Oculus Touch Games Dead and Buried, Ultrawings Coming to Gear VR

Oculus Touch Games Dead and Buried, Ultrawings Coming to Gear VR

Despite their corporate fraternity, the Oculus Rift and Samsung Gear VR don’t cross over with each other very often when it comes to content. Certain applications will often be available on the one and not the other (looking at you March Madness). Game ports do happen but they typically flow from the less powerful Gear on up to its beefy older brother. Today, however, we can reveal that at least two Oculus Rift games have been ported to the Gear VR in one form or another. At a press event in San Francisco, we had the chance to see both Ultrawings and Dead and Buried running on the Gear for the very first time.

The down-porting of both these titles is made even more impressive by the fact that they are both games that require Oculus Touch. This means that not only do these games need to be reworked without the positional tracking of the Rift, they need to figure out how to exist without the only input method they were originally programmed to use. Fortunately, the Gear VR is getting a nifty new motion controller to make things a bit easier.

Even with the new controller, there’re still a ton of input features that need to be stripped out of a game like Dead and Buried or Ultrawings in order to make them playable. The Ultrawings demo we played, for example, takes out much of the pre-flight button presses and switch flips. Instead you just press a button to increase the throttle and focus mainly on moving your wrist –rather than your entire arm — to steer.

Dead and Buried — a game that’s all about using positional tracking to find cover and get the perfect shot — was only playable in the multiplayer “shootout” mode. In this mode, all I had to do was raise my controller when I heard a bell and try my best to shoot the enemy standing out in the open directly across from me. That enemy was controlled by a real human being over wifi. In this case it was Oculus’ head of mobile product Max Cohen. Cohen explained that online matchmaking is completely possible for Dead and Buried’s Gear version

Cohen also added that both ports are still in early days with no clear release date or price just yet. However, the fact that it’s now even possible for Touch games to exist on a mobile VR platform like the Gear opens up some seriously cool possibilities.

What Touch game would you most like to see come to the Gear VR? Let us know in the comments below.

Tagged with: , ,

Guns and Ghosts Update for Dead and Buried Has Some Surprises in Store

Today Oculus Studios has announced a major update for its free Touch shooter Dead and Buried, adding new characters, levels and more. 

Called the Guns and Ghosts Update the studio has added two more characters to the roster, an old gunsmith and a pistol wielding spirit. As players progress in Dead and Buried they’ll be able to unlock 10 additional options for them both.

Dead and Buried new characters

The horde mode has seen several additions, with a resurrection gun now available to bring players back from the dead, a new boss, and a single-player option for those times you can’t find anybody online.

Lastly a new rifle and sniper map have been added to Shootout mode, putting players in a desert oasis located next to an old Spanish ghost town.

“Listening to the community is a must, and we took your feedback to heart,” says Oculus Software Engineer Ryan Rutherford. “We’re thrilled to deliver these improvements and new content—and can’t wait to share more updates throughout the year!”

For any further updates to Dead and Buried, keep reading VRFocus.

‘Dead and Buried’ Review: Get Ready To Sweat In This Highly Physical VR Shooter

‘Dead and Buried’ Review: Get Ready To Sweat In This Highly Physical VR Shooter

Reload quickly, aim carefully, and in the name of all that’s decent keep your head down. This is the mantra that every Dead and Buried player should recite if they want to be successful in the latest multiplayer virtual reality shooter.

Dead and Buried is one of the first game to be developed almost completely by Oculus Studios — the in-house content creation arm of the Facebook-owned Rift manufacturer.  It was created in a partnership with Gunfire Games, the team behind Chronos. Dead and Buried is a multiplayer shooter with a wild west theme. You play as one of four otherworldly desperadoes battling it out with other undead gunslingers for supremacy in these literal VR ghost towns. The action is fast and frenetic; the gunplay is well designed and satisfying; and the combat mechanics are immersive and technical enough to keep matches consistently engaging. In short: this game is fun.

