Anshar 2: Hyperdrive Review – Second Time’s The Charm

Anshar 2: Hyperdrive revives one of modern VR’s oldest games through a Meta Quest remake, offering a fantastic dogfighter. Read on for our full Anshar 2: Hyperdrive review.


Anshar Wars has history in virtual reality. Appearing on Samsung Gear nearly eight years ago, developer OZWE found a winner with its space shooting dogfighter, and Anshar Wars 2 was quick to follow. Now, five years later, AW2 is back and instead of a straight port, we’ve got a Quest-exclusive remake. Featuring a new control scheme, revamped multiplayer, and updated visuals, Anshar Wars 2: Hyperdrive is thoroughly entertaining.

Playing an unnamed Ansharian Empire pilot with Squad Alpha 10, Hyperdrive takes place 10 years after the Separation Wars, where Anshar crushed a rebellion within its space colonies. Following a period of fragile peace, a new threat emerges from the depths of space, led by fearsome Nergal fighters and a former ally gone rogue. The plot is coherent, not especially creative, and several story beats are admittedly predictable, though you can probably guess the narrative’s not why we’re here.

Piloting different ships across a 13-mission campaign, you’ll take to the skies and stars alike for aerial dogfighting, and this is where Hyperdrive really shines. Each mission’s comprised of different objectives, ranging between taking down cargo trains, destroying Nergal communication satellites above orbit, protecting your Ansharian Mothership, and more. Optional objectives are often present too like protecting resources, rewarding players with a higher score if completed.

Weapon loadouts are swapped between missions, going between missiles, bombs, lasers, EMP charges, and more. Most require manual aiming with the touch controllers, though missiles automatically lock on after several seconds. Some weapons require ammo replenishments and to get that, you’ll need to destroy enemy ships. Once defeated, they’ll sometimes drop temporary upgrades for your ship too, boosting your fire rate, adding extra health for your shields, and more, so it’s worth taking out the stragglers. 

Anshar 2: Hyperdrive Review Review – Comfort

Anshar 2: Hyperdrive has a few options available. While there’s no specific toggle, you can switch between standing and seated gameplay with ease, and I’d argue seated works better as Hyperdrive doesn’t require full body movement. As mentioned before, you can swap between 1st and 3rd person perspectives but if you’re liable to motion sickness, I’d recommend sticking to 3rd person gameplay.

Beyond this, camera controls in 3rd person can be set to smooth turning or snap, though you can’t adjust how far the snap turning goes. Hyperdrive also lets you choose which hand handles certain controls. That goes for flight direction too, as players can swap hand movement for head movement, taking you in the direction you’re facing.

Undoubtedly, Hyperdrive’s variety is one of its biggest strengths, avoiding repetition while holding your interest. You can usually clear missions in under 5 minutes, though recklessly charging in often leads to your demise. Unfortunately, checkpoints aren’t evenly divided between missions, so there’s a good chance you’ll be restarting a few times. It’s a short campaign, one you’ll likely finish it in around 3-5 hours, but thanks to a bronze, silver, and gold medal score system, there’s incentive to try again. 

Now, Hyperdrive’s controls are unconventional for VR as gameplay defaults to a 3rd person perspective. It’s a little frustrating when navigating through a tight gap as you can’t always see what’s ahead, and collisions (almost) always kills you. And yet, this otherwise works. Direct ship movement is done through motion controls, moving your right hand across your play space. The right joystick’s used for turning as the game uses a fixed camera angle, while left adjusts acceleration when pushed forward or backwards. 

If you’d prefer it, there’s also a 1st person option which places you directly into the ship’s cockpit, which really feels like you’re at the heart of the action. Gameplay certainly benefits from that greater immersion – I’m reminded of EVE: Valkyrie despite Hyperdrive’s less realistic visuals – but I ultimately preferred the 3rd person approach. It’s important to note that you can lower the dogfighting’s intensity, though if you easily get nauseous, that won’t do much.

