Echo Arena Review: Ready at Dawn Delivers VR’s First Amazing Esport

Echo Arena Review: Ready at Dawn Delivers VR’s First Amazing Esport

We’ve written about Echo Arena multiple times. We had our first hands-on preview back at Oculus Connect 3 (OC3) when it was just a multiplayer mode within Lone Echo, an otherwise single player game, and then saw it again at a separate preview event. Now with two beta weekends in the books that brought tons of new people into the fold, Echo Arena is finally launching as its own separate, standalone experience.

After spending so much time with it I can confidently say that Echo Arena is hands-down one of the best multiplayer VR games I’ve ever played and should be experienced by everyone with an at least passing interest in VR technology.

At its core the premise is simple: there is a single disc floating in the middle of a zero-gravity room. You’re on a team with a bunch of other people. There is a goal at each end of the arena, which also has a variety of objects in the way. Your mission is to push off of objects, use your wrist boosters, and carefully navigate the environment while throwing, passing, and grabbing the disc on your way to score.

The best way to describe it is like playing Ultimate Frisbee in zero-G with some callbacks to the likes of Tron, Harry Potter’s Quidditch, and even soccer (football.) Just describing it and even showing it in action (via the trailer above) isn’t enough to really do it justice though as Echo Arena, perhaps more so than any other VR game before it, needs to be experienced to be understood.

Any good competitive game is going to be easy to pick up and play but difficult to master. Take Rocket League for example, one of the most popular and successful indie games. It’s just soccer with a giant ball and rocket-powered cars. That’s it. Simple, but oh-so-difficult to master in practice. Fighting games are similar. Echo Arena on the other hand is a bit different.

While it’s certainly intuitive once you get the hang of it, I think that, like with most VR games, there are three levels of mastery: first-time player that’s still adapting to VR itself, intermediate player that knows VR but is still learning the game, and expert player that is comfortable in VR and has a firm grasp of the game’s mechanics and strategies. Most people are going to be in that intermediate category but if you’re new to VR and jumping into a game like Echo Arena totally fresh, then you might have some trouble at first.

Mechanically it isn’t hard to understand. You leverage your momentum to fly across the arena as you subtly adjust your trajectory with your Iron Man-esque wrist boosters. Grabbing the disc, throwing it through the air, and calling out to teammates all feels very much like Ultimate Frisbee or most any real-life sport. That’s part of what makes it so effective. But when you realize you no longer have to consider things like the wind, arcing the disc, or curving it through the air, you notice how different of an experience Echo Arena can be.

You can even punch your opponents in the face to stun them, grab onto legs and arms and shoulders to ride teammates for extra speed or climb up your opponent’s back to knock them out right before they score. Do you keep someone back at the goal to play defense all match, or do you go full offense and sprint back to the goal in an emergency? Do you organize formations to maximize passes and angles on the goal, or do you freestyle it?

Since Echo Arena is more or less a brand new sport in a way it’s forcing players to rethink how they move and coordinate as a team. In basketball you can do bounce passes and other things to get people open, whereas soccer has such a large field it usually comes down to shot angles and one-on-one match-ups more often. While playing Echo Arena I noticed when I have a good chemistry with my team and we communicate openly we always found the most success. In that way, Echo Arena is very clearly balanced and designed as a smart and exciting team-based competitive game.

As high as the highs are in Echo Arena the game has its lows as well. Since you need so many people for a good match to get going (6-8 roughly per game) it may not be easy to find people to play at all times. Furthermore the game only has one map. While this ensures the player base isn’t split and keeps a healthy, active community focused on mastering tactics, it does mean things can get boring quickly. A lack of map diversity means a lack of game variety. Ultimately Echo Arena is a finely-tuned and very narrowly focused game and the small slice of gameplay dynamics that it highlights are some o the best we’ve seen.

The small VR community has already started embracing Echo Arena with open arms and the teams at Oculus and Ready at Dawn have taken notice. In fact, they’ve partnered with Intel for the VR Challenger League this summer and you’ll be able to play Echo Arena for a chance to win thousands of dollars in VR’s first legitimate Esports contest. This is a huge step for a game that literally just officially released.