There are five game modes to chose from in Dead and Buried: a shooting gallery that’s only really useful for target practice, your standard wild west shootout, the objective-based robbery, quick draw in the streets, and wave-based cooperative horde mode. All of these are enjoyable in their own right, but combined together under one title they make Dead and Buried one of the most versatile multiplayer VR titles available.

Horde, Shootout, and Robbery are the real standouts here. Quick draw is fun as well, but it is dramatically more limited as just a “3…2…1…FIRE” reflex test with quickly fading novelty. The former three modes, however, are consistently fun and highlight the strategic, and highly physical, gameplay that Oculus Studios has been working so hard to perfect.

Horde mode is exactly what it sounds like: a wave-based challenge where you and up to three friends try and last as long as possible and defeat the big, supernatural bad of each map. Shootout is a team-based firefight pulled straight out of any famous western’s saloon, or town square fight scene. Robbery might be the most innovative of the lot.

In this mode two teams of two play as either lawmen or outlaws. The job of the robbers is to push forward by winning consecutive death matches on a linear map and make their way to, and open, the final safe. The lawmen, conversely, want to push the outlaws back until they lock them up in the brig. Each separate match has a pool of shared lives for each team. When your team’s lives run out you lose and are forced either forward or back depending which team you’re on.

Shootout and Robbery are the two best use cases for the unique mechanics that make Dead and Buried fun and are where most players will likely spend the majority of their time. Cover and precision are the bread and butter of Dead and Buried combat. There’s no intentional locomotion system in any of the game modes listed above. Instead, you spawn into one of several cover points on a given map and remain their until you die.

This, unfortunately, means that some games have a fair amount of luck involved in order to win. If you’re going 1v1 against a rival it often comes down to who spawns in a more optimal location. These problems are less noticeable in bigger team fights, where no spot is truly safe, but the absence of some sort of teleport mechanic hurts the game overall.

Being rooted to one spot doesn’t mean that you’re without movement options completely, however. Each spawn point has its own cover for you to hide behind in most cases and so a good portion of matches in Dead and Buried center around knowing when to peak out and fire and being able to dive behind cover quickly.

This makes Dead and Buried one of the most physical VR games we’ve ever played and you’ll rarely end a match without sweating. This isn’t an issue, as the physicality of the game is what makes it so satisfying. You honestly feel like a skilled marksman when you’re able to bait your opponent into showing his face just to blast it into the after, after-life with a well timed shot. Being required to physically hide from opposing fire also makes defense feel more immersive in this game than in any traditional 2D shooter. Your survival is directly related to how smart and fast you can be while playing and that never really gets old.

Final Score: 8.5/10 – Great

There’s a loose progression system in Dead and Buried. The game offers you four different avatars to play as, unlock, and customize with new aesthetics as you gain more experience. This provides some limited incentive to play more but it’s not quite enough to answer this title’s most significant question: is there enough here to keep the servers humming and the matches well populated?

From a pre-launch perspective the answer seems to be yes. There are enough enjoyable game modes and physical, enjoyable gameplay mechanics to keep things interesting, but time will tell whether or not the limited number of Rift users with Touch will choose to spend their time sweating it out in a Dead and Buried gun battle when there are other, less intense experiences to chose from. But, If they can take the heat, this one will be well worth the effort.

Read our Game Review Guidelines for more information on how we arrived at this score.

Tagged with: , , , ,

Time Is Running Out To Pre-Order Oculus Touch And Get Two Great Games For Free

Time Is Running Out To Pre-Order Oculus Touch And Get Two Great Games Free

Oculus Touch launches on Dec. 6, just one week away. The long-awaited peripheral is being ravenously anticipated by current Oculus Rift owners. The company has further stoked their appetites by creating a virtually unprecedented list of free launch titles. Five titles will be free to those that purchase Oculus Touch, but two of those games have a ticking clock on them. We reached out to Oculus to figure out exactly when the clock runs out and what will happen once it reaches zero.