Anshar 2: Hypderdrive Review

For anyone who played Anshar Wars 2, there’s a few differences here. Alongside new control options, Hyperdrive utilises 6DOF rather than 3DOF, benefitting greatly from more powerful hardware. As for visuals, OZWE confirms it’s had a significant refresh and while I can’t directly compare them – sadly, it’s no longer available on the Oculus Store – Hyperdrive boasts colourful visuals that suits Meta Quest brilliantly. They won’t blow you away but between alien planets, asteroid fields, and more, Hyperdrive’s locations never get stale.

Finally, if you’re not looking to play Hyperdrive alone, there’s a few multiplayer options to keep you occupied. Alongside a deathmatch mode and some co-op missions, OZWE implemented a battle royale-style mode, unlocking new cosmetic options for your ship upon levelling up. Sadly, these modes feel slightly bare right now, but I had fun with other players and there’s a solid foundation to build upon. 

Anshar 2: Hyper Review – Final Impressions

OZWE has done a fantastic job bringing back Anshar Wars 2 for the Meta Quest and opting for a remake over a straight port was a great call. Sure, the campaign doesn’t take long and multiplayer’s a little lacking, but what’s there is well executed, varied, and kept me hooked throughout. Offering a few new twists that’ll appeal to fans of the original, Anshar 2: Hyperdrive comes highly recommended.



Anshar 2: Hyperdrive Review Points


For more on how we arrived at this rating, read our review guidelines. What did you make of our Anshar 2: Hyperdrive review? Let us know in the comments below!

OZWE Games Share New Anshar 2: Hyperdrive Trailer, Coming Soon To Quest

OZWE Games have shared a new trailer and a bunch of beta footage of Anshar 2: Hyperdrive, the Quest remaster of Anshar Wars 2.

Anshar Wars 2 released for Gear VR and Rift in 2016 and is now being remade and remastered for Meta Quest headsets, set for release soon.

We got our first look back in August, but this week developers OZWE Games shared a brand new trailer and some footage, alongside a new shortened and subtitled name — Anshar 2: Hyperdrive.

The trailer promises new controls and visuals, as well as a full campaign (with 13 solo levels) alongside three multiplayer modes — battle royale, deathmatch and co-op. There will also be a new leveling system and cosmetic skins.

In addition to the original third-person view, the game also now supports a cockpit first-person camera as well. This feature was requested by a Reddit commentator a few months ago, to which the developers responded that it “wasn’t officially planned” but they “will try a few things to see how it goes.”

It must have gone well, because the studio has shared footage of the first-person cockpit view in action, embedded above.

There’s also some multiplayer gameplay footage, embedded above, with one player uses the third-person camera while the other plays in the cockpit using first-person. If you just want third-person solo footage, check out this video here.

A release on the Meta Quest platform is confirmed for now, but other platforms might receive the remaster as well — the description for the trailer on OZWE Games’ channel says Hyperdrive is a remastered version “for 6DOF VR devices”.

Anshar 2: Hyperdrive is coming soon to Meta Quest and the original game, Anshar Wars 2, is available now on Oculus Rift.

Anshar Wars 2 Coming To Oculus Quest, Developer Shares Footage

A remake of Anshar Wars 2, originally available on Gear VR and Rift in 2016, is coming to Oculus Quest.

The developer shared footage on Reddit of the game running on Quest, announcing that the remake is currently in development for release in the future..

The game originally launched five years ago, back in 2016 for Gear VR. While technically a sequel, the free original game it succeeded was more of a tech demo than anything fully fledged. Anshar Wars 2 for Gear VR was a full title, built by OZWE Games and executive produced by Mike Doran from Oculus. As a mobile VR title, the game featured short 5-minute missions that used head movements to fly a ship floating in front of you in 360 degrees to avoiding obstacles.