Final Score: 8.5/10 – Great

Make no mistake about it: Echo Arena is a great game and is easily one of the best multiplayer VR games to date. The fast-paced and intense gameplay is unlike anything else we’ve ever seen and the sheer skill required to nail the timing of group coordination is immensely satisfying. Once you’re on a roll with a team you like it’s hard to stop playing. But the lack of map and game variety, as well as the relative learning curve, hold this back from being even better.

Echo Arena is available for Rift with Touch starting today on Oculus Home. Anyone that downloads it in the first three months gets the game completely for free and it will be $19.99 after that period. Check out these official review guidelines to find out more about our process. 1

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Echo Arena innerhalb der ersten drei Monate kostenlos erhältlich

Echo Arena beendet am 17. Juli 2017 die Open-Beta-Phase und erscheint am 20. Juli 2017 für die Oculus Rift. Die Entwickler Ready at Dawn zeigen sich großzügig, denn wer das Spiel innerhalb der ersten drei Monate herunterlädt, darf es kostenlos behalten. Dies ist einer Partnerschaft mit Intel zu verdanken. Das Science-Fiction-Spiel ist der Multiplayer-Modus zum First-Person-Adventure Lone Echo.

Echo Arena innerhalb der ersten drei Monate kostenlos sichern

Der VR-Titel Echo Arena lässt euch gemeinsam mit einem Team aus bis zu drei Spielern innerhalb einer gravitationslosen Umgebung gegen Gegenspieler antreten. Das Ziel dabei ist es eine Disc in das Tor des generischen Teams zu befördern, um Punkte zu erzielen. Dabei kommt es auch zum gelegentlichen Schlagabtausch mit den Fäusten. Das Spiel erinnert stark an die Kriegssimulation aus Enders Game und hat großes eSport-Potenzial.

Echo Arena ist als Spin-off der Multiplayer-Modus von Lone Echo, einem First-Person-Science-Fiction-Adventure. Darin unterstützt ihr Captain Olivia Rhodes als Roboter mit künstlicher Intelligenz namens Jack, bei der Erkundung ihrer Umgebung in einer Mine auf den Saturnringen. Dafür stehen diverse futuristische Tools zur Verfügung und cleveres Problemlösen ist gefragt, um unterschiedliche Rätsel zu lösen. Auch interaktive Dialoge mit der kompletten Umgebung sind ein Teil des Spiels. Beide Spiele finden in einer gravitationslosen Umgebung statt und nutzen die Oculus Touch Controller.

Beim Kauf von Lone Echo für 34,99 Euro erhaltet ihr Echo Arena gratis dazu. Doch auch wer kein Interesse am Singleplayer-Adventure hat, der kann sich Echo Arena auf unbestimmte Zeit kostenlos sichern. Dafür muss das Spiel lediglich innerhalb der ersten drei Monate nach der Veröffentlichung heruntergeladen werden. Nach dieser Zeit kostet das Spiel ca. 20 Euro im Oculus Store. Die kostenlose Bereitstellung des VR-Spiels ist einer Partnerschaft mit Intel zu verdanken.

Diese Gelegenheit sollten sich kein Rift-Besitzer entgehen lassen, deshalb sichert euch Echo Arena kostenlos ab dem 20. Juli für die Oculus Rift.

(Quellen: RoadtoVR | Video: Oculus Youtube)

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Echo Arena Will be Free for the First Three Months

During the Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) last month, developer Ready at Dawn announced a sister title to its single-player sci-fi adventure Lone Echo, that was Echo Arena. A pure multiplayer experience, at the time the studio said Echo Arena would be free for a limited period. Now further details have emerged on how long that promotional period will last and the cost once it ends.

Ready at Dawn released all the details on Oculus’ forums, revealing that Echo Arena will be free for the first three months after launch next week. This is due to a sponsorship by Intel so that anyone with an Oculus account can download the videogame. After that promotion period has finished Echo Arena will then cost $19.99 USD, so it’s worth adding to your library even if you don’t play it straight away. There’s no exact date on when the free period will end, the studio states that’ll be announced closer to the time.

Echo Arena

It’s worth noting that downloading Echo Arena for free doesn’t give you access to Lone Echo. They are separate titles, so if you want to play Lone Echo you can pre-order it now for $34.99 or pay $39.99 on launch day.

