Here’s 10 Minutes Of Eclipse PSVR Gameplay, Dev ‘Looking Into Move Support’

Good news everyone; White Elk Studios’ excellent atmospheric adventure, Eclipse: Edge of Light, is finally available on PSVR and PC VR headsets.

For those that don’t know, Eclipse is a narrative-driven exploration game that casts players as a strandee on an uncharted planet. You uncover the remains of an ancient race and set about exploring them. We’ve always been fond of the game’s tone, intuitive controls and breathtaking environments. In fact we called it the best game on Daydream when it first released.

The PC and console edition of the game boasts improved textures, which is a welcome addition. As you can see from our PSVR gameplay, it uses the DualShock 4 controller on PS4. However White Elk tells us that the team is looking into PlayStation Move support.

Still, even with a DualShock 4 it’s a delight to revisit this world of solitude in a better headset. Sure, Eclipse is a little dated by today’s standards, but I’d still say it’s an experience you should see for yourself. We’ve recorded the first 10 or so minutes of the game in which you get to grips with the smooth locomotion and the jetpack, which sounds like it would swerve your stomach but comes with a range of comfort options.

Until now, Eclipse has only been available on mobile VR headsets like Daydream, Gear VR and Oculus Go. Naturally, we were keen to check the game out on more powerful devices.

The game’s still due on Oculus Quest soon. It’s even coming to Nintendo Switch, though there’s no support for the Labo VR headset. For now, you can pick up Eclipse on the PlayStation Store, Steam and Oculus Store for $14.99.

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Ace Space Adventure Eclipse: Edge Of Light Hits PSVR And PC VR Next Week

One of the first big VR releases of 2020 is nearly here. Eclipse: Edge of Light should hit PC VR and PSVR headsets very soon.

The Steam page for the former Daydream exclusive states the game is coming on January 14th. Whatsmore, the PlayStation Blog’s weekly release list also claims the game’s coming to PSVR next week. These lists can occasionally get it wrong but we confirmed that Eclipse was coming to these platforms in January during our Holiday VR Showcase last year. There’s a good bet it’s going to happen, then.

Eclipse is a discovery-driven first-person adventure. You crash land on an alien planet and set about exploring the remains of an ancient civilization.

We loved the tone the game set, its sporadic approach to storytelling and the intuitive control scheme. In our initial review we called it easily Daydream’s best game.

“White Elk took a lot of risks with the game’s design that pay off in spades, from the smart use of Daydream’s controller to giving players full control over their movement,” we wrote. “The result is a memorable sci-fi adventure that kept me fully engaged from start to finish, and left me feeling like I’d really explored an alien world. This isn’t just the best game on Daydream, but one of the best mobile VR games full stop.”

Plus we’re looking forward to finally playing Eclipse with full positional tracking; you could move your head around in Daydream’s Mirage Solo headset, but your hands were locked in place with 3DOF motion controls.

As for the Quest release? That’s due a little later on in the year, but it’s absolutely still in the works.

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Eclipse: Edge of Light Shines Onto PlayStation VR & Oculus Rift Next Week

Having released award-winning puzzler Eclipse: Edge of Light for Google Daydream followed by Oculus Go, indie developer White Elk Studios will soon bring the title to more headsets. Next week will see a multiplatform launch for PlayStation VR, Oculus Rift and HTC Vive.

Eclipse-Screenshot-Pasture-2kAs Eclipse: Edge of Light was previously a videogame designed for mobile headsets the studio has improved the visual quality of the experience, making use of the extra processing power available.

The videogame’s narrative doesn’t involve a protagonist, instead putting players in the central role. After crashing on an alien world they’ll soon discover this is a world which resembles a dreamscape, full of vividly diverse locations to explore. This is not some barren planet, however. Players will soon discover the remains of an ancient civilisation and its powerful technology.

Finding a powerful relic dubbed ‘The Artifact’, this device can interact with the mysterious technology whilst granting them powers which appear almost magical. Using these new found gifts players must explore the world, uncovering its secrets and the downfall of this once powerful civilisation.