Anshar Wars 2 also launched a multiplayer mode and released for Rift in the same year, including support for multiplayer with Gear VR cross-play.  At the time, we said Anshar Wars 2’s multiplayer might be the ‘pinnacle of phone-powered VR technology.’ It seems only apt then that five years later the game is making its way to Oculus Quest.

As you can seen in the footage embedded above, it looks pretty similar to the Rift version released a few years back. For the Rift release, players had the option of using their head or the controllers to move the ship. The footage on Quest clearly shows someone playing using a controller to pilot the ship, and the developer noted that the game is “a blast with the new controls” in the Reddit thread.

Another Reddit user commented in the thread about the potential of a cockpit view, to which the developer responded that such a feature is “not officially planned yet, but we will try a few things to see how it goes.” The developer did also confirm multiplayer support on Quest, but no word yet on whether cross-play with Rift will be supported.

Anshar Wars 2 is coming soon to Oculus Quest and available now on Oculus Rift.

Hands-On: Death Lap Channels Twisted Metal For Intense VR Combat Racing

Death Lap is a new upcoming VR combat racing game from OZWE Games featuring cross-play and cross-buy that releases “soon” for Rift and Quest.

OZWE Games just announced Death Lap not long ago, less than a month ago before Oculus Connect 6 in fact, and at OC6 we got the chance to talk with Alma Moya Losada, the Head of Marketing and Communications at OZWE, about the game. She also let us try out a build of the game running on Oculus Quest.

Death Lap VR Interview:

I was immediately reminded of Twisted Metal mixed with a more traditional racing game. The Twisted Metal games are great, but they’re more like arena fighting games that just so happen to give you vehicles as the characters. In Death Lap you’re still racing around a course, but have the addition of weapons and constant combat to deal with at the same time.

WipEout has weapons as well, but they’re more of an ancillary feature there — in Death Lap, the combat takes the center stage. Right now the game works by having you steer your car with the left analog stick of your Touch controller while you aim your weapon with your right hand in full 6DOF.

They said they’re experimenting with letting you steer using your actual left hand, but they said in testing it made people’s arms tired. However, it works well in other racing games I’ve tried like Touring Karts, but at least having the option would be nice.

Death Lap Reveal Teaser Trailer:

There are some limited power-ups you’ll come across, but for the most part every vehicle is installed with their own custom weapons so each time you race in a new car it’s a different experience. For my demo I picked the one with a rocket launcher. Trying to drive well and stay in the lead while simultaneously looking around to aim rockets and shoot ahead of vehicles, leading them, to get the splash damage of the explosion just right, felt really good and fun.

There’s no release date yet but Death Lap is coming out soon for both Oculus Quest and Oculus Rift with full cross-play support. The focus is on competitive multiplayer racing, as expected, but you can race against the AI as well if you’d like.

Check out our interview video above with the Head of Marketing for more details.

The post Hands-On: Death Lap Channels Twisted Metal For Intense VR Combat Racing appeared first on UploadVR.

Vehicular Combat Experience Death Lap Will Tear it up on Oculus Quest & Rift

Known for its sci-fi franchise Anshar Wars, virtual reality (VR) developer OZWE Games is going for a more grounded approach for its next videogame Death Lap. A fast and furious racing title with plenty of combat elements, Death Lap has just been announced for Oculus Quest and Oculus Rift headsets.

Death Lap

In Death Lap OZWE Games will be mixing up several racing genres, offering players the chance to tear up the track and their opponents using a variety of vehicles and weapon systems. With a loose story revolving around this annual race and its host, Nitro Saint Payne, there is only one concern for racers, making it past the finish line.

Going into greater detail regarding the main character, OZWE Games CEO Stéphane Intissar mentions on Oculus Blog that Nitro Saint Payne is a mixture of famous supervillains such as Arcade from Marvel Comics; the Joker, Dan Killian in The Running Man and Cruella de Vil from The Hundred and One Dalmatians.

