Lies Beneath Review: Surviving Stylish Horrors

Lies Beneath is an action-packed single-player survival horror game published by Oculus Studios and developed by Drifter Entertainment, the same team behind PC VR co-op shooter Gunheart and Robo Recall: Unplugged on Quest. Read our full Lies Beneath review below for more!

The Oculus Quest has a great selection of VR games. But what you might notice when browsing the Store or looking through your Library of content is that there is certainly a lack of narratively-driven single player titles. Other than Vader Immortal, Apex Construct, Moss, Virtual Virtual Reality, Journey of the Gods, and a handful of others the vast majority of content on the Quest is designed to be briefly picked up and played for a few minutes or focused on multiplayer. Thankfully Lies Beneath is here to help alleviate the issue a bit.

Lies Beneath tells the story of a young woman that gets into a car accident while visiting her family in a small Alaskan town. She’s driving in a car with her father when a mysterious figure steps out in front of the vehicle, causing her to swerve off of a bridge and crash, getting flung from inside. By the time you make your way back to the scene, your father is gone with nothing but a trail of blood leading away.

Thus, the mystery begins.

It’s a good hook for a story and the way Drifter Entertainment unravels the threads is very interesting and well-done. Everything in Lies Beneath is presented as if it were a dark, noir-style comic book. The beginning of each “Issue” has you flip through a giant, floating comic complete with panels, descriptive box out text, dialogue bubbles, and more. After getting up to speed, you essentially live out the events of the book.

The art style feels just like a comic come to life. It reminds me a bit of Mad World on the Nintendo Wii, or the similarly-styled VR shooter Dimension Hunter. The main difference here is how well the overall package sells the window dressing. It’s more than just a superficial coat of animated paint. When you do things like hit boxes with your axe, tiny sound effect blurbs like *crack* pop up for a split second and clicking things in the menu show a brief *click* sound blurb. It does a great job of further selling the aesthetic.

Lies Beneath VR 3

As stylish and pronounced as it is, it takes a while before the environments feel very interesting. You spend quite a while lumbering around in the snow where everything looks extremely samey. The foggy blizzard restricts your vision so the game rarely renders anything in the distance and darkness requires using your small lighter to see just a foot or two in front of you. This all helps build suspense, but ends up making it feel truncated in terms of actually being immersive. Hopefully the Rift version that releases in a couple of weeks can sidestep some of these issues.

I also noticed some performance issues on Quest in the form of stuttering here and there, most commonly when approaching comic panel narration in between level sections. For example, every Chapter has comic panels positioned as sign posts inside the levels that articulate your character’s thoughts rather than using voice over dialogue and each time I approached this (every handful of minutes or so) there was usually a brief jitter of frame drops.

Since your lighter can be used to point you in the right direction if you look at where the embers are pointing off the tip of the flame, you’ll never get lost — not that you would have anyway since Lies Beneath is a pretty linear game. Most of the time you’ll walk from one end of a chapter to the other, interacting a bit with objects as you go, running from big bad guys, and shooting your way past ghouls.

In terms of actual scares and building up a sense of horror, Lies Beneath is one of the lighter efforts in its genre. Since you almost always have weapons on-hand there is a lot more combat here than in something like The Exorcist: Legion VR, Face Your Fears 2, or other recent horror games. Rather than forcing you into a state of helplessness you can and will fight back in Lies Beneath quite often.

lies beneath bear trap zombies

All told the game is about 6-8 hours long depending on your play style spread across 20 chapters. It takes a while to reach some environmental variety, but once you do the art style becomes more pronounced and visually pleasing. I’m really not a fan of sticking players in a snowy blizzard for the first chunk of the experience, it was a bit of an underwhelming opening for that reason.

There is a good assortment of weapons here from revolvers and hand axes to shotguns and more. When you have your lighter fully lit and out in one hand you can see an aiming reticule where you point and weak spots on enemies are highlighted. It’s a cool system that adds some strategy to tense fights.

Coming off of weighty PC VR games like Boneworks,  The Walking Dead: Saints & Sinners, Half-Life: Alyx, and even Asgard’s Wrath and Stormland, combat in Lies Beneath doesn’t feel very reactive. Most objects in the game are static, not physics objects at all, and melee attacks usually pass through enemies and objects without making contact. Even gunshots result in mostly canned animations it seems, which is a bit of a bummer.