Eclipse-Screenshot-River-2k

With full locomotion controls for maximum immersion, players are equipped with a jetpack-mounted space suit to wander around. White Elk Studios stipulated at the time of the original release that great care had been taken to ensure comfortable movement within the videogame without the need for teleportation mechanics. With the virtual reality (VR) industry moving at pace, how well this holds up today remains to be seen.

Eclipse: Edge of Light will launch on 14th January via Steam and PlayStation store. No price has been revealed at the moment but the original version only retailed for £7.99 GBP. As a roughly 3 hour experience it should remain a similar price. VRFocus will continue its coverage of Eclipse: Edge of Light and White Elk Studios, reporting back with further updates and announcements.

Eclipse: Edge Of Light Is Finally Coming To Quest, PSVR And PC VR

We once crowned Eclipse: Edge Of Light as Daydream’s best game. Now that the platform is essentially dead, it seems it will forever hold that crown. But good news; you’ll soon be able to experience Eclipse elsewhere, too.

White Elk Studios’ stunning sci-fi adventure is on its way to practically every other VR headset. As we revealed during our Holiday VR Showcase today, the game’s due to arrive on PC VR and PSVR in January. Not only that, but White Elk is planning to bring it to Oculus Quest early next year, too. It’s already available on Oculus Go, so it’ll be available pretty much everywhere soon.

In Eclipse, players crash land on an alien planet and set about discovering what appears to be the remains of an ancient civilization. It’s perhaps closest to something like Downward Spiral: Horus Station in tone.

On Daydream, we loved the game for its atmospheric exploration and intuitive control scheme based on the headset’s 3DOF motion controller. These ports will mark the first time the game can be played with full 6DOF controls, so we’ll be really interested to see how it holds up.

In our 2017 review of the game we said that “White Elk took a lot of risks with the game’s design that pay off in spades, from the smart use of Daydream’s controller to giving players full control over their movement. The result is a memorable sci-fi adventure that kept me fully engaged from start to finish, and left me feeling like I’d really explored an alien world. This isn’t just the best game on Daydream, but one of the best mobile VR games full stop.”

We’ve got plenty more announcements to come in our Holiday VR Showcase, so stay tuned!

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The Best Samsung Gear VR Games of 2018

Samsung’s Gear VR headset was once the dominant mobile head-mounted display (HMD), it featured everywhere, in Samsung’s Unpacked events, standard videogame conferences, and institutions the world over as they looked to entertain visitors with new technology. But that position and stature have slowly faded, Samsung isn’t bundling the device with smartphones as it did and with the arrival of Oculus Go, VR enthusiasts can now go mobile with even more ease. That being said, there are a lot of Gear VR owners out there, and developers are still supporting the HMD. So here are VRFocus’ ten favourite videogames from the latest twelve months.

The Best Samsung Gear VR Games of 2018

Slightly Heroes

Slightly Heroes – Hatrabbit Entertainment

Whilst this isn’t a dedicated Gear VR title that’s no bad thing. In fact that works to Slightly Heroes advantage as the videogame is a one vs one online multiplayer, with cross-platform support, enabling you to battle those on Oculus Go, Oculus Rift, HTC Vive, Google Daydream, Windows Mixed Reality, Lenovo Mirage Solo, and the non-VR Android app. This should ensure there’s always someone to match against. If not there’s always AI enemies to dispatch.

Arca's Path

Arca’s Path VR – Dream Reality Entertainment

Arca’s Path VR takes the gameplay style of classics like Marble Madness and updates it for VR headsets. Featuring a dark storyline where you play a girl tricked by an evil witch, you’ve been turned into a ball and must navigate 25 labyrinthine levels in a bid to free yourself and return home. To do this, Dream Reality Interactive has employed a gaze-based control mechanism, meaning you just need to look where you want to go.