There will be five cars to choose before each race, each featuring a variety of strengths, short and long-range weapons, and special abilities. Players will be able to race on five circuits: a psychedelic desert, oil on fire in the desert, Las Vegas by night, an abandoned theme park, and a giant pinball.

And just to make the races even more interesting Intissar says: “Besides weapons, players can use items to get an edge over their opponents: traps, secret paths, and pickup items spread throughout the 3D environments. To spice up the game, players can be eaten by a colossal piranha, electrified by the malicious clown, and crushed by a giant dice over the ruthless rides.”

With a multiplayer which can support up to six people, Death Lap will also feature a single-player option. In multiplayer integrated VoIP will allow players to talk (taunt) to each other plus they be able to rank on global leaderboards.

Currently, there’s no indication how far through development Death Lap is or when OZWE Games plan on releasing the title. With Oculus Connect 6 (OC6) less than two weeks away its likely further details will be made available during the event. For further updates, keep reading VRFocus.

Oculus Reveal Launch Content For Oculus Go

In the run up to the release of the highly anticipated Oculus Go standalone all-in-one virtual reality (VR) head-mounted display (HMD), Oculus confirmed a number of titles that will be part of the launch content for the platform.

Anshar Online Screenshot 01

The Oculus Go HMD will provide users with a chance to experience stunning and immersive content all without the need for a mobile device or computer. With the all-in-one design offering three degrees of freedom (3DoF) along with an orientation-tracked controller, the Oculus Go will be a lightweight and portable solution for those wanting to experience VR.

Settlers of Catan (Catan VR) will be a launch title for Oculus Go offering players a chance to enjoy the hugely successful board game of the same name. Released today for the Oculus Rift and Samsung Gear VR, the Oculus Go release will be cross-play compatible with the other versions allowing players to come together and play regardless of the platform of their choice.

Catan VR - Screenshot

Anshar Online, the next evolution of the popular VR franchise, Anshar Wars, will bring a rich single-player campaign to Oculus Go that can be enjoyed alone or with friends. The massive multiplayer online (MMO) space shooter where six players will be able to seamless play cross-device with Oculus Go, Samsung Gear VR and Oculus Rift.

They Suspect Nothing invites players to complete a series of bizarre tasks, tests and puzzles to prove they are not human. Featuring over 20 mini-games, with downloadable content available as well, across a number of levels. Players must do everything they can to ensure they the robots suspect nothing and make it through the challenges.

Lastly from developer Owlchemy Labs, creators of the popular Job Simulator, will be the follow-up title Vacation Simulator. In a similar vain to Job Simulator, players will be able to join computerized companions beach-side for some virtual relaxation.

All of these titles will be available on Samsung Gear VR as well as the Oculus Go, offering players more choices when it comes to picking a platform to play on.

The Game Developer Conference is running all week and VRFocus will be sure to bring you all the latest from the show throughout the week.

GDC 2018: Catan VR, Anshar Online And They Suspect Nothing Revealed For Go, Rift And Gear

GDC 2018: Catan VR, Anshar Online And They Suspect Nothing Revealed For Go, Rift And Gear

Oculus Go was a big focus of the company’s 2018 Game Developers Conference session today, so it’s only natural that we saw some new games announced for the standalone platform alongside other Oculus hardware.

First up is a game you knew about: Catan VR. The virtual version of this classic boardgame is actually launching on the Oculus Rift and Gear VR today with cross-play and will also support cross-play when it launches on Go in the coming months. We went hands-on with the VR build yesterday and found it to be just as fun as playing in real life.

Next up is a surprise sequel to a hit Gear VR series. OZWE Games is working on Anshar Online, again coming to all three platforms with cross-play support in the near future. Those familiar with Anshar will know it for its exciting space combat, and this iteration will feature co-op play and PVP across 50 different missions.

Finally we have They Suspect Nothing, which we don’t know a whole lot about yet other than that it too is cross-play across all three Oculus headsets. Look for more details on that one after we’ve gone hands-on at the Oculus Booth today.

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