Top Ten AR Videogames

AR Game Montage

Augmented reality (AR) is one of the more interesting technologies our smartphones can handle with ease. At first, it felt like a bit of a gimmick, but in the right hands, it can add a lot to gaming. Whether you prefer to stay home and solve puzzles, or roam the area battling or catching creatures, there’s something out there for you. VRFocus has put together a list of some of the best AR infused videogames you can play right now.

Pokemon Go Trainer Battles

Pokemon Go!

It wouldn’t be an AR list without Pokemon Go!, would it? The game that got everyone outside in the summer of 2016 has been using AR technology since the outset. What started with Pokemon placed within the world you inhabited, has become a robust system with avatars that interact while your physical self stands around tapping the screen in a gym or raid battle. AR features are integral to Pokemon Go!, particularly the map view which tracks not only yourself but the gyms, pokemon and pokestops along the route; using photos and location services along with the accelerometer to interact with the fantastical world Niantic Labs have created.

The Birdcage

The Birdcage, and its sequel, are beautiful puzzle games that place the central puzzle within your home space. Aiming the camera, you can place the titular birdcage in the centre of a room. The task is to open the enclosure and free the bird by solving puzzles attached to the cage. Utilising your phone’s camera, the perspective can be changed by moving closer or further, and even around the cage. There are lots of switches to flick, dials to turn and word puzzles to move through the steps. The Birdcage looks and sounds gorgeous and is perfectly taxing on the brain; think The Room but in your room.

Angry Birds AR: Isle of Pigs

Angry Birds had its time in the sun quite some time ago, but recent entries have tried to implement the winning formula onto new technologies. Dabbling in VR (where applicable) and this AR entry, the mechanics feel fresh again. Angry Birds AR: Isle of Pigs opens and asks you to place the traditional looking level on a nearby table (or on the floor). Everything is recognisable – towers and buildings made from blocks with chubby pigs standing by. On your phone, you’ll have a direct view of a catapult, into which the familiar birds jump and can be fired at the puzzle. Watching the blocks and pigs tumble about is joyous and it fits within the AR space ideally. A great game for everyone, but kids will love it!

Angry Birds AR Structure Destroyed

Draw a Stickman: AR

There’s something wonderful about drawing an object on your phone and watching it come to life. With Draw a Stickman: AR, that’s the first step. Your stickman can be as simple or lavish as you want. Once they’re created, an RPG style world is displayed on the floor or surface of your table and you can tap where your stickman needs to go. What comes next is a simple RPG, full of monsters and dungeon crawling… and more drawing! This adds a nice flair to the game, and watching everything pop up in a 3D space through your phone never gets old.

The Walking Dead: Our World

It’s been a few years since TWD: Our World was released and in that time, enthusiasm for zombies has waned a little. Don’t let that stop you from trying this AR gem, though. If one of your daydreams has been how you would deal with a zombie outbreak, now is your chance to live that out. There are walkers roaming your neighbourhood – with maps from Google – and they need to be put down. With legends from the TV show to recruit, you can search out stashes of items and weapons ready to fight it out with the shambling terrors. There are plenty of missions to take on, including saving survivors and holding off rival NPCs, so there’s a lot of variety in this apocalyptic world.

Five Night’s at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery

The tenth overall instalment in the Five Nights at Freddy’s franchise, it’s time to be scared again. Well, only if creepy, broken, furry robots are your nightmare fuel. There are still puzzles to solve and horrors to avoid, except this time the animatronics are in your home! Played in first-person perspective, the jump scares will get you every time. Thankfully combat is an option, and bashing the demonic beasts has never felt more satisfying. The videogame received a lot of content updates, so anyone jumping in now will have plenty to do.

Pikmin Bloom

Pikmin Bloom

Also from Niantic Labs, comes another Nintendo property in Pikmin Bloom. Some liken this title to a gamified fitness app, as there is no deep gameplay aspect like other AR games on this list. Pikmin Bloom encourages users to leave their homes, walk their local areas and this is reflected in collecting seeds along your route and hatching them into cute Pikmin. Features from the console counterpart have been implemented – like Oliver’s ship log, which is now a daily tracker with photos and captions – to create a richer world.

The Witcher: Monster Slayer

In summer 2021, a surprising AR game popped up on app stores. The Witcher: Monster Slayer is a remarkably enjoyable extension of the Witcher universe. Much like Pokemon Go! the player explores the local neighbourhood battling monsters within the AR world overlaid onto a scale map of your area. Here, instead of using cute creatures, your finger swipes are translated into sword swings and spells to destroy the horrific monsters plaguing the land. A great inclusion are story-driven quests which expand the lore within the games (and the books) and give you a good sense of progression, alongside earned XP and new items to unlock as wander the streets.