Echo Arena pits two teams of five players against one another in low gravity arenas. They have to capture a disc and get it to the opposing side to score a goal with it. To make things somewhat trickier, the arenas are filled with an array of obstacles that not only deflect the disc in random directions but will also impede players movement as well.

Ready at Dawn ran a beta weekend for Echo Arena so that players could have a taste of what to expect. If you didn’t play it at the time then you can always read VRFocus’ preview from E3 2017.

Oculus has been making a massive push this week to attract new customers to its platform. Earlier this week the company announced a big price drop for the headset plus the Oculus Touch controllers, dropping the price down to $399/£399 GBP. And today it announced that after that promotion ends Oculus Rift and Touch will have a permanent price reduction with the kit retailing for $499.

As ever, keep reading VRFocus for all the latest VR news and updates.

‘Echo Arena’ Launches Today, Free for a Limited Time

Echo Arena, the zero-g VR sports game coming to Rift July 20th, is going to be free for anyone who downloads it in the first 3 months after launch, says production studio Ready at Dawn in an Oculus forum post.

Update 07/20/17: Once you so much as add ‘Echo Arena’  to your library during the three-month window, you’ll have free, unlimited access to the title indefinitely.

Original Article (7/14/17): Echo Arena is the multiplayer mode launching alongside Lone Echo, a first-person, sci-fi adventure using the same zero-g locomotion system and Oculus Touch controllers. Ready at Dawn says owners who purchase Lone Echo ($40 regularly, $35 with pre-order) will automatically get Echo Arena for free at any time.

For everyone else, Echo Arena will be free (and accessible indefinitely) as long as you download it within 3 months after launch. After the 3 month period, the game will sell for $20.

This 3-month free download window is the result of a sponsorship by Intel. Already experiencing two successful open beta access periods (the second goes to July 17th), Echo Arena looks to garner a large player base.

Check back soon for our review of Lone Echo.

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vSports – Eröffnung der VR Challenger League mit Echo Arena und The Unspoken

Nachdem Oculus im letzen Monat die VR Challenger League ankündigte, dem bis dato größten Virtual Reality eSports Event, machte die VR-Facebook-Tochter nun publik, dass die ersten Paarungen online zur Anmeldung freistehen. Zusammen mit Intel und der ESL fördert Oculus die neue Art des Virtual Reality Sports und versucht die Massen von Virtual Reality zu begeistern. Der Begriff vSports könnte sich schon bald etablieren.

Paarunger der VR eSports Veranstaltung von Oculus Intel und ESL

Jetzt teilnehmen – VR Esports League: VR Challenger Brackets ab sofort geöffnet

Die drei Hauptveranstalter ESL, Intel und Oculus lassen es sich nicht nehmen, dem Event einen ordentlichen Preispool zu verpassen. Preise im Gesamtwert von mehr als 200.000 US-Dollar warten auf die Gewinner. Erst Online, dann sowohl in Nordamerika, als auch in Europa können Spieler an der Veranstaltung teilnehmen.

Die Spiele, die gespielt werden, sind The Unspoken und Echo Arena. Während man in ersterem Spiel mit Magie und taktischem Kalkül gegnerische Zauberer bekämpft, fliegt man in Echo Arena in futuristischen Arenen schwerelos umher und schleudert Disks in gegnerische Tore.

Echo Arena und The Unspoken im vSports Fokus

Ab heute können sich also Onlineteilnehmer für Qualifizierungsrunden anmelden. Wer erfolgreich ist, kann dann in die lokal ausgetragenen regionalen (Zwischen-)Finals vorrücken. In Deutschland ist lediglich Hamburg Austragungsort. Hier wird vom 28. bis 29. Oktober in der Barclaycard Arena gefighted. Folgende Termine und Örtlichkeiten sind gesetzt.

Oculus Connect (San Jose),  11. – 12. Oktober
ESL One Hamburg, 28. – 29. Oktober
IEM Oakland, 18. – 19. November
DreamHack Winter (Las Vegas), 30. November – 3. Dezember

Diejenigen, die auch diese Qualifizierungsrunden überstanden haben, reisen nach Katowice nach Polen. Hier finden dann, in mitten des weltgrößten IEM Katowice Gaming Wettbewerbs (25. – 26. Feb. und. 3. – 5. März), die finalen Virtual Reality eSports Paarungen der VR Challenger League statt.