The scariest moments in Lies Beneath are purely atmospheric. Hearing the sounds of beasts in the forest, just beyond your view, feasting on corpses. Spotting red, glowing eyes peering at you from around a corner only to disappear once you reach the next area beyond the trees. The constant feeling that you’re being watched, at all times, everywhere you go. It’s tense and unnerving and slowly builds over the course of the game.

There were a handful of jump scares, but they’re not super common. Instead, Lies Beneath relies more on a sense of stress and anxiety to justify its horror label. The atmosphere is foreboding, the narrative is dark, and the imagery is often creepy, so when you get overwhelmed by enemies and are fumbling to reload or running low on ammo, that’s when the hairs start to stand up on your neck and arms or you flail in desperation right before death.

Trust me, I speak from experience.

Lies Beneath VR 2

Lies Beneath Review Final Verdict

While Lies Beneath doesn’t pack enough true terror to be considered a new peak for VR horror, it does manage to craft an intriguing story in a stylishly formed world with mostly satisfying combat and palpable tension. It’s exciting to see a developer that was so previously rooted in the fast-paced action shooter category branching out to something more slow-paced, narratively-driven, and visually unique. The gameplay certainly leaves plenty to be desired in the wake of Half-Life: Alyx, but in terms of its story and setting there is enough here to make it worth a recommendation — especially in comparison to similar experiences already available on Quest.


Final Score: :star: :star: :star: :star: 4/5 Stars | Really Good

lies beneath pro con list review

You can read more about our five-star scoring policy here.


Lies Beneath releases today on Oculus Quest and comes to Oculus Rift on April 14th. This review is based on the Oculus Quest version of the game. For more details visit the official website.

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Lies Beneath is a new VR Horror From Gunheart Developer Drifter Entertainment

This past week has already seen White Door Games announce the terrifying Cosmophobia and now another equally unsettling virtual reality (VR) horror has surfaced. Drifter Entertainment, the studio behind Robo Recall: Unplugged and  Gunheart has revealed its next project, Lies Beneath for Oculus Quest and Oculus Rift.

Lies Beneath

A survival horror which has been inspired by classics such as Resident Evil and Silent Hill, Lies Beneath takes place in the sleepy town of Slumber, Alaska.  “Returning college student Mae must fight to save her father (and her sanity) from the terrifying townsfolk and creepy creatures infecting her hometown,” explains the synopsis.

Lies Beneath looks like its going to be instantly terrifying thanks to its visceral cel-shaded art style. “In terms of the world we’ve built, it pretty obviously draws inspiration from the comic world, says Creative Director Brian Murphy on the Oculus Blog. “I think of it as a kind of a cheeky mid-century American Creepfest, mixed with profoundly disturbing Junji Ito-style Japanese horror comic weirdness.”

Gameplay will see players fight hordes of monsters with an arsenal of melee and ranged weapons, from shotguns and pistols to axes, knives and explosives. Drifter Entertainment mixes up the action with puzzles to solve and lore objects that uncover hidden truths to find.

Lies Beneath

Drifter Entertainment has impressively committed to the storyline by creating two websites dedicated to Slumber. The first is a tourist style ‘Visit Slumber, Alaska‘ site with a nice version about its history. The second is by the Slumber Historical Society, for a Ghost Tour of Slumber’s darker history.

There’s not long to wait for Lies Beneath with the Oculus Quest version scheduled for 31st March while the Oculus Rift edition will arrive on 14th April. Check out the first trailer for the videogame below and for further updates keep reading VRFocus.

Co-Op Shooter Gunheart Is 25 Percent Off For A Limited Time

Co-Op Shooter Gunheart Is 25 Percent Off For A Limited Time

One of VR’s best shooters is 25 percent off for a limited time.

We rated Gunheart “Great” when we reviewed it after a year of early access development. Drifter Entertainment, however, continues to keep updating the game and adding new features even after release — moving it closer and closer to becoming VR’s “go-to co-op shooter,” as David Jagneaux wrote in his review. The 25 percent discount brings the cost down to $22.50, so if you’ve been holding out on exploring Gunheart’s wide range of game modes now might be a good time to take the plunge.