The five titles included with a Touch pre-order are: The Unspoken, VR Sports Challenge, Dead & Buried, Quill and Oculus Medium. The latter three titles will be free on the platform in perpetuity, however the first two games have a half life. The Unspoken and VR Sports Challenge are only free to customers that pre-order a Rift. According to a representative for the company, “Dec 5th is the last day of the pre-order based on region. When the clock strikes ‘Dec 6,’ the pre-order is over.”

Once that pre-order window closes VR Sports Challenge and The Unspoken will cost $29.99 apiece, Oculus confirms. The official, Oculus position on the other three titles is that:

“Our internally developed titles of Medium, Quill, and Dead & Buried are currently free for anyone who buys Touch. They’ll be added to your account when you go through the setup of your new Touch controllers.”

So there you have it. Make sure to get your pre-order in before Dec. 6 if you want to get the full five titles for free.

Oculus Touch is a hand-tracked controller platform compatible with the Oculus Rift VR headset. Touch will allow Rift users to bring their hands into immersive experiences and interact with objects in a more natural way. The controllers launch on Dec. 6th for $199 and will be available through Amazon, Best Buy and Oculus themselves.

Tagged with: , , , , , ,

Acclaimed Oculus Shooter ‘Dead and Buried’ to Come Bundled With Touch

Oculus has announced that the first-party VR game Dead and Buried will come bundled for free with Oculus Touch (for all purchases, not just pre-orders), bringing the Touch bundled content count to three games.

Dead and Buried joins the Touch bundle alongside VR Sports Challenge and The Unspoken (the latter two are bundled with pre-orders only), and other content like Oculus Medium and Robo Recall will be free for all users. Extra software like this may make the $200 price of Oculus Touch a more attractive investment for customers who already spent $600 on the headset.

dead-and-buried-12 dead-and-buried-6 dead-and-burried

Though unreleased, Dead and Buried has been widely acclaimed, and the value it specifically adds to the Touch prospect may be quite large. The game was developed in-house by Oculus, and has single player, multiplayer, and co-op modes with wild west shootouts as the main theme. It makes sense that Oculus would provide it free since they made it, but also because it would benefit the multiplayer experience in having as many people on as possible, since the overall install base of VR is still relatively small. This logic applies even more to The Unspoken being bundled with pre-orders, as that game is very focused on multiplayer.

SEE ALSO
Preview: 'Dead & Buried' Action Packed Multiplayer Could be the Killer App Oculus Touch Needs

While it’s hard to pinpoint what Dead and Buried might have been priced at if it wasn’t bundled, it’s easy to imagine that it could easily rank among the higher priced games in the market. I had a chance to try the latest demos for this game at Oculus Connect 3, and it proved to be one of the most exhilarating experiences at the show. Meeting and high-fiving your partner right before the match where you’re frantically trying to shoot over cover at the enemy team and duck for cover at the same time is one of the most fun experiences I’ve had in VR in general, not to mention working with a team of four to defeat a zombie queen in the newly revealed co-op mode, which I also had the pleasure of trying.

The decision to make this game free might be even more worthwhile because of how it could provide one of the defining moments of VR for players, letting them see the potential of the technology.

Along with Dead and Buried, all the free bonus content coming to Touch could make the launch of the product one to be very looked forward to, and one that will indulge much playing time before anyone has to worry about buying another game to make the platform worth their while.

The post Acclaimed Oculus Shooter ‘Dead and Buried’ to Come Bundled With Touch appeared first on Road to VR.

Dead and Buried will be Free for Oculus Touch

The Oculus Touch motion controllers for Oculus Rift are due to launch in just over a month with 30 titles scheduled to arrive. One of those is Dead and Buried, a co-developed title between Oculus Studios and Gunfire Games (Chronos). In a blog posting this week Oculus has revealed the videogame will be available to all Touch owners for free on launch day.