Ghostbusters Afterlife: ScARe

Released in conjunction with the latest Ghostbusters movie, this AR app is wonderful jumping on point for the Ghostbusters universe. Packed with puzzles, flying objects possessed by new and familiar ghosts which require ‘busting’ and lots of footage to guide the light story along. This is a great app for kids who can explore their home, or even a local park, while looking for ghosts. There’s something spectacular in swiping and moving the phone to control the stream of the proton pack and wrangle the spectral monsters and slam them into the trap.

Doors: Awakening

Much like The Birdcage above, Doors: Awakening uses your immediate space to position an object bursting with puzzles. In this instance, it’s a door. If you don’t feel like walking back and forth across your living room, you can place these doors on a table and spin them using swipes on the screen. Doors: Awakening has a spooky atmosphere delivered by luscious graphics which bring a real sense of otherworldly adventures to our world. The puzzles aren’t overly difficult, the main reason to play is the visual spectacle it brings to our world.

Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery Update Expands Phone Compatibility, Adds New Modes

Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery

As happens every year, Halloween is the best time to release either themed updates or improvements to current horror titles. Some like Snapchat’s are fun additions designed to get celebrate the season whilst others are much more frightening. To that end, Illumix has announced an update for Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery which sees a new sharp-toothed character join the roster as well as expanding the videogame to more players.

Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery

Added to the character feature set is Plushtrap, well known to fans of the franchise. But Plushtrap isn’t any old AR encounter like the rest of the group, this mean-looking rabbit is part of a new mixed reality (MR) gameplay mode Illumix has introduced. This is thanks to the development of a proprietary AR engine, meaning Plushtrap’s encounter only takes place within this MR environment.

Detailing a little more about the new addition over on Reddit, Illumix notes: “Plushtrap’s CPU is currently only compatible with the Plushtrap plush suit given the unique environment in which his encounter takes place–you’ll note that his CPU looks distinct from that of the other animatronics. That said, you will still be able to use Plushtrap’s plush suit in conjunction with other CPUs in regular animatronic AR encounters.”

The Illumix AR engine has also allowed the studio to expand Android device compatibility for more of you can play Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery. Thus you no longer need an ARCore or ARKit compatible device.

Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery

Since the launch of Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery last year Illumix has introduced new mechanics such as allowing users to locate and ‘pick up’ digital objects as well as have real objects trigger digital content. The studio says the videogame has generated over 7 million downloads and that: “More than 1 year of total time spent in the AR experience on average by users per day.”

There’s been plenty of Halloween activity this year, with Steam launching its annual sale, Blair Witch: Oculus Quest Edition arriving and Angry Birds VR And Acron: Attack Of The Squirrels getting updates. Plus don’t forget to enter VRFocusAffected: The Manor and The Walking Dead Onslaught competitions.

For further updates from Illumix on Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery, keep reading VRFocus.

Hold on to Your Hats Five Night’s at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery Appears Today

While videogames like Pokemon GO often promote their augmented reality (AR) features, in reality, you don’t need the function turned on to play any of the titles. But there are a new breed of experiences appearing for mobile devices which embrace AR to its fullest, the latest being horror franchise Five Night’s at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery which has launched today.

Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery

While Five Nights at Freddy’s VR: Help Wanted kept with the franchise storyline putting players inside a nightmarish amusement park filled with murderous animatronics, developer Illumix had to change the dynamic because of the new locations, your home.

In this storyline players subscribe to Fazbear Entertainment’s brand new on-demand “Fazbear Funtime Service”, receiving a personal visit from their favourite characters. That, of course, means a terrifying visit by Freddy, Bonnie and the rest of the gang, creeping around wherever you happen to be.

Gameplay revolves around surviving an endless stream of these hostile animatronics, following you wherever you are –  home, work, the park. With access to limited resources, to help you survive the tools at your disposal include a flashlight, shocker and battery. There’s also the chance to build your own animatronics in Five Night’s at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery, as you can collect parts, CPUs, plushsuits, and mods to assemble, repair, and deploy your own hotwired animatronics.

Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery

This feature has an added social element thanks to the PvP mode. In Five Night’s at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery friends can attack each other with their custom-made robots, sending one after the other in a scary tit-for-tat. Success also means climbing the leaderboards to show you can deliver – and survive – the frights.

Five Night’s at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery is available today for Android and iOS platforms. This is the first AR videogame from Illumix, with the company having raised approximately $10 million USD towards developing more. Five Nights at Freddy’s VR: Help Wanted team Steel Wool Studios are also working on an Oculus Quest version, so players can really enjoy any version of the immersive horror franchise wherever they are. For further updates on either title, keep reading VRFocus.

Early Access for Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery to go Live in November

Five Nights at Freddy’s has become a cult horror franchise over the years, eventually seeing a virtual reality (VR) version arrive earlier this year from Steel Wool Studios. Last month Illumix announced work on an augmented reality (AR) version for mobile devices called Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery. Today, the studio has confirmed an Early Access release will take place in the next month whilst revealing a couple of other details about the experience. 

Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery

Specifically designed for mobile gameplay, Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery won’t be a port of any of the previous titles. It will also be the first free-to-play videogame in the franchise.