Gunheart includes 10 different weapons (along with weapon mods) as well as both PvP and co-op modes, plus a mode that extends multiplayer onto traditional PC screens so you can play along with a friend even if they don’t have a VR headset. Though Steam is constantly being inundated with new shooters, Gunheart sets itself apart by staying fast-paced with quick movement and jumping.

At the time of this writing there was a little less than 24 hours left in the sale.

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Best Of UploadVR Livestreams: Skyrim, LA Noire, Beat Saber, And More

Best Of UploadVR Livestreams: Skyrim, LA Noire, Beat Saber, And More

You might have noticed over the last few months that we’re trying to increase our livestream frequency here at UploadVR. We’ve been using Restream, a service that allows you to stream to more than one platform simultaneously so that we can hit both YouTube and Twitch. Then using OVRDrop, we can see chat from both services while inside VR without having to look at the monitor at all.

We’re still gearing up to start doing some more mixed reality streaming with a smooth, easy pipeline, so keep an eye out for that in compatible titles going forward. But since today is the Fourth of July and that means taking the day off for most Americans, I decided to put together this roundup of some of our best recent VR gaming livestreams all in one handy spot.

Check some of them out and if you like what you see subscribe to use on YouTube and Twitch to get involved the next time we’re live! We usually try to go live two or three times per week around 2:00PM or 3:00PM PT.

Skyrim VR

LA Noire: The VR Case Files

 

Beat Saber

 

Archangel: Hellfire

 

Echo Arena

 

Gunheart

Thanks for checking out some of our livestreams! If you’ve got suggestions for games you’d like to see us play live, let us know down in the comments below. And keep an eye on our channels next week as we will be livestreaming Seeking Dawn, the highly anticipated VR shooter ahead of its launch in mid-July.

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Drifter Entertainment Releases New Content Update For Gunheart

Virtual reality (VR) first-person shooter (FPS) puts players into a world full of intense gunfights and alien bugs that need killing. Step into the shoes of a robotic bounty hunter trying to make some money at the edge of the galaxy alone, with friends, or in player-versus-player combat. The title has come a long way since it was announced back in May 2017 and then having left Early Access last month. Now, the team at Drifter Entertainment have released a new update that brings plenty of exciting new content to the title.

Gunheart screenshot

Dubbed the June update, players will not only find the usual large number of bug fixes and improvements to gameplay and systems, as is the tradition with updates but a number of new features all together. Firstly players will be able to take character customization to a new level as there is now the option to pick the paint job for their rig. Match the paint job with your favourite hat and you’ll be able to rock the galaxy in style.

While in the Palco Rig Room picking a paint job why not try out the new Rig Mods. Mods were added to weapons sometime back and allow for players to change up the behavior of a selected weapon. With Rig Mods, players will be able to upgrade their robotic body with new perks such as increased air control, projectile slowing, area-of-effect (AOE) damage on shield break, and many others that will do ‘crazy stuff’ to help keep the gameplay fresh and engaging.

The movement system has been completely revamped allowing greater control of how to navigate the world and offering more control when in the air. This will come in handy for the new Lone Wolf mode which offers the hardest challenge yet in the title as players go in alone against some of the toughest enemies in the world of Gunheart all with only one life. This mode will be even more of a challenge as enemy behaviors have been upgraded to allow for better spawning of enemies and encourage them to hunt players down. The buzzkills enemy will also now go crazy and dive bomb players, blowing up on impact.

Gunheart screenshot

Lastly, there are improves to the games player-versus-player mode to off a more balanced and interesting fight along with the whole new Horde mode. Can you survive wave after wave of increasingly difficult enemies and come out on top as the best robotic hunter around? Put your money where your guns are and find out.

Gunheart has received positive reviews from players including VRFocus’ own Senior Staff Writer Peter Graham who said in his review: “Gunheart has a lot going for it, visually well designed with decent gunplay mechanics and enough content to keep most players happy for several hours. There are bugs and some optimisation issues – just having a better than min spec PC might work – yet the overall experience is still very enjoyable. Certainly Gunheart’s main hook is the easy, drop in co-op gameplay, yet there’s not always many people about, an issue a lot of VR multiplayers suffer with.”

