Hands-On – Ace Combat 7: Skies Unknown Brings Pulse-Pounding Aerial Dogfights to PS VR

Hands-On – Ace Combat 7: Skies Unknown Brings Pulse-Pounding Aerial Dogfights to PS VR

I craned my neck back while wearing the PS VR headset to look above into the sky. At this angle, I could see an enemy fighter jet attempting to loop around behind me. Recognizing what was happening, I pulled the L2 trigger on my DualShock 4 to brake, pushed down on the left joystick to dive forward, flip around, and head off their loop before they got behind me. The maneuver worked and as I broke through the clouds, water droplets smearing the outside of my cockpit, I launched a rocket. It spiraled forward and destroyed my enemy, letting me boost through the flames and stab through the final layer of clouds, emerging victorious.

Ace Combat 7: Skies Unknown is an absolutely exhilarating and pulse-pounding game with immersive aerial dogfights. During a Bandai Namco press preview event in San Francisco this week, I got the chance to go hands-on with the flight combat game using the PS VR and came away with a giant smile on my face, excited to take to the skies once again when it finally releases later this year.

I was hoping the entire game would be playable inside of Sony’s headset when it releases, but alas, that’s not the case. Only a handful of specific missions will support the PS VR, similar to Gran Turismo Sport’s VR mode.

The original game in the franchise from over 20 years ago was actually known as Air Combat and first appeared in Japanese arcades. The brand has never been recognized as a hyper-realistic flight simulator by design, but instead attempts to combine its ultra-realistic visual style with accessible, yet intense, flight controls to help you orchestrate epic moments of aerial combat, like the ones seen in the trailer above. Ever since Ace Combat 2, the franchise has been synonymous with Bandai Namco and the PlayStation platform. Now, it’s making the leap into the immersive space with PS VR support on PlayStation 4. It feels like about as natural of an evolution as you could hope for.

“VR introduces a new form of expression that the traditional medium of gaming doesn’t really have access to,” said series Producer Kazutoki Kono during a translated in-person interview. “So when I try to create something for VR, I always bear in mind the feelings I had the first time I tried VR and saw a giant life-sized dinosaur towering above me.”

Ace Combat 7, as a full package, is aiming to be the most robust and engrossing entry in the franchise to date. After over two decades, the latest engine updates and graphical advancements have resulted in the most visually impressive entry thus far and that vision is clearly carried over into the limited PS VR content on display.

“For the VR aspect, we felt the most important element was to never interrupt the illusion that the player is the pilot,” explained Kono. “There are no cuts or weirdness going on, it’s always first-person. When you get to the campaign side of things in the non-VR mode, it comes down to using a lot more cinematography techniques like cutscenes and scene shifts to add more emotion and storytelling.”

Earlier this week we showed a video of supposed PS VR gameplay in action for Ace Combat 7 and after trying it for myself at this preview event, I can confirm that the below footage looks essentially identical to the mission I went hands-on with. There will be more than just a single mission to try in VR when the game releases across a variety of environments. Graphically it’s a downgrade from the non-VR version, as is the case in all instances of games that support both play styles, but the immersive factor more than makes up for the loss of visual fidelity.

I didn’t notice a screen door effect because I was too busy dodging rockets and bursting through clouds. Momentum felt appropriate as I nimbly banked and throttled through the air with a satisfying sense of velocity.

It’s a great experience that easily feels like one of the most accurate games I’ve tried in VR yet, at least from a purely photo-realism perspective. That being said, I couldn’t help but feel a bit disappointed that the entire game won’t be playable in VR.

“We took into consideration the development time and budget from a production standpoint as well as the need to craft a tailor-made experience when we made the decision of the amount of VR content we wanted to create,” said Kono. “What we realized very early on in the process is that we couldn’t just make a few tweaks to the standard version of the game and expect it to work properly in VR. The goals of the VR version and the flat-screen version were in completely different places in terms of what we were able to achieve and what users wanted to see. When we made this realization it almost became like a parallel development of two very different experiences. To reproduce the content in all of its entirety for two different platforms was just impossible. For the purposes of Ace Combat 7, the VR missions are a tailor-made experimental mode, whereas the non-VR campaign missions are the mainline experience.”