Wild west themed Dead and Buried brings the old school barroom shootout into VR, with teams of two players duelling the death. Armed with pistols, shotguns, grenade launchers and other available weapons littered around the area, players have to use cover to survive as long as possible. Get killed and they’ll be moved to a different location to continue the battle. Whichever team achieves the most kills wins.

Dead and Buried GIF

In the blog posting Oculus Software Engineer Ryan Rutherford gave further details on the upcoming title including a game mode called Robbery. “In this mode, one team tries to rob a train while the other attempts to stop them,” said Rutherford. “The safe is located in the caboose and players battle it out through multiple train cars – sleeper cars, box cars, even a shootout on the roof! When one team wins a skirmish, that team advances while the other falls back.”

Shooting experiences are going to feature quite a bit for Oculus Touch, the controllers are ideally suited to waging gunfights. These will include: Serious Sam VR: The Last Hope by Croteam; Arizona Sunshine by Vertigo Games and Epic Game’s recently revealed Robo Recall.

Unveiled at Oculus Connect 3 last month, Robo Recall is another gallery style shooter, this time with players facing hordes of robots. The title is due to arrive in early 2017 and will be another free experience for gamers to enjoy.

VRFocus will continue its coverage of Oculus Touch, reporting back with any further updates.

‘Dead and Buried’ Will Be Free With Oculus Touch Because Oculus Wants “People To Have Fun”

‘Dead and Buried’ Will Be Free With Oculus Touch Because Oculus Wants “People To Have Fun”

The list of high-quality games that will be free when Oculus Touch releases in December just grew by one. Today, Oculus announced via a blog post that Dead and Buried, the highly anticipated multiplayer shooter, will be free with Touch at launch.

Most new systems typically launch with one free, high-end title but Touch is getting three. With this announcement, Dead and Buried is joining VR Sports Challenge and The Unspoken as free launch titles for the Touch platform. The entire trio meets the criteria of what most expect from a AAA experience. These are not tech demos or glorified controller tutorials. They’re all very fun, very well designed, and very free.

Any one of these games could easily have been a full-price exclusive title. By making them free, Oculus is leaving millions of potential dollars on the table. In fact, this decision will end up costing the company quite a bit due to the amounts they will need to pay the third party developers in order to make up for their lack of sales revenue.

When asked why it is giving away so much for so little, a representative within Oculus merely stated, “we want people to have fun!”

A commitment to good times is admirable but it is also likely that these decisions are being informed by the actions of Oculus’ parent company: Facebook. At this year’s Oculus Connect conference in San Jose, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced that his company has already spent $250 million on VR content development and that it planned to spend at least that over again in the near future.

Having a $250 million war chest at its disposal would certainly free a company up when it comes to pricing for its launch titles. But still, it’s nice to see Oculus passing those savings on to you the consumer rather than allocating it towards less charitable pursuits.

So if Touch is in your future then enjoy the free gift! If you dare…

Major ‘Dead and Buried’ Update Brings Heists, Zombies and Co-Op To The Oculus Touch Shooter

Major ‘Dead and Buried’ Update Brings Heists, Zombies and Co-Op To The Oculus Touch Shooter

When Oculus Touch launches in December it may already have its killer app releasing right alongside it. Dead and Buried is one of the most exciting titles coming to the already jam packed platform. Developed in-house by Oculus Studios, Dead and Buried is a multiplayer shooter that takes place in a literal ghost town. You assume the role of an other-worldly gunslinger brought back from the grave in order to shoot some bad guys…or some good guys.

We first saw the game demonstrated at an Oculus press event during GDC 2016. At that point, the only gameplay option available was a 2v2 deathmatch that took place in an old-fashioned saloon. Even in its unpolished state, Dead and Buried was still one of the most memorable and enjoyable demos that Oculus showed off at that event. Months later, at Oculus Connect 3, the company pulled back the curtain on the new and improved version of this hotly anticipated title.