Gunheart has been a long time coming and continues to get numerous updates from the team at Drifter Entertainment. The title supports both VR play with HTC Vive, Oculus Rift and Windows Mixed Reality headsets along with non-VR play as well. The title is available now and you can see a short video detailing the above update below. For more on Gunheart in the future, keep reading VRFocus.

A Taste of the Action in Gunheart

Science fiction has become something of a go-to setting for action first-person shooter titles. Perhaps the vast, unknowable nature of the universe makes it attractive to explore, or perhaps it is the idea that there might be hostile aliens out there we can shoot without feeling guilty. Whatever it is, space is the setting for Gunheart from Drifter Entertainment.

Today’s gameplay video begins in a central hub known by the name of ‘Event Horizon’. This is the place where players can check out their equipment, and buy new guns and other paraphernalia that can make you even more dangerously effective.

Gunheart screenshot

In Gunheart, the player takes the role of a galactic bounty hunter, with your missions coming with a target and a cash reward. Money appears to be the driving motivation for your character, as all that high-tech equipment comes with a hefty price tag.

Some of the guns can be combined to make even bigger and more terrifying guns by simply bringing the motion controllers closer together, causing the two parts to click together to form this powerful handheld cannons.

The weapons can be upgraded with various mods, like rapid reloaders or sniper scopes, and special bullet types like hollow points are up for purchases as well. All these settings can be controlled from within this central hub.

The missions are accessed from a map which bares a resemblance to a transit map like you might find in the London underground. Once a job is selected, you are teleported to the correct location to begin.

Gunheart screenshot

In addition to the single player campaign, PvP is also available and can be selected from the mission map. There are several PvP modes available, including the ‘Brawl’ free-for-all. Mastering certain weapons in PvP mode will unlock them for purchase in the main campaign.

The Gunheart gameplay video is available to view below. For further coverage of new and upcoming VR titles, keep checking back with VRFocus.

Something For The Weekend: Pre-E3 Oculus Store Deals

With the Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) 2018 show almost here it is time for another entry of Something for the Weekend, where VRFocus brings you a number of deals on virtual reality (VR) titles. It is time to look at the Oculus store this weekend where there are a number of deals on titles that are ensure to be your next favourite. From intense gunfights to some puzzle solving titles, there is something for everyone this weekend. As always, be sure to check back every weekend for even more deals right here on VRFocus.

Archangel: Hellfire

Archangel: Hellfire

Looking for some action packed mech fights this weekend? Then look no further than Archangel: Hellfire. This multiplayer deathmatch title will drop you into intense, free-roaming matches where you control one of six building-sized mechs equipped with massive weapons of death. Fighting in an apocalyptic landscape, there is even a single player campaign to experience should you need a break from the online battles.

Archangel: Hellfire is available now for £14.99 (GBP) down from the usual £22.99 for Oculus Rift.

Gunheart Screenshot Hero

Gunheart

Gunheart has a lot going for it, visually well designed with decent gunplay mechanics and enough content to keep most players happy for several hours. There are bugs and some optimisation issues – just having a better than min spec PC might work – yet the overall experience is still very enjoyable.” – Read VRFocus’ Senior Staff Writer Peter Graham’s review of Gunheart.

Gunheart is available now for Oculus Rift for £19.99 (GBP) down from £22.99.

Cube Puzzle

Cube Puzzle

Cube Puzzle is a VR first person puzzler game with classic controls and intuitive shape matching gameplay.
You need to control a group of cubes and rotate it to fit through a hole in the wall and each time you fit through a hole without clashing, more blocks will be added on your cluster. As you cluster gets bigger, you will need to hide the cubes by clicking Eye-Closing button to see the hole and determine what rotation to make. Stay as long as possible and unlock more levels, it’s time to go beyond yourself!”

Cube Puzzle is available now for on Oculus Go for £0.79 (GBP) down from £1.49.

Clazer screenshot 1

CLAZER

Experience the thrill of sport shooting in this title that transports players to authentic environments with realistic shotgun physics. Not only will you get to use a shotgun and learn the proper way to lead a target so you can accurately shoot them, but do so in an immersive experience. The title also features a competition leaderboard so player can go up against eachother to claim the top spot.

