Camp Marshmallow Review: A Dark And Twisted Must-Play For Oculus Quest

Camp Marshmallow on SideQuest is a dark, twisted VR experience about life, death, and s’mores created by solo developer Chris Pavia that’s available for free on Oculus Quest. You can finish the whole thing in just about 10-minutes and it’s a must-play for fans of dark humor and introspective stories.

From the Camp Marshmallow SideQuest page:

“Four young Scouts and their Scoutmaster venture into the forest to sing campfire songs and assert their dominance over nature. A chill breeze pushes through the branches, carrying hushed whispers about the curious newcomers. The fire sizzles and pops as shadows dance across the trees. With sticks in hand and visions of gooey marshmallows in their eyes, the Scouts look to their leader to provide them with the forest’s bounty.”

NOTE: Spoilers for Camp Marshmallow follow. It’s impossible to talk about this experience without discussing the details, so if you are at all intrigued thus far I urge you to stop reading and go download it for yourself!

You can watch me play through Camp Marshmallow in the video above (it’s only about 10-minutes long after all) during the latest episode of our VR Roulette random-selection live VR game show. After spinning the wheel this was the game I landed on for the episode’s finale and I couldn’t be happier with the results.

In Camp Marshmallow you take on the role of the Scoutmaster, presumably an adult that’s taking a group of kids out on a camping trip — similar to something you might see in the Boy Scouts. Everyone is sitting around the campfire, singing songs, and blissfully enjoying the ignorance of childhood.

It’s nostalgic and sweet, but something feels off.

“The fire is roaring and our sticks are sharp, Scoutmaster,” one child says. “The only thing missing are the marshmallows. Here, consider this the Spear of Destiny. It can transform an ordinary marshmallow into a beautiful memory.”

The child then hands you a stick as you walk to a clearing between some trees where a collection of anthropomorphic marshmallows stand waiting, smiling, and dancing. Apparently they didn’t get the memo about why they’re here tonight.

camp marshmallow smiling

What follows can only be described as graphic violence — at least, in so far as you consider impaling a screaming marshmallow to be violent. Instead of blood gooey, sugary fluffiness drips onto your hands and splatters out. Screams of pain, pleas for mercy. It’s got it all.

And yet despite it all, it’s hard not to laugh. The way the little creatures beg for their lives is tongue-in-cheek at first and quite silly, but after the second or third mutilation it starts to take a turn. The children get creepier, the song gets stranger, and the marshmallows become more lifelike. Instead of just shivering as you cower over them they’re running away and hiding.

I don’t want to spoil things too, too much here but suffice to say you should absolutely let the marshmallows speak, listen to the children, soak in the song, and pay close attention to the small details to really enjoy this brief, but insightful VR experience.

Camp Marshmallow Review Final Impressions

Camp Marshmallow feels like an early experiment from a rare talent with an eye for atmosphere. During my playthrough I couldn’t help but be reminded of the unnerving scenarios in Accounting from Squanch and Justin Roiland and I can’t wait to see what this experience’s creator, Chris Pavia, does next. If you enjoy dark and introspective stories that make you both laugh and feel uncomfortable at the exact same time, then Camp Marshmallow has you covered.


4 STARS

 


Camp Marshmallow is available now to sideload on Oculus Quest, for free, via SideQuest. When downloading the game, you can opt to donate a custom amount to the developer via itch.io to help support efforts. Fore details on how to sideload games using SideQuest, check out our guide here.

This review was conducted on an Oculus Quest, using v1.0.0 of the game. For more on how we arrived at this score, check out our review guidelines. Let us know what you think in the comments below!

Review Scale

Trover Saves The Universe Comes To Quest This Week

Holy f**k! Check out this news from the Upload VR Summer Showcase: Summer Edition – Trover Saves The Universe lands on Oculus Quest this week!

Justin Roiland and Squanch Games’ bizarre VR adventure game launched on PSVR and PC VR platforms almost a year ago to the day, but now finds its way onto Facebook’s standalone headset. Trover Saves The Universe touches down on Oculus Quest on June 18th. Check out the trailer below – even if you’ve already played the game you probably won’t want to miss it.

If you couldn’t already tell, Trover Saves The Universe is an eccentric VR experience from the mind behind Ricky & Morty. Played from a third-person perspective, you take Trover on an unpredictable adventure to battle the evil Glorkon.