As for Early Access, Illumix will be holding a timed EA period before 28th November, with the official launch to follow afterwards. If you want to register for the Early Access period you can do so at the official website. The studio notes that: “Early Access will be granted in batches on a first come, first served basis. Anyone that has pre-registered will have a chance to be granted access. Players with an Early Access Ticket will also receive a limited number of invitations so that they can play the game with their friends.”

“Illumix is committed to creating innovative AR content that is accessible to everyone. Our DNA is in community gaming, and we are excited to begin working directly with the fans to evolve our first title through our Early Access program,” said  Illumix CEO Kirin Sinha in a statement.

Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery

Coming to both iOS and Android devices Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery looks set to become one of the first AR horror titles – alongside Night Terrors: Bloody Mary – where you’ll be able to explore your seemingly normal home and have all sorts of horrible mechanical creations suddenly appear from the dark – if you’re brave enough to play with the lights off.

Of course, if you want to get into the Halloween spirit before then, Five Nights At Freddy’s VR: Help Wanted is available for most VR headsets including Oculus Rift, HTC Vive and PlayStation VR. As further details regarding Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery are released, VRFocus will keep you updated.

Scare Yourself Everywhere With Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery Later This Year

Augmented reality (AR) firm Illumix came out of stealth in 2018 after securing funding from Silicon Valley VC investors to make AR videogames. Today, the company has announced its first title in the form of Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery, bringing the horror franchise to AR for the first time.

Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery

With Five Nights At Freddy’s VR: Help Wanted arriving for virtual reality (VR) headsets several months ago the series continues its return to the spotlight with Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery. Set to offer a survival horror experience with completely new audio and visual gameplay to previous editions, this AR version will bring those scary animatronics to life on iOS and Android devices.

Very few details have been revealed so far when it comes to the gameplay but one’s things for sure, bringing the horror series into AR means you can turn your home, the park, the train, basically anywhere into a setting that’s going to make you jump (or possibly scream). The screenshots reveal that you’ll have access to a torch – to illuminate those glowing eyes under the stairs – as well as a big ‘shock’ button, presumably to stop the robots in their tracks.

Five Nights at Freddy’s is the work of creator Scott Cawthon who revealed last month that the franchise has more in the works, including more videogames and a film.

Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery

“Augmented Reality offers new ways for players to interact and engage with their favourite franchises by blending real-world environments, fictional characters, and innovative gameplay,” said Kirin Sinha, CEO and Founder of Illumix in a statement. “With Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery, we wanted to evolve beyond the traditional AR-optional geolocation gameplay and deliver a more meaningful AR experience by having AR as the core component of the game.”

While titles such as Pokemon GO, Ghostbusters World and The Walking Dead: Our World all feature AR integration it’s not essential to the gameplay.

Currently in development, Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery is expected to launch later this year although no firm date has been mentioned yet. You can pre-register at https://www.fnafar.com and for more details regarding the videogame, keep reading VRFocus.

Five Nights At Freddy’s AR Brings The Terror Of Creepy Animatronics To Your Living Room

Five Nights at Freddy’s, the smash-hit indie horror franchise about spending the night in a deranged kids play place overrun by twisted animatronic creatures come to life, is getting an AR spin-off later this year.

What better way to spend Friday the 13th than reading about an upcoming AR horror game spin-off for one of the planets most popular and recognizable horror brands? As someone that has sufficiently terrified himself with AR apps like Night Terrors and the Bloody Mary follow-up, as well as a slew of VR horror title such as Resident Evil 7, The Exorcist VR, and more, I can definitely say without a doubt that I have full faith that Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery is going to be absolutely terrifying.

Five Nights at Freddy’s AR is being developed by Illumix, a relatively new AR-focused start-up that wants to change the way games are consumed. “Augmented Reality offers new ways for players to interact and engage with their favorite franchises by blending real-world environments, fictional characters, and innovative gameplay,”said Kirin Sinha, CEO and Founder of Illumix in a prepared statement. “With Five Nights at Fredddy’s AR: Special Delivery, we wanted to evolve beyond the traditional AR-optional geolocation gameplay and deliver a more meaningful AR experience by having AR as the core component of the game.”

We don’t know much about the game yet, but I imagine it will be a bit like a mix of hide and sneak and trying to prevent the animatronic creature from getting to you just like other iterations. The screenshots below give a bit of a hint as to how the game will work:

five nights at freddys ar special delivery screenshot fnaf 2 five nights at freddys ar special delivery screenshot fnaf 3 five nights at freddys ar special delivery screenshot fnaf 1

The VR version, dubbed Five Nights at Freddy’s: Help Wanted, follows the same format as the non-VR iterations with you controller camera and door locks from a stationary location as you juggle blocking access with preserving battery life. A similar format could translate well to mobile AR if done correctly.

Five Nights at Freddy’s AR: Special Delivery is slated for release this fall, presumably in October I’d assume, and will be coming to iOS and Android devices. You can pre-register now on the official website.

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