CLAZER is only £2.29 (GBP) down from £3.99 for Oculus Go.

Remnith

Remnith

Experience chaotic first-person shooter (FPS) action where enemy units will feed off the energy of ever shot that isn’t lodged directly into them. The more shots you miss the stronger your enemies will get. Every battle is a boss battle in this action packed title where enemies can grow and evolve, using different tactics as the battle progresses. With five difficult levels, twenty five arenas, and a number of enemies to fight. There is plenty of action to enjoy within Remnith.

Remnith is available now for £2.29 (GBP) down from £7.99 on Oculus Rift.

Sprint Vector Final screenshot1

Sprint Vector

“There’s very little to dislike in Sprint Vector. Sure there will be times when that competitive edge over takes you, getting annoyed when you fudge a jump but that’s to be expected. The single-player has enough to get you started with a few hours of gameplay, yet it’s the multiplayer that’ll have you coming back for more. Here’s hoping that Sprint Vector draws in enough of a crowd to sustain it, rather than becoming another multiplayer focused experience that gets forgotten about. Which would be a shame, because from where VRFocus is standing Sprint Vector is another hit for the studio.” – Read VRFocus’ Senior Staff Writer Peter Graham’s review of Sprint Vector.

Sprint Vector is available now for Oculus Rift for £14.99 (GBP) down from £22.99.

VormHoles

VormHoles

“Armed with a firework rocket launcher, you must defend your temples from hordes of snake like creatures. The snakes come from another dimension with one aim in mind, to destroy temples and harness the energy of your world. But these creatures have a weakness, fireworks!”

VormHoles is currently £0.79 (GBP) down from £1.49 for Gear VR.
Adventure Of Ice Cream

Adventure of Ice Cream

Welcome to the snowy ice-cream world. Can you shoot all the interactive obstacles to collect as many coins as possible including the super-power cards, which will unlock hidden power. With high scores to earn and a world wide leaderboard to climb, it is all about landing those shots in this title.

Adventure of Ice Cream is currently on sale for £0.79 (GBP) down from £1.49 for Gear VR.

SWAT Academy

SWAT Academy

SWAT Academy puts you to the test as you master the weapons and tactics needed to become the best of the best. Hone your skills in the intense combat training simulations, face off against waves of hostile targets, and survive the onslaught of the zombie horde.”

SWAT Academy is currently available for £3.99 (GBP) down from £5.99 for Gear VR.

A-Tech Cybernetic VR

A-Tech Cybernetic VR

In this story driven FPS, players can experience the action in a classic swam mode against an endless horde of enemies or in the story-driven campaign mode. Taking place in a futuristic biomedical company overrun by mutants, players will need to put their shooting and survival skills to the test. With real-life movements, players can interact with their surroundings and feel like a action hero in this immersive title.

A-Tech Cybernetic VR is available for only £12.99 (GBP) right now on sale from £18.99 for Oculus Rift.

That is all for this week but remember that VRFocus gathers all the best sales and deals every week, so check back next weekend at the same time to discover more.

Gunheart Review: Liberating Movement And Bullets Galore In This Co-Op Shooter

Gunheart Review: Liberating Movement And Bullets Galore In This Co-Op Shooter

Gunheart feels like the result of developers listing out all of the things most hardcore VR gamers want from their ideal game. Drifter Entertainment have crammed in tons of weapons to pick from, dynamically generated missions so you don’t run out of content too quickly, procedural and hand-crafted maps, lots of enemies, satisfying and tight gun mechanics, and a strong networking system to facilitate co-op. You can also freely move around the map with smooth locomotion, leap dozens of feet into the air, and teleport anywhere as much as you’d like.

In fact, Gunheart is such a thoroughly robust shooter that it’s even got a fully functional non-VR mode for PC players so everyone can play co-op running the same missions together regardless of device. It’s ambitious and after about a year of Early Access refinement, extremely polished.

Gunheart is an excellent example of a game that evolved in smart ways throughout its time in Early Access and became better as a result. For example, when I first played Gunheart all the way back over a year ago it was a teleportation-only game. Since then, they added full locomotion, jumping, and a slew of enhancements and content expansions. Other than the core shooting mechanics, it’s hardly even the same game anymore.