Um sich für die online Qualifikation zu registrieren und weitere Informationen zu erhalten, sollten die zukünftigen VR eSportler vr.eslgaming.com besuchen.

(Quelle: Oculus)

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New ‘Lone Echo’ Launch Trailer

Lone Echo, the upcoming zero-G, sci-fi adventure from Ready at Dawn, has a brand new trailer proceeding its July 20th launch date.

In the game’s initial announcement trailer, we got a look at its unique locomotion scheme as well as some of the drama that plays out around a certain anomaly that wreaks havoc nearby your home space station. You, as a service robot, have to repair important systems and navigate puzzles alongside a human companion.

From the new trailer, we get a better look of life aboard the mining rig, set just off the rings of Saturn in the year 2126. As an android named Echo-1 (‘Jack’), you act as a sort of ‘comfort-bot’ to Captain Olivia Rhodes, the ship’s sole human.

image courtesy Ready at Dawn

According to Ready at Dawn, you “solve an increasingly threatening mystery as you use futuristic tools, clever problem solving, and interactive dialogue to engage with the world around you.”

The VR sports game Echo Arena, built as a multiplayer counterpart launching alongside Lone Echo, demonstrates just how comfortable the unique zero-G locomotion system is, which uses a combination of boosters and self-propelled momentum as you push off of objects and structures. Echo Arena will be free, and will also launch on July 20th.

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The 10 Best Games for Oculus Rift

So, you’ve either got your hands on an Oculus Rift or an Oculus Quest with the help of Link, and now you want to know what to download first (besides the free stuff). Here’s our breakdown of the top 10 Rift platform games that you should definitely play. Like right now.

Before we start, don’t forget that your Rift (and Quest with Link) also works with compatible games purchased through Steam. Thanks to Valve’s open SteamVR platform and OpenVR APIs, Steam supports HTC Vive, Windows VR, Valve Index, and Oculus Rift equally, so you can shop around for even more titles that aren’t published on the Oculus Store provided the developer enabled support.

HTC Vive owners can play all of these too with the help of Revive, a software hack that hooks Vive into Oculus Store exclusives. Without further ado, these are our top 10 Rift games in no particular order.

The 10 Best Oculus Rift Games

Stormland

From Insomniac Games comes the open-world adventure Stormland, a real study in good shooting mechanics, excellent locomotion schemes, and not to mention a two-player co-op mode so you and a Rift/Quest-owning buddy can battle all the evil robots the cloud-filled world has to offer. Half of the fun is picking your combat tactics; are you a silent killer, ripping out an unsuspecting enemy’s heath pack and skitter away to safety, or are you the ‘jump from a 200-foot tower like Deadpool’ kind of person with reckless abandon? It’s up to you!

‘Stormland’ on Rift

Check out why we gave Stormland a [9/10] in our review.

Asgard’s Wrath

I don’t know about you, but being a Viking god was always on my list of things to do before leaving this world for Valhalla. It just so happens that Sanzaru Games has produced one of the best VR games to date, as this melee combat adventure has so much story, combat, dungeon crawling, and looting that you’ll easily invest 20 hours on the low side, but come back for at least 40 to get everything out of what has turned out to be one of the funnest and most well-realized VR titles to date

‘Asgard’s Wrath’ on Rift

Read our review of Asgard’s Wrath to find out why we gave it an [8.8/10].

Lone Echo & Echo VR

Here we have two halves of the same zero-G coin: first-person action-adventure game Lone Echo (2017) and it’s multiplayer counterpart Echo Arena (2017). As impressive feats of engineering in their own rights, both games feature an undoubtedly comfortable zero-G locomotion system that lets you fly through the air without the slightest hint of motion sickness.

Lone Echo is the sort of cinematic sci-fi narrative that engages the player with its excellent voice acting, impressive visuals, and a deep and memorable story. Combined with its innovative locomotion system, it’s truly a gem of a game worth playing—if only to say you’ve been to the edge of the Universe and back. Check out why we gave Lone Echo a solid [9/10] in our review.

‘Lone Echo’ on Rift ‘Echo VR’ on Rift

Where Lone Echo is plodding and tactful in its storytelling, Echo VR amps up the speed, throwing you in an online team sport that’s a fun mix of soccer and ultimate Frisbee… in space. The best part? It’s free to own permanently. Echo Combat, the first-person shooter expansion to Echo VR, isn’t here yet, but it’s also shown that the high-flying, zero-G locomotion mechanic is definitely suited to other game genres.

