Arcade Slot Car Racer ‘Tiny Trax’ Launches on PlayStation VR

Tiny Trax (2017), the tiny slot car racing game, is now out for PlayStation VR. Created by Brighton-based studio FuturLab, Tiny Trax gives you the tiny HotWheels-sized cars from your childhood and lets you tear around and the room, do incredible jumps and drift around bends on a slot track otherwise impossible outside of VR.

Scaled to mimic a child’s giant toy racing track, you can play 12 track across three environments; Tropical, Fire and Ice and Outer Space. Online multiplayer allows up to four players driving six different vehicles.

“We’re delighted to announce Tiny Trax – it’s a game that will appeal to players of all ages, allowing them to dive straight in and recreate the thrill of slot racing in immersive virtual environments,” said FuturLab MD James Marsden

According to a PlayStation blogpost, development of the game was built around a primary goal of using VR to improve on an existing real-world seated experience, which led developer Dave Gabriel to the idea of slot-car racing in VR. Gabriel says Tiny Trax “ticked all the right boxes,” including no need to move from the seated position (no motion sickness), building impossible tracks in locales like the beach or on alien planets, and a track that didn’t have to obey the laws of gravity.

‘Tiny Trax’ on PSN

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PlayStation VR Exclusive Tiny Trax Races onto PlayStation Store

Tiny Trax, the first virtual reality (VR) title from UK studio FuturLab, is now available for PlayStation VR. Delivering a slot car drift racing experience described as ‘Micro Machines meets Scalextric’, the Brighton-based studio aims to immerse players in virtual worlds surrounded by a variety of epic toy racing tracks.

Tiny Trax screenshot

A drifting/boost-recharge mechanic means Tiny Trax is easy to pick up, but challenging to master. The player remains static in the virtual world, while they control the action going on around them, resulting in a comfortable VR experience. The videogame also boasts online multiplayer functionality for up to four players, with 12 tracks across three environments – Tropical, Fire & Ice and Outer Space – and six vehicles to choose from.

The music has been composed by leading videogame composer Joris de Man, whose previous work includes Horizon: Zero Dawn, Killzone and FuturLabs’ own Velocity 2X.

“We’re tremendously excited that Tiny Trax is now available for PlayStation VR,” said FuturLab Director James Marsden. “VR is still a new concept to a lot of people, so we strived to make a game where all the environments evoke emotions of comfort and excitement. In Tiny Trax you play as a full-sized adult in a tiny world with even smaller cars – It’s a hugely compelling and re-playable game that we hope brings a new perspective to VR.”

Tiny Trax screenshotTiny Trax is downloadable from today via the PlayStation Store in the US and Europe for £12.99 GBP/€14.99 EUR/$19.99 USD. VRFocus will keep you updated with all future VR titles from FuturLab.

5 PlayStation VR Games to Watch at E3 2017

The PlayStation VR benefited from a huge swathe of videogame titles at launch, but in the months that followed this barrage slowed to a trickle. The recent releases of the well received Farpoint and Star Trek: Bridge Crew see the first wave of titles announced coming to a close; so what’s next? VRFocus looks at five new titles on the horizon, and why you should be excited for them.

The Persistence screenshot

The Persistence

After the success of Playroom VR, UK-based Firesprite are coming back for more virtual reality (VR), this time with a much darker experience. The Persistence is a horror title featuring procedurally generated environments. In a similar fashion to Ubisoft’s Zombi, every time the player dies they become a new character, but in The Persistence the space ship upon which they are based will have changed: a new layout, enemy placement and items.

To connect each attempt, the player can harvest cells which can be used to improve attributes such as speed, health and stealth. If a player dies these are transferred for the next play through, hence that title.

The Persistence was originally expected to launch last month, however there’s no signs of a release date at present. It’s likely we’ll learn more at next week’s Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3), Los Angeles.

 

Bloody Zombies ScreenshotBloody Zombies

Another UK studio, nDreams pledged their commitment to the new medium very early in the wave or modern VR. After launching The Assembly last year, the developer/publisher is returning to PlayStation VR with Bloody Zombies: a side-scrolling brawler.

While the genre may not scream ‘VR’, it is actually a perfect combination of technology and action. The 2D characters appear like cardboard cutouts in the virtual environment and the added benefit of a widened viewpoint allows developer Paw Print Games to hide secrets beyond the edge of the traditional 2D screen.

Bloody Zombies has been designed to allow for up to four players to use any combination of VR and non-VR when playing together online, keeping the experience open to all. VRFocus has already been hands-on with Bloody Zombies and will get to experience the title once again at next week’s E3.