The premise here is that you’re a robotic bounty hunter that takes on jobs to hunt down and kill disgusting bug-like alien monsters. While the plot is just light enough to give you a reason to shoot at things, the real selling point is the atmosphere.

Before and after every mission you’ll visit the Bent Horizon club, which gives off a Star Wars-esque cantina vibe. From here you can customize your bounty hunter with hats, face designs, different vests/capes, and more. You’ll also be able to equip dozens of different weapon mods to tons of different weapons to augment and change how they’re used in battle.

Each Bent Horizon instance also serves as a multiplayer hub lobby where other players materialize so you can chat and meet people and decide if you want to group up for some missions together. Having a physical (or rather, virtual) place to walk around and adjust things rather than just a bunch of menus really helps establish Gunheart’s personality and lore. It feels like a sci-fi version of Rec Room’s gym.

While there aren’t as many varied missions in Gunheart as you’d find in a game like Destiny 2, that had years of development time across hundreds of team members for example, there’s still quite a lot going on here. A semi-procedural system shuffles map layouts around to keep missions fresh and there’s a set-in-stone progression of campaign stories to finish.

The temporary event missions spice things up a bit, as do the competitive PvP maps, so there’s definitely something for everybody. During a mission you’ll come across loot like money and ammo, but not much in the way of gear. Uncovering loot caches and treasure chests that contain cosmetic skins or even new gun mods more frequently during missions would have helped add to replayability.

Luckily most of the maps feature a lot of elevation variation encouraging you to use your jump and teleport liberally to stay mobile and get the high ground. Most standard enemies have wings that let them glide and jump up to high points as well, so you’ve got to keep your head on a swivel. It’s very easy to get overrun quickly if you let them swarm in on you — especially if you’re playing solo.

The drop-in, drop-out multiplayer works great though and you can set it so random people or friends can join your Bent Horizon lobby or even jump in on your mission while you’re right in the middle of it. Even though it’s launch week so far we haven’t seen a ton of people online yet, but hopefully that changes with the weekend coming up and the inclusion of both VR and non-VR play styles.

Since we first played Gunheart over a year ago one other prominent co-op shooter with fast movement has hit the scene as well, named Evasion. That one is targeting PSVR support as well with the Aim Controller and has a bit more variety from the jump with different classes, but it lacks the speed, jumping, and weapon mod system that really helps Gunheart stand out.

Drifter Entertainment consists of game development veterans from Epic Games, Oculus, and Microsoft with experience on projects like Gears of War, Halo, Robo Recall, and Doom. That pedigree shows with how polished and exciting Gunheart is to play. After a few hours I wanted more variety and more types of guns, even though the unlockable perks were all awesome, but at launch it’s already much better off than most other VR shooters.

Final Score: 8/10 – Great

Gunheart is a perfect example of how to iterate and improve on a game over the course of more than a year in Steam Early Access. What started out as a basic co-op VR shooter with teleportation movement is now one of the most feature-rich VR games we’ve seen in recent memory. Dozens of weapon mods, dynamic mission generation, excellent co-op, high-flying fast-paced movement, and enough bullets to make John Wick blush all add up to Gunheart being an easy recommendation. If they can continue iterating and adding content post-launch, this could become VR’s go-to co-op shooter.

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

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Review: Gunheart

Virtual reality (VR) first-person shooters (FPS) have certainly come on leaps and bounds in the last couple of years, slowly moving away from fixed wave-based videogames to experiences that are far more engaging and fluid. Upcoming titles like Archiact’s Evasion and Farhome by DEVCUBESTUDIO show what’s coming in the future, and as for the present Drifter Entertainment’s first VR project Gunheart has all the hallmarks of an exciting sci-fi shooter.

Gunheart Screenshot Hero

To say that Drifter Entertainment has a pedigree in FPS videogames is somewhat of an understatement, the team is made up of VR veterans from Epic Games, Oculus and Microsoft who have worked on Gears of War, Doom 3, Halo 4, and Bullet Train. That history is noticeable throughout Gunheart, from the gritty neon lit hub of The Bent Horizon to the open sprawling levels, and veritable selection of weapons and upgrades available.