Vader Immortal: A Star Wars Series

This three-part Star Wars cinematic experience arrives from ILMxLabs, Lucas Films’ skunkworks which is known for having churned out some of the highest-quality immersive content to date.

‘Vader Immortal’ Series on Rift

Vader Immortal is more of a VR ‘experience’ than it is a outright game, presenting the user with a 45-minute adventure for each episode, however each comes with its own game area that lets you practice all of your Jedi skills in what’s called the ‘Lightsaber Dojo’. In other, less capable hands, this would be a hokey add-on, but here it actually works and makes sense. All in all, it definitely deserves to be on the list however you slice it.

Beat Saber

Created by Prague-based indie team Beat Studio, Beat Saber (2018) is a funky and incredibly stylish rhythm game that will have you slicing blocks to the beat of high-BPM dance music. While the idea is simple, the execution is magnificent. Beat Saber gives you a mess of songs to play, each with four difficulty levels to master, the highest being expert which will have you feeling like a 21st century techno-Jedi.

‘Beat Saber’ on Rift

Check out our review of Beat Saber on PSVR to find out why we gave it a [8.9/10].

SUPERHOT VR

If you haven’t played the PC or console version of SUPERHOT (2016) before, get ready for a new take on the FPS genre with its strategy-based shooting missions. Designed from the ground-up for VR headsets, SUPERHOT VR (2016) is an entirely separate game in the same vein as its flatscreen counterpart. The iconic red baddies (and their bullets) move only when you do, so you can line up your shot, punch a guy in the face, dodge a bullet, and toss a bottle across the room, shattering their red-glass heads in what feels intensely immersive and satisfying—because you’re doing it all with your own two hands. That and you’ll feel like a badass no matter whose basement you live in.

‘Superhot VR’ on Rift

Find out why we gave Superhot VR [9.1/10] in our review.

Robo Recall

People used to think that fast-paced, high-action games would be too disorienting for new virtual reality users, but in Epic Games’ Robo Recall (2017)you can teleport around at full speed as you blast away at the game’s evil (and hilarious) robot army. If being able to tear your enemies literally limb from limb and beat a robot over the head with their own dismembered arm isn’t astounding enough, the level of detail and polish put into this game will make you reassess what’s possible in VR.

‘Robo Recall’ on Rift

Find out why we gave Robo Recall [8.5/10] in our review.

Trover Saves the Universe

From the co-creator of Rick and Morty comes the 3D platformer Trover Saves the Universe. Your dogs have been dognapped by a beaked lunatic who stuffed them into his eye holes and is using their life essence to destroy the universe. You’re partnered with Trover, a little purple eye-hole monster who isn’t a huge fan of working or being put in the position of having to save the universe.

‘Trover Saves the Universe’ on Rift

We haven’t had a chance to review Trover Saves the Universe, although it’s currently sitting at a very respectable [4.76/5] on the Oculus Store.

I Expect You to Die

Schell Games has only just pushed out the last DLC installment of the hit spy-themed puzzler I Expect You to Die (2016). It’s on basically every platform now, and for good reason: it’s incredibly clever, well-built, and easy enough to pick up while being hard enough not to want to put down.

‘I Expect You to Die’ on Rift

I Expect You to Die is currently sitting at a good [4.66/5] on the Oculus Store.

Moss

Once a PSVR exclusive, Moss (2017) has now made its way to PC VR headsets, letting you control your cute little mouse buddy, Quill, on your adventures through a large and dangerous world. Stylistically, Moss hits a home run with its impressive diorama-style visuals and interactive elements that lets you, the player (aka ‘The Reader’) move puzzle pieces around and also take over the minds of enemies as Quill slashes through the world to recover her lost uncle. Puzzles may not be the most difficult, but Moss has effectively set up a universe begging for more sequels to further flesh out the enticing world Polyarc Games has created.

‘Moss’ on Rift

See why we gave it a [7.9/10] in our review on PSVR.