The new version of Dead and Buried steps up an already interesting experience with the addition of two new game modes: horde and co-op. The horde mode, which Oculus Studios co-developed with Gunfire Games, lets you take your guns off of your friends and aim them instead at wave after wave of undead enemies.

The main antagonist of horde mode is a banshee-esque witch and her zombie army. You and three friends spawn into one of four cover points set up horizontally from one another. Your job is to gun down monstrosities trying to peel away your cover, and have you for dinner, while keeping yourself and your friends alive.

If you’re killed during the round you remain out-of-service until the next one begins which means there are some true hero-moments where one player can save a session for the rest of the team. There are a variety of enemy types to be aware of including standard zombies, suicide bombers, and even snipers. Each wave gets successively harder and the demo we saw culminated in a boss fight with the witch herself.

The horde mode had our team shouting like maniacs in the middle of a crowded convention hall without hesitation. It’s challenging, entertaining, and a fantastic example of co-operative multiplayer gaming, which is something we have not seen much of on VR platforms just yet. Anyone who’s ever played “what would we do in the zombie apocalypse with their friends will enjoy this immensely.

Every great western needs a great heist and Dead and Buried is no exception. In heist mode you and a friend will compete against two other human opponents as either a duo of lawmen or a posse of outlaws. The robbery, of course, takes place on a train that is divided into several different levels. In each level you need to kill your opponents a certain number of times to either advance up the train as the bandits, or push them back as the sheriffs.

If the ne’er do wells reach the front of the train then they must accomplish one last objective by breaking into a safe using a classic dial-style combination lock. But it won’t be easy as Johnny law is still hot on their tail, guns a-blazing. In this final level one outlaw takes on the safe while another takes on the fuzz with a large shield to aid him or her in that ignoble quest.

Trying to physically spin a dial in real time while bullets are exploding all around you is…stressful to say the least. During our attempt at the great train robbery we dominated all the way until the safe and then lost in spectacular fashion. But maybe we wouldn’t have if DAVID KNEW HOW TO USE A FREAKING SHIELD. Deep breaths Joe, deep breaths.

As fantastic as these two new gameplay modes are, Oculus Studios confirmed on the show floor that there is still more content to be packed into what is shaping up to be a must-have title for day one of the Oculus Touch launch. These other updates include more heists, more guns, and we’re sure, a whole lot more fun.

Dead and and Buried releases on December 6, the same day as Oculus Touch.

Oculus Touch Launch Title Dead and Buried Being Co-Developed by Gunfire Games

The Oculus Touch motion controllers are set to have an extensive line-up of software available for when launch day arrives. At the Oculus Connect 3 conference yesterday Oculus’ Head of Content, Jason Rubin outlined 35 titles that would support Touch at launch and one of those was first-person shooter (FPS), Dead and Buried. Being made internally by Oculus Studios, its now been revealed that Gunfire Games has been co-developing the title.

Gunfire Games, the studio behind Chronos and Herobound: Spirit Champion for Oculus Rift, has announced that its been lending its virtual reality (VR) skills and knowledge to the upcoming title.

Dead and buried image 2

“When Oculus Studios approached us about getting the group behind Herobound, our second Oculus title, back together to work on Dead and Buried, we knew it would be a good fit because we already know the talent of the team they have at Oculus and how well we all work together,”  said Gunfire Games President David Adams.

For the last several months the studio has been assisting the internal Oculus Studios content team in the development of Dead and Buried, by helping them build out additional content and features for the game.

Wild west themed Dead and Buried brings the old school barroom shootout into VR, with teams of two players duelling the death. Armed with pistols, shotguns, grenade launchers and other available weapons littered around the area, players have to use cover to survive as long as possible. Get killed and they’ll be moved to a different location to continue the battle. Whichever team achieves the most kills wins.

The official Oculus Touch price and launch date were revealed this week, along with new incoming features for Oculus Rift and Gear VR, including Rooms, Avatars and Parties.

For all the latest Oculus Rift and Oculus Touch news, keep reading VRFocus.