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Narrows – Resolution Games

Narrows lets you take to the high seas, heading to the Caribbean during the golden age of piracy to make your fortune. Combining real-time crew-management with ship-to-ship combat, there are plenty of customization options to tweak your cannons and crew for battle, plus rogue-like replayability. Gameplay also includes swashbuckling sword fights, charting your own course, and making sure your crew of misfits are healthy and fed.

Covert – White Elk

Covert features asymmetrical gameplay that lets two players work together to pull off a high-profile heist, whether they’re inside or outside of VR. This works by the VR player having to pull off the heist while their mate acts as the hacker accomplice on a mobile device, feeding them vital information. Being the multiplayer title that it is, make sure the mobile device is compatible with the app, Android 7.0 or iOS 6 and above.

Eclipse: Edge of Light – White Elk

Eclipse: Edge of Light’s story finds you crash landing on a sentient planet. Upon discovering the ruins of an ancient civilization, you then come across a device known as The Artifact, allowing you to interact with their technology whilst bestowing seemingly magical powers upon you. In order to uncover the secrets of the planet and this long-lost civilization, eventually hoping to escape, players must recover the pieces of The Artifact that have been scattered across the landscape.

Virtual Virtual Reality

Virtual Virtual Reality – Tender Claws

Virtual Virtual Reality is a narrative-driven comedy adventure about VR and AI. Players use virtual VR headsets to explore over 50 unique virtual realities, delving into the story behind AI service Activitude. As bizarre as this all sounds, Tender Claws’ VR experience is a great introduction to VR.

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Catan VR – Experiment 7

Mixing traditional boardgame gameplay with the immersive online gaming that only VR can provide, Experiment 7’s Catan VR is a polished example of the genre. Featuring both single-player and multiplayer online modes, up to four people can play against one another in cross-platform gameplay, with players taking the role of settlers who need to establish colonies on the islands of Catan, acquiring resources to build infrastructure and roads whilst engaging in trade with other players.

Racket Fury - PSVR

Racket Fury: Table Tennis VR – 10Ants Hill

For those who enjoy a bit of sport, Racket Fury: Table Tennis VR offers a single-player campaign with four Cups to play through. Each of the 16 opponents have their own temper and unique style of play meaing players will have to think on their feet and adjust their strategy with each new opponent they face.

Astraeus Screenshot5

Astraeus – E McNeill

Like E McNeill’s three previous VR videogames, Darknet, Tacteraand SkylightAstraeus is another deviously simple looking real-time strategy (RTS) experience that becomes a lot more complex the longer you play. Astraeus is a VR asteroid mining title where you need to build a mining network from dozens of bases and watch as hundreds of ships swarm around you. Your job is to control these swarms of mining drones, create the bases, and outpace the competition in Campaign, Skirmish, and asynchronous multiplayer modes.

The Wizards: Trials of Meliora

The Wizards: Trials of Meliora – Carbon Studio

The Wizards: Trials of Meliora is the next step in Carbon Studio’s spellbinding adventure. Designed specifically for mobile devices, the videogame enables players to wield powerful spells as they defend the realm. There are five levels to complete with four gesture-based spells to master. You’ll also be able to upgrade the spells to inflict greater damage and cause more chaos. One for those who enjoy a good magical fight.

Eclipse: Edge of Light für Oculus Go und Gear VR veröffentlicht

Entwicklerstudio White Elk Studios veröffentlichte kürzlich die Portierung seines Daydream-Titels Eclipse: Edge of Light für Oculus Go und Gear VR. Das herausstechende Sci-Fi-Abenteuer erschien erstmals im April letzten Jahres, nun schafft es den Sprung auf weitere Plattformen und möglicherweise auch bald auf die PlayStation VR (PSVR).

Eclipse: Edge of Light – Release für Oculus Go und Gear VR

In Eclipse: Edge of Light dürfen die Spieler/innen einen mysteriösen Planeten erkunden, der so manches Geheimnis für euch beherbergt. Nach einer unverhofften Bruchlandung schnallt ihr euer Jetpack auf den Rücken, um die fremde Umgebung zu erforschen. Dabei stoßt ihr auf ein uraltes Artefakt, das euch erlaubt mit der antiken Alientechnologie des Planeten zu interagieren und dadurch tiefer in die Ruinen der unbekannten Rasse einzudringen.