Honorable Mentions

  • The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim VR: While not an Oculus Store game, Bethesda’s Steam version of Skyrim VR fully supports Oculus Rift, letting you engage in multiple tens of hours of exploring the beautifully realized open world environment. What else is there to say? It’s Skyrim in VR.
  • No Man’s Sky: Unlike Skyrim VR, this is a free update to the game, which you can grab on Steam. It’s a bit flawed, but it’s an infinite galaxy of opportunities, so it always has that going for it.
  • Job Simulator: Tongue in cheek madness as you enter a far off future where robots rule the world, and consequently also have no idea how the past actually was. Smash stuff. Silly Robots. Hilarity ensues.
  • Vacation Simulator: Owlchemy Labs’s followup to Job Simulator. More story, a more open environment to traverse (albeit node teleportation) and a ton of vacation-style activities to explore and play. Arguably better than the first.
  • Arizona Sunshine: Offering you a chance to explore, collect real-world guns and indiscriminately shoot them at every moving thing (in this case zombies), Arizona Sunshine fills a very special place in many people’s hearts. The story mode does offer some thrills, but isn’t really groundbreaking as such.
  • Onward – A fan favorite with a hardcore playerbase, the OD green of mil-sim shooters Onward gives you that VR battle you’ve always wanted, including tactical team-based gameplay and plenty of guns.
  • The Mage’s Tale:  Touch – Crafting elemental magic, exploring foreboding dungeons, battling giants and stealing their treasure. There’s all of this and more in The Mage’s Tale. Although story-wise the game comes too close to campy and played out for its own good, it’s still a solid investment for the enterprising young wizard among you.
  • DiRT RallyGamepad/steering wheel – Driving through the forest with a beer in your hand isn’t ok…in reality. But in DiRT Rally you’ll need all the soothing ethanol you can get as you stomach the twists and turns of an exciting car simulator, that while rated ‘intense’ on the Oculus Store, is ultimately a fun and exciting way to burn some time perfecting your Initial D drifting skills. Ok. Better leave out the alcohol anyway.
  • Edge of Nowhere (2016) Gamepad – A third-person VR survival horror game created by Insomniac Games that strands you in the icy wasteland of Antarctica, Edge of Nowhere leaves you with only a pick-axe, a shotgun, and some rocks to defend yourself against a bloodthirsty ancient species that lurk inside the snowy caverns.
  • Chronos (2016): Gamepad – A third-person adventure by Gunfire Games, Chronos will have you slashing at enemies with the long-trained penchant for beat-em-ups will get you exactly nowhere in this Zelda-inspired, Dark Souls-ish-level of difficulty game where dying in the game physically ages your character.

If the list doesn’t have the game you’ve been eyeing for months, definitely check out our reviews for some more gaming greats on Oculus Rift, HTC Vive, and PSVR.

Update (November 19th, 2019): We’ve done a long-due overhaul of the list, expanding it from five to 10 games. We’ve also done away with the ranking system. If you’re looking for a more quantified list by user review rankings, check out The Top 20 Best & Most Rated Rift Games & Apps.

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Echo Arena für Oculus Rift: Zweite Betaversion steht bereit

Der Lone-Echo-Ableger Echo Arena ist in einer letzten Beta-Version vor der finalen Fassung erschienen und lässt sich noch bis zum 10 Juli herunterladen. Der Titel wird im Oculus-Rift-Store dauerhaft kostenlos angeboten, das fertige Spiel soll am 20. Juli erscheinen.

Echo Arena: Multiplayer-Spiel mit Hitpotential

In dem futuristischen Multiplayer-Spiel bekämpft man sich mit Fäusten und neonleuchtenden Diskos, der Grafikstil erinnert ein wenig an den Science-fiction-Film Tron. Bis zu vier Spieler können in der virtuellen Arena gegeneinander antreten. Vor allem das Agieren in der Schwerelosigkeit kommt in dem Titel gut herüber und fühlt sich angenehm an, wie ein Test der ersten Beta-Version bereits gezeigt hat. Nach unserer Einschätzung hat Echo Arena durchaus das Potential, den Verkauf von VR-Headsets anzukurbeln. Obwohl das Spiel lediglich im Oculus-Store zu haben ist, können dank Revive auch Besitzer einer HTC Vive zuschlagen. Für Aufsehen sorgte, dass der Gründer von Oculus nach seinem Ausscheiden den Hack inzwischen unterstützt.

