus Rift. The original game did launch on the Vive all the way back in 2016, though this is the first time it’ll be officially appearing on the Rift. The expansion, meanwhile, first launched on PSVR late last year.

All three versions of the game will be fitted with brand new content that total up to three times the size of the original experience, as this typically mad trailer explains. Accounting+ isn’t a game as such, more of a series of increasingly outlandish sequences in which zany characters will shout at you and generally make you feel extremely uncomfortable. There’s nothing quite like it in all of VR and we wouldn’t change a thing about it.

The new version of the game will come with support for multiple languages and include a level loader that allows you to visit any point in the experience on a whim so that you can bring your friends straight into the bit where you cut that blob open.

Elsewhere, Roiland’s Squanch Games is currently busy working on another PSVR exclusive, Trover Saves The Universe.

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