Trover isn’t Roiland’s first journey into VR, though. He also collaborated with Crows, Crows, Crows on the brilliantly weird Accounting+ and Job Simulator developer Owlchemy Labs made its own Rick & Morty VR game a few years back. We were very fond of the game when it originally launched last year, giving it a 7/10.

“The bottom line is that if you liked games such as Lucky’s Tale and Astro Bot and also appreciate Justin Roiland’s style of vulgar fourth-wall-breaking comedy, then this is a match made in third-person action-adventure heaven,” we said at the time.

There’s plenty more news spinning out of the Upload VR Showcase: Summer Edition today. Make sure to watch the show in full; there’s a little something for everyone. Will you be picking up Trover Saves The Universe on Quest? Let us know in the comments below!

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Trover Saves The Universe Receives Free DLC, Available Now

Trover Saves The Universe by Justin Roiland, the co-creator of Rick and Morty, received an update with DLC called Trover’s Important Cosmic Jobs.

According to the Steam description, this new content “takes you into the boss’s offices where you’ll find other intergalactic employees who all need help keeping their jobs and staying alive (oof, unemployment is tough but murder?! What kind of place are they running?!)“.

The game released back in May, and we rather enjoyed it. David said that it does have some repetitive gameplay elements, but if you’re a fan of Roilland’s vulgar comedic style then you’ll probably enjoy it anyway. Ultimately, despite the flaws, it was one of the funniest games David has ever played. The trailer announcing the DLC release is amusing in and off itself, and maintains the meta, fourth-wall-breaking style of jokes that Roiland and the base game are known for.

In even more good news, the DLC is entirely free and available to download now for PC VR and PSVR. We actually got to interview Roiland back at E3 shortly after the game’s release. The whole thing was very impromptu and we were standing right beside a garbage elevator, but it’s definitely worth checking out if you’re a fan of him or his work.

Will you be checking out the new Trover DLC? Were you a fan of the base game? Let us know in the comments.

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‘Trover Saves the Universe’ to Get Free ‘Cosmic Jobs’ DLC in October

Rick and Morty co-creator Justin Roiland loves VR, and his latest VR game, Trover Saves the Universe (2019), is getting its first DLC drop next month.

Called ‘Trover’s Important Cosmic Jobs’, the free DLC is headed to all supported platforms on October 8th. Trover Saves the Universe supports both PC and PS4 console as well as PSVR, HTC Vive, Oculus Rift, and Valve Index.

According Trover—the weird eye-baby monster protagonist that help you along your way to find your stolen dogs—you’re going on a trip to where he actually works, Important Cosmic Jobs (ICJ).

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There’s little else to go on for now, as Squanch Games says more information will arrive closer to the DLC’s launch, although the studio did release a PAX West trailer showing an extremely brief clip at the end.

Funnily enough, as soon as Trover’s introduction to the DLC starts, the reel runs out of tape, and you’re left wondering just what awaits.

The post ‘Trover Saves the Universe’ to Get Free ‘Cosmic Jobs’ DLC in October appeared first on Road to VR.

PSVR’s Weirdest Game ‘Accounting+’ Now Available on Vive & Rift with New Levels

Squanch Games, the studio founded by Rick and Morty creator Justin Roiland, and Crows Crows Crows today released Accounting+ (2017) on HTC Vive and Oculus Rift. Launched first on PSVR back in late 2017, the game also got a big content update that brings new levels to all supported platforms.

Update (October 18th, 2018): Accounting+ is now live on Steam (Vive, Rift). Fair warning from the creators: “Accounting+ includes: Sexual Themes, Violence, Crude Humor, Strong Language, Blood, and Drug References!!”

The studios also put out a five-minute ‘Director’s Cut’ launch day announcement which lets you see the gritty aftermath of the death of Harold Jenkins, the wacky little guy who made an appearance in the pre-order announcement – linked above and in the article below.

Original Article (September 21st, 2018): In short, Accounting+ is madness incarnate, featuring the sort of offbeat characters you’d expect to leak out of the Justin Roiland’s addled brain. You’re coerced into joining a gang, stabbing and killing “The King of VR”, and many other wacky experiences that make you question what you’re doing with your life.