Anyone that’s played any other flight game in VR, such as EVE: Valkyrie, Elite: Dangerous, Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare’s Jackal Assault Mission, or the X-Wing Mission for Star Wars Battlefront, can attest to the fact that it’s a genre that feels right at home in VR. The seated cockpit setting and placement of your hands in real-life as well as in the game all do a wonderful job of tricking your mind into thinking you’re inside a virtual world. That’s a big reason why motion sickness isn’t as common as in other types of VR games.

“Fairly early on in development we had a number of focus groups that tried the game with the VR headset on,” explained Kono. “What we noticed as a pattern is that people’s awareness of what the plane was doing and what the physics were supposed to be, did not get sick. For example, if a player understands that you should bank and then pull up in order to ‘turn’ the plane, they handled the VR experience better due to understanding what their inputs were causing in VR. In addition, by including fixed elements like the cockpit and the HUD elements help the player orient themselves and help combat tendencies towards motion sickness.”

Ace Combat 7: Skies Unknown is launching this year for PlayStation 4, with optional PS VR-exclusive side missions, as well as on Xbox One and PC via Steam. When asked about PC VR support for headsets like Rift, Vive, or OSVR, Kono indicated that they currently have no plans to institute support. From the sounds of it, the VR missions were created in collaboration with Sony specifically for PS VR.

I’m excited to climb back inside the cockpit again, but I just wish the full game were getting immersive VR support. Do you plan on picking up Ace Combat 7: Skies Unknown when it releases later this year? Let us know in the comments below!

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New Ace Combat 7 Gameplay Footage Released

Last month several minutes worth of footage were released showcasing Bandai Namco’s Ace Combat 7 on PlayStation VR. Recorded at the Bandai Namco Thank You Festival in Goyang, South Korea, the video has been taken down following a copyright claim by the studio, but for those looking for further updates on the title can now see official gameplay.

At the 2017 Taipei Game Show (TpGS) this weekend Ace Combat 7 had a live demo during a interview segment with developers. If you saw the previous footage, the demo looks to be exactly the same – naturally Bandai Namco’s showcasing the same demo sequence – but as the video is an official Bandai Namco Entertainment Asia release this one won’t be disappearing.

As previously reported, the PlayStation VR version of Ace Combat 7 will feature an off shoot of the main story rather than a ‘light’ version as originally planned. Other than that no other details have been released. Ace Combat 7 is scheduled for release later this year.

The video below features almost an hour of coverage from the event, for just the Ace Combat 7 footage skip to 20:45. As for any further VR news from TpGS, keep reading VRFocus.

Check Out PlayStation VR Gameplay For Ace Combat 7

Check Out PlayStation VR Gameplay For Ace Combat 7

Resident Evil 7 might be out tomorrow but, hungry gamers that we are, we’re still looking forward to what’s next for PlayStation VR, and Ace Combat 7 is one of the better looking games on the horizon.

The anticipated return of Bandai Namco’s flight action franchise was first announced all the way back at the 2015 PlayStation Experience, where we got a glimpse of the game in CG form. Then, last year, we saw it again with standard gameplay. Finally, well over a year after announcement, we have a solid look at PS VR gameplay, and it’s very promising.

Ace Combat has always relied on break-neck pacing that makes its brand of state of the art air combat a real thrill. This gameplay, shown at the 2017 Taipei Game Show in Taiwan, suggests that developer Project Aces has kept that sensation intact. Played from a cockpit view, the player takes off into a beautiful blue sky where they paint targets with lock-on missiles and take them down. The constant barrel rolls to have us questioning just how comfortable an experience this will be, but that’s in the player’s hands, ultimately.

Graphically the game looks like it could be an impressive showcase of what PS VR can do, and using a DualShock 4 to fly while sitting down should prove to be just as immersive as other PS4 games like EVE: Valkyrie [Review: 9/10]. It seems perfectly suited for the headset, though we’re yet to go hands-on with it for final judgement.

There’s still a lot to learn about Ace Combat 7, including story, other platforms, and final release date. The sequel is expected to launch this year, but we’re not clear on the extent of its PS VR support. Hopefully the entire game will be integrated with the headset, much like Capcom’s anticipated scare-fest will be when it releases this week, though it’s also possible that the game will only have a VR experience mode like we’ll see later in 2017 with Sony’s own Gran Turismo Sport.