Ebenfalls am 20. Juli soll auch Lone Echo erscheinen, das allerdings kostenpflichtig wird. Derzeit lässt sich der Titel im Oculus-Store mit einem Rabatt von 5 Euro vorbestellen, der Preis liegt regulär bei 40 Euro. Im Gegensatz zu Echo Arena bietet Lone Echo auch Einzelspielern Spaß. Man landet in einer Mine auf einem der Saturnringe und muss Captain Olivia Rhodes als künstliche Intelligenz Jack unterstützen. Dabei stehen einem zum Beispiel futuristische Tools zur Verfügung, um Rätsel zu lösen. Gespannt darf man darauf  sein, wie gut sich die versprochenen interaktiven Dialoge entwickeln. Wie Echo Arena benötigt Lone Echo die Oculus-Touch-Controller.

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‘Echo Arena’ Extends Open Beta to Monday, July 17th

Echo Arena, the VR sports game from Ready at Dawn and Oculus Studios, went back into open beta last week. Although it was supposed to end yesterday, the developers are extending the access window so Oculus Rift owners can rocket around in the game’s micro-gravity environment mere days before its official July 20th launch.

Update 07/11: Info on open beta extension added.

Celebrating a critically successful first open beta session last month, Echo Arena is back by popular demand. The game, which is technically considered a multiplayer mode for the upcoming first-person adventure Lone Echo, will be free to all Oculus Rift owners at launch later this month.

The game requires Oculus Touch, the platform’s optically-tracked motion controller.

image courtesy Ready at Dawn

Featuring a ‘full contact’, zero-G mix of Ultimate Frisbee and an exceedingly comfortable locomotion system that lets you fling yourself through virtual space, Echo Arena really hits the sweet spot of speed, comfort and replayability—something that some are calling the “killer app” of VR.

Stepping into last month’s open beta, only basic matchmaking was available and the party-creating feature wasn’t supported. According to Ready at Dawn, the goal with the second open beta was to further test network updates, skill-based matchmaking, and the first iteration of the Echo Arena Party system. Besides more pre-launch bug fixes, the teams is also prepping a ‘VR Challenger’ series, which they’ll be revealing soon.

‘Echo Arena’ on Oculus Store

For first time players, Oculus has published a ‘tips and tricks’ guide so you can get a better handle on the nuances of throwing the game’s disc, jetting around with your hand-mounted boosters, braking in mid-air, and maneuvering around the space so you can get a leg up on your opponent (and punch their lights out).

You can download the beta for free right now on the Oculus Store and jump in before the game officially launches on July 20th alongside Lone Echo.

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‘Echo Arena’ Free Beta Weekend is Live – Competitive Zero-G Multiplayer

At E3 this month we learned that the intriguing multiplayer mode of Lone Echo will be spun out into its own game called Echo Arena. While both Lone Echo and Echo Arena launch on July 20th, the latter is in open beta for this weekend only, available now.

The Echo Arena open beta runs until June 25th at 8:00PM PT and is available to download now on the Oculus store, Touch controllers are required. The game is a five vs. five match where players floating around in zero-G attempt to score a disc in the opponent’s goal.

Over at the Oculus blog, the company explores the game’s controls and offers a few gameplay tips for Echo Arena:

Practice, practice, practice. Rather than flying head-on into a match, take a second to gather your bearings and practice some moves in the lobby. Rehearse the basics, hang out with other players, and try some more challenging moves like tracking the disc, throwing while moving, and quickly changing directions.

Your best defense is full-contact offense. There’s nothing like a swift punch to temporarily take an opponent out of commission. Hold down both triggers and protect your facemask to block an incoming punch and stun your attacker!

Catapult yourself to victory! Sometimes the fastest way around the arena is to hitch a ride on another player—you can even launch yourself off of an opponent you just stunned with a punch to the face.

The Echo Arena open beta also offers a key opportunity for aspiring VR E-sports players to practice ahead of the upcoming ESL ‘VR Challenger League’ in which the game will one of two VR titles where players will compete for a $200,000 prize pool.

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Hands-on: 'Lone Echo' Multiplayer is a Totally Surprising Triumph for Competitive Zero-G Locomotion

Following the beta, Echo Arena will launch on July 20th and be free for a limited time.

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