First released as a free game on HTC Vive and Oculus Rift, dubbed simply Accounting (2016), the deliciously bizarre fever dream of a game expanded with a few news levels, launching as Accounting+ exclusively on PSVR.

Accounting+ includes a host of crazy characters voiced by Justin Roiland, Reggie Watts, Rich Fulcher (The Mighty Boosh), Cassie Steele (Degrassi: The Next Generation), and Arin Hanson (Game Grumps) to name a few.

After a recent content update, which included a new water park level, the developers said Accounting+ has grown to double the size of the original Accounting. The next update is said to triple the size of the game, with at least a space level coming in tow.

The studios haven’t released word on exactly when Accounting+ will launch, although they say “very soon” (see update). In the meantime, you can follow along by adding it your Steam wishlist.

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Video: Check Out Gameplay From Trover Saves The Universe

Video: Check Out Gameplay From Trover Saves The Universe

You can get a pretty good sense of what Trover Saves The Universe is like in new gameplay footage released from PAX.

The title is coming in 2019 from Squanch Games to both PlayStation VR and PSVR, so you play the game both inside and outside VR. While we got hands-on time with the game at E3 a few months ago, new videos from PAX show some of the characters, environments and, of course, some of Justin Roiland’s humor that will be infused throughout. This includes a villain that takes two cute puppies and puts them into his eyeholes.

The gameplay also shows how Squanch is experimenting with humor and narrative just as they are with a number of small Daydream VR games. The footage for Trover walks through the tutorial and basic movement mechanics, including showing how you come to control Trover by connecting to one of the “power babies” from his eyeholes.

“We gotta wrap this up, come on, we got — there’s other people waiting to play this–this demo,” Trover says near the end of the footage above.

In typical Squanch fashion the PAX trailer and gameplay videos are accompanied by a comic that calls the game a “P.O.S.”

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New ‘Trover Saves the Universe’ Gameplay Video Reveals the Weird & Wild World of Trover

Upcoming action-platformer Trover Saves the Universe is the bizarre and hilarious brain child of Rick and Morty co-creator Justin Roiland. Now you can see for yourself what PS4 and PSVR users will experience in a new demo presented at PAX West this past weekend.

Update (11:15 AM ET): Squanch Games just uploaded a new trailer/gameplay video. Check it out below.

Original Article (September 4th, 2018): Having played a more gameplay-focused demo during E3, it appears Trover Saves the Universe is shaping up to be another fourth wall-breaking romp from Squanch Games, a studio founded by Roiland that also produced Accounting (2017), PSVR exclusive Accounting+ (2017), and the Daydream exclusive Dr. Splorch Presentes: Space Heroes (2018).

Here’s how Squanch describes Trover Saves the Universe:

Wonderful. 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. Does that make any sense? You’ve partnered with Trover, a little purple eye hole monster to save them. Find power babies and plug them into his eye holes so that he can absorb their power, track down Glorkon, and save your dogs (and the Universe).

Trover Saves the Universe is slated to release exclusively on PS4 and PSVR (DualShock 4 only) at some point in early 2019.

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Justin Roiland’s ‘Dr. Splorchy’ to Release on Daydream Next Week, Launch Trailer Here

Dr. Splorchy Presents: SPACE HEROES is an upcoming Google Daydream title from Squanch Games, a studio founded by Rick and Morty creator Justin Roiland. Squanch today announced that the patently Roiland-esque game is launching July 23rd.

I went hands-on with Dr. Splorchy at this year’s GDC in March, and while I walked out not quite understanding if the game was primarily a shooter or action-adventure title, whatever it is I knew Dr. Splorchy was set to offer the same ad lib madness of Squanch’s other off-the-wall VR games such as Accounting+ (2018) and the upcoming PSVR platformer Trover Saves the Universe.

Image courtesy Squanch Games

Here’s Squanch’s description of the game (apparently the titular Dr. Splorchy types in all caps):

YOU AND YOUR BROTHER ARE IMPORTANT SPACE HEROES. WITH THE HELP OF ME, DR. SPLORCHY, YOU’VE MADE YOUR WAY INTO THE HEART OF THE EVIL SPACE LORD SHIP WHERE YOU MUST DEACTIVATE HIS WEAPON OF MASS DESTRUCTION.