Either way, with a lot of talk about just how quiet things are for PS VR right now, this is definitely one to keep your eyes on as the year goes on.

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New Ace Combat 7 VR Footage Showcases Gameplay at Bandai Namco Thank You Festival

At the 2015 PlayStation Experience Bandai Namco revealed the first teasing footage of Ace Combat 7 whilst confirming support for PlayStation VR. Then at this years PlayStation Experience a couple of weeks ago, a new trailer featured during the keynote showcase. While the video certainly looked impressive, actual gameplay sequences were lacking, with clips only lasting a couple of seconds. This weekend, footage shot at a recent event showcases far more of Ace Combat 7.

The video – shot at the Bandai Namco Thank You Festival in Goyang, South Korea – records almost six minutes of gameplay using the PlayStation VR head-mounted display (HMD). It begins with the player sat in the fighter cockpit, as it ascends onto the deck of an aircraft carrier. As they look around you’ll be able to see the highly detailed cockpit and HUD prior to the aircraft being launched. After flying around for a short while the player then engages in some aerial combat, switching between lock-on missiles and machine guns.

Ace Combat 7 screenshot

 

Few details have been released on Ace Combat 7, but the team hasn’t been completely quiet. This month Famitsu interviewed Ace Combat 7 producer Kazutoki Kono and development producer Masashi Koyanagi reports Gematsu. The interview revealed that the developer only planned to create ‘light’ PlayStation VR mode for the main story, but now the virtual reality (VR) content follows a different direction to the main story.

Ace Combat 7 has been scheduled for release on PlayStation 4 in 2017. And for the latest news on Ace Combat 7, keep reading VRFocus.

Play Flight Sim ‘Ace Combat 7’ On PS VR At The PlayStation Experience

Play Flight Sim ‘Ace Combat 7’ On PS VR At The PlayStation Experience

At the PlayStation Experience taking place this weekend, Bandai Namco shared the trailer for its upcoming Ace Combat 7 game during the opening keynote. The Ace Combat franchise is arguably the most well-known flight combat simulator series and this latest entry is the first for the new generation of video game consoles. It brings a new level of visual fidelity in Unreal Engine 4 to the series, but will also deliver a well-known brand to the PlayStation VR ecosystem when it releases.

Ace Combat 7 was announced at the previous PlayStation Experience in 2015 and things have been mostly quiet since then. The original trailer shows us an unfolding conflict where a pilot was watching a battle from what looked like a space elevator before leaping off into a long drop before the clip ended. This time around the trailer gives a glimpse at the overarching conflict that Ace Combat 7 will be built upon. A kingdom declares war on a federation and it looks like you’ll be controlling a young woman pilot that is/was a prisoner. The narrative for the Ace Combat games is one of its most cherished elements, so fans will be on the lookout for the story’s reveal hopefully in the near future.

PlayStation VR owners will likely be excited to get into another game that involves a major brand, though we do not know to what extent the VR features will go. Hopefully, the developers will be able to provide an experience that doesn’t induce nausea considering the fast pace and constant change of direction involved in flight combat. If you’re at the PlayStation Experience event, the game is playable on the exhibition floor at booth #3400 with VR implementation. Check out our coverage of the new PS VR exclusive Starblood Arena and an update on Resident Evil 7 in VR. Stay tuned for more updates on PSX.

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Take To The Skies With Ace Combat 7 In New PlayStation Experience Trailer

It has been some time since we spoke about Ace Combat 7 on VRFocus, almost a year exactly in fact.

Bandai Namco’s flight and fight series has been on notice for both the PlayStation 4 and PlayStation VR since it was first revealed at the last PlayStation Experience held in San Francisco in 2015. An exclusive for Sony’s hardware, Ace Comabt 7 was only one of a handful of virtual reality (VR) titles showcased by Sony Interactive Entertainment (SIE) at the 2016 edition.

The latest trailer for Ace Combat 7 sees clips of both action and story as the life of combat pilots in the so called “Strangereal” universe flit between acts of heroism and living on quite literally a wing and a prayer. Get ready to climb back in the cockpit and soar into the clouds. Combat and glory awaits – but will you live to tell the tale?

VRFocus will continue to follow Ace Combat 7, reporting back with the latest updates on the title as we get them.