 

Theseus screenshotTheseus

Recently confirmed for PlayStation VR, Forge Reply’s Theseus proposes an interesting combination of platform challenges and brawling, combined with static and dynamic camera angles, screams ‘God of War’.

According to Samuele Perseo, Producer at Forge Reply: “Theseus is not an ordinary hero; in our game he is the prey, not the hunter. He is “only human” while his enemy, besides being 33 feet tall, has otherworldly strength… and he is invulnerable.

“Theseus cannot just fight the Minotaur head-on: each encounter between the two poses a new challenge. It may be necessary to resort to stealth, or an ancient mechanism could be the key to escape death. The monster is blind, but his hearing and his smell are sharp.”

Theseus is expected to launch on PlayStation VR this summer, and as such will likely make its playable debut at E3 next week.

 

Tiny Trax screenshotTiny Trax

The third UK studio delivering their wares to this list, FuturLab has built a strong audience thanks to the success of the Velocity series. Now however, the developer is turning its attention to VR, with the upcoming Tiny Trax.

Having been compared to Micro Machines with a hint of Off-Road 4×4 thanks to its unique viewpoint, Tiny Trax will follow Codemasters’ Toybox Turbos in delivering an unconventional racing videogame to VR players. Featuring both single player gameplay and an online multiplayer for up to four people, Tiny Trax will include six vehicles to select before heading out onto the track.

No release date has yet been announced for Tiny Trax, however FuturLab has suggested that it will be ‘coming soon’. Of course, VRFocus will keep you updated with all the latest details.

 

God of War III RemasteredSony Santa Monica

So, we don’t actually know what this one is. So why’s it on this list? Because Sony Santa Monica is one of the most highly respected developers on PlayStation hardware. That’s why.

As you will most likely have seen, last month VRFocus reported on an unofficial statement regarding Sony Santa Monica’s continued work in VR, and that after assisting a number of studios with external projects its first title for the PlayStation VR will likely be announced soon. That ‘soon’ may well be at E3 next week.

Whether it will be a part of an existing franchise – Sony Santa Monica has of course championed the God of War series – or a brand new title is yet to be seen, but you can be sure that whatever comes will shoot straight to the top of PlayStation VR owners’ most wanted lists.

Slot-car racer Tiny Trax is FuturLab’s VR Project for PlayStation VR

A couple of weeks ago VRFocus reported on British developer FuturLab teasing on Twitter that it would be unveiling a virtual reality (VR) project for PlayStation VR. Well that day has now arrived, with the studio revealing Tiny Trax, a slot-car racer.

Taking inspiration from toys by Scalextric and Carrera, FuturLab has created a title that evolves slot-car racing in a way only videogames can do. Designed to be easy to pick up and start playing Tiny Traks features a drifting/boost-recharge mechanic, alongside lane switching and epic jumps across twelve tracks that’ll take players to tropical islands, volcanoes, ice caves and outer-space.

Tiny Trax screenshot 2

Featuring both a singleplayer – against AI – or an online multiplayer for up to four people, Tiny Trax includes six vehicles to select before heading out onto the track. Friends can select either single races or go for a tournament to test their skills.

FuturLab hasn’t revealed a release date just yet for Tiny Trax, simply stating ‘coming soon’, so you’ll have to make do with the reveal trailer below for now.

VRFocus will continue its coverage of FuturLab and Tiny Trax, reporting back with the latest updates.

FuturLab Announce Upcoming New Title

British developer FuturLab have revealed on Twitter that there will be an announcement about the company’s newest virtual reality (VR) videogame title later this month.

FuturLab made a name for themselves by creating games for the PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4 and Sony Vita, gaining critical praise for their work on Velocity 2X and Surge Deluxe, with Velocity 2X even winning a Gamespot ‘Game of the Year’ award for the Vita category in 2014. As such they have built a strong relationship with Sony, enough that Velocity even managed to graduate from a digital exclusive to a physical release for PlayStation 4.

The company announced at the 2016 Develop: Brighton event that a title for the PlayStation VR was in the works at the studio, though details about what it was they were working on were scarce. Some speculated that the upcoming title would be a re-working on Velocity for VR, though a message on the website stated that developers at the studio were working on ‘An exciting new IP!’.

FutureLab are remaining cagey about the new title, with the studio official blog saying only this: “It’s been a very interesting learning experience – in fact we’ve learned a ton, and we’ll be talking about that a great deal around the reveal of the game (probably at the end of the year, but we reserve the right to keep schtum until it’s ready to show!).
For now, all we can say is that it’s very pretty and very cool. Most importantly, nobody has felt any kind of motion sickness whilst playing. Hooray!”

VRFocus will keep you informed of further developments regarding FuturLab’s upcoming project and other PlayStation VR titles.