Während eurer Reise durch die Sci-Fi-Welt erwartet euch eine tief greifende Geschichte rund um eine verlorene Alienkultur sowie zahlreiche Rätsel, die ihr durch die Manipulation der Umgebung bewältigen dürft. Zur Fortbewegung setzt das VR-Abenteuer auf freie Lokomotion, was euch erstaunlich viel Bewegungsfreiheit für einen Mobile-Titel gewährleistet. Insgesamt erwarten euch rund drei Stunden Spielzeit. Nebenbei sorgt die visuell ansprechende Grafik mit den fremdartigen Gebäuden und Hologrammen sowie der untermalende Soundtrack für eine immersive Spielerfahrung, wie auch Jonathan Hawkins, President und Creative Director von White Elk Studios in einem Interview mit Oculus beschreibt:

“Die Kernidee des Spiels ist von einer Verbindung der Natur zur Vergangenheit, Gegenwart und Zukunft inspiriert. Durch das Medium VR konnten wir diese Vorstellung weiter vorantreiben, indem wir die Spieler virtuell in diese Welt teleportieren. Die Geschichte des Planeten wird durch seine Umgebung, die Interaktionen mit seinen Kreaturen und Hologrammvisionen der Vergangenheit erzählt. So erkundet man eine eindringlich schöne Welt und enthüllt langsam ihre dunkle Vergangenheit. Durch die erstaunlichen Visuals von Cecil Kim und seinem Team in den Section Studios und den fantastischen Soundtrack von Andrew Prahlow erhält die Welt von Eclipse eine Seele.”

Eclipse-Edge-of-Light-Oculus-Go-Gear-VR

Ursprünglich sollte der Sci-Fi-Titel für PlayStation VR (PSVR) erscheinen und wurde auch zunächst für die VR-Brille entwickelt. Allerdings sicherte sich Google damals die Exklusivrechte für das Spiel. Dieser Vertrag scheint nun abgelaufen, sodass eine zukünftige Portierung für die PSVR sowie Oculus Quest möglich wäre. Neben Ecplise arbeitet Entwicklerstudio White Elk Studios derzeit am asymmetrischen Couch-Koop-Spiel Covert für Oculus Go und Gear VR.

Eclipse: Edge of Light ist ab sofort für 9,99 Euro für Oculus Go und Gear VR im Oculus Store erhältlich.

(Quellen: Upload VR | Oculus Blog | Video: Oculus YouTube)

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Google Daydream Sci-fi Adventure Eclipse: Edge of Light Arrives on Oculus Go

In 2017 indie developer White Elk Studios released successful virtual reality (VR) experience Eclipse: Edge of Light exclusively for Google Daydream, receiving several awards and nominations in the process. Now the studio has widened support by bringing the title to standalone headset Oculus Go.

Eclipse: Edge of Light

Eclipse: Edge of Light’s story finds you crash landing on a sentient planet. Upon discovering the ruins of an ancient civilization, you then come across a device known as The Artifact, allowing you to interact with their technology whilst bestowing seemingly magical powers upon you. In order to uncover the secrets of the planet and this long-lost civilization, eventually hoping to escape, players must recover the pieces of The Artifact that have been scattered across the landscape.

Discussing the title in a recent Oculus Blog posting, White Elk Studios President and Creative Director Jonathan Hawkins revealed the goals behind the project: “I wanted to tell a unique story without a protagonist. Instead, I wanted to use the immersive nature of VR to make players feel like the story is about them. It’s about you crash landing here and your actions in this world—it’s you uncovering the story of the planet.”