Gunheart certainly doesn’t take itself too seriously, aiming to provide an arcade style shooting experience that’s ideal for drop in and drop out gameplay, whether you just want a quick half hour blast, or to go on some epic team missions. As mentioned The Bent Horizon is your hub and starting point. Kitted out like some futuristic dive bar where only the nastiest of criminals would venture, everything is neatly laid out so you can upgrade your rig, change guns or hangout with other players.

While there is some sort of storyline about you being a bounty hunter and some alien race coming down to create all sorts of havoc, the only thing you need to concern yourself with is cash. Nothing comes for free and that’s especially so if you want to buy the latest armaments to be a badass bounty hunter. To earn cash you need to complete missions, either by yourself or with a few teammates if any are around. Each mission isn’t massively long – averaging around 20 to 30 minutes each – yet Drifter Entertainment has added a few extras to make them more than just A to B killing romps.

Gunheart screenshot 1

Missions have Elite and Speed modes available to earn more cash, and for those eagle eyed players there are plenty of money canisters littered around the levels to up that total even further. Being the multiplayer title that it is, Gunheart also features PvP battle modes for when hunting aliens gets a little too samey and monotonous.

These tend to come into effect after a few levels due to the way the aliens have been designed. While the actual environments are gloriously winding and varied at points, offering plenty of tactile points to move between – rather than just walking into a death trap valley – most of the creatures do tend to have that alien bug mechanic of running at you until one of you is dead. Some of the bigger creatures do occasionally go for cover but not for long.

One of the best features about the gun fights in Gunheart is the movement. Of course there’s teleportation for maximum comfort – it’s also needed to get to some of the trickier ledges – alongside smooth locomotion for that true FPS feel. Additionally, there’s also a double jump option which is very rarely seen in VR shooters. This helps to open up the maps enormously, being able to leap considerable distances.

Gunheart screenshot

What did spoil Gunheart’s gameplay however was latency. VRFocus always runs on a min spec PC to make sure what the developers claim can run a VR experience actually can. On HTC Vive there wasn’t an issue with the graphics controls on low. With Oculus Rift however, with the same settings the visuals looked better yet at points the latency made trying to shoot anything almost impossible.

Gunheart has a lot going for it, visually well designed with decent gunplay mechanics and enough content to keep most players happy for several hours. There are bugs and some optimisation issues – just having a better than min spec PC might work – yet the overall experience is still very enjoyable. Certainly Gunheart’s main hook is the easy, drop in co-op gameplay, yet there’s not always many people about, an issue a lot of VR multiplayers suffer with.

80%

Awesome

  • Verdict

Gunheart Livestream: Fast-Paced Co-Op VR Shooter

Gunheart Livestream: Fast-Paced Co-Op VR Shooter

If you asked most Rift and/or Vive users what their favorite VR games were, you’d probably hear a lot of the same answers. The massive, sprawling worlds of Skyrim VR and Fallout 4 VR likely rank very highly, but so does the fast-paced action of Beat Saber. For most people, shooting down enemies in multiplayer with friends is still what gamers will come back to the most, but not everyone wants a hardcore military simulation every time like Onward.

This is a big reason that Robo Recall, the free shooter from Epic Games, made such a big splash on release. Now if you took that concept and expanded it to include multiplayer, you’d be pretty close to what the team of shooter veterans at Drifter Entertainment have accomplished with Gunheart. This is a super fast-paced VR shooter (it has non-VR support too!) that is all-out action. Evasion is an upcoming shooter with a lot of similar ideas.

We’ll be livestreaming Gunheart on PC using Rift with Touch starting very soon (which means we’ll start at approximately 3:30PM PT) and aim to last for about an hour or so. We’re going to use Restream to hit both YouTube and Twitch at the same time!

Embedded livestream coming soon

You can see our archived streams all in  this one handy Livestream playlist over on the official UploadVR YouTube channel (which you should totally subscribe to by the way). We’re also rebooting our Twitch channel too.

Let us know which games you want us to livestream next and if you want to see more Gunheart in the future. Comment with any feedback down below!

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The post Gunheart Livestream: Fast-Paced Co-Op VR Shooter appeared first on UploadVR.