Back in 2016/17 developers were still experimenting with locomotion in VR titles, some opting to remove it all together to avoid nausea. “I wanted to innovate and find a way for people to move without nausea,” says Hawkins. “For myself, VR excels when I’m able to feel like I’m there and I can move around like in the real world. I wanted to see if we could figure out what triggered simulation sickness, and then create a full and comfortable locomotion movement system for players to explore their surroundings. The solution I found was creating a world that encourages slow-paced movement in spaces that feel huge in real life, but with the correct field of view and movement speed.”

Eclipse: Edge of Light

It was through this innovation and stunning visuals that Eclipse: Edge of Light became a must-have title for Google Daydream. Now Oculus Go and Samsung Gear VR owners can see what it is all about for £7.99 GBP. For any further updates from White Elk Studios, keep reading VRFocus.

The Excellent Eclipse: Edge of Light Is Now On Oculus Go And Gear

The Excellent Eclipse: Edge of Light Is Now On Oculus Go And Gear

Google Daydream’s best game is now available on Oculus Go and Gear VR.

White Elk Studios’ Eclipse: Edge of Light just landed on the standalone and mobile-based VR headsets for $9.99. These are the first platforms the game has been ported to since its launch on Daydream in April of last year.

Eclipse is an excellent first-person sci-fi adventure in which you crash land on a mysterious planet and set about exploring your surroundings using a jetpack and full locomotion. The world around you is wonderfully realized and the story is delivered in a thoughtful way, whilst the game makes great use of motion controls too. We put the game in our recent list of 100 VR titles you should really be playing, and that still stands.

Eclipse had originally been billed for PSVR, so we’ve asked White Elk if it could finally come to Sony’s headset and others now that it appears any exclusivity agreement is up. It’d be great to see it launch on the shiny new Oculus Quest headset, too.

Currently, the developer is working on another Oculus Go game, a local co-op multiplayer experience named Covert. That’s being published by Oculus Studios and is due to release this year.

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Google Offering $40 Game Bundle With New Daydream View Headset

From now until the end of 2017, Google is offering a game bundle worth $40 with every Daydream View purchase, which includes some of the platform’s best titles. Google’s updated VR headset was announced this week alongside their Pixel 2 smartphones, and begins to ship on October 17th.

The 5-game bundle of first-person explorer Eclipse: Edge of Light, multiplayer spell-caster Wands, asymmetrical multiplayer game Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes, puzzle-adventurer Lola and the Giant, and wacky mini-game collection Virtual Rabbids: The Big Plan is a great way to kick-start your Daydream VR experience.

Announced on Tuesday, the new version of Daydream View – a VR headset enclosure for Daydream-ready Android smartphones – has improved upon the original design in subtle but important ways, with new optics, ergonomics, and a passive heat sink – read our hands-on article for some initial impressions.

The new headsets begin shipping October 17th; the game bundle will remain available until December 31st, and must be redeemed by January 15th 2018.

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Trailer Revealed For Google Daydream’s Eclipse: Edge of Light

Developer White Elk today released a trailer for upcoming Google Daydream exclusive title Eclipse: Edge of Light.

Eclipse: Edge of Light is set on a planet on to which the players crash-land and must then set about exploring the landscape around them. Upon discovering the ruins of a collapsed civilisation, the characters then find a device known as The Artifact, that allows them to control elements of the world. In order to uncover the secrets of the planet, and eventually escape, players must recover the pieces of The Artifact that have been scattered across the landscape.

EclipseArt_1

Google Daydream is the successor to Google’s popular Google Cardboard headset, which was released in November 2016. Eclipse: Edge of Light was announced back in 2015, but since slid off the radar for quite some time. Eclipse was originally announced for PlayStation VR, but it is currently listed as a Daydream exclusive.

Eclipse: Edge of Light will be one of several Daydream exclusive titles, joining the likes of puzzle platformer Lola and the Giant, tower defence game Underworld Overlord and shooter The Arcslinger on the platform.

You can watch the Eclipse: Edge of Light trailer below.

VRFocus will keep you updated on Eclipse: Edge of Light and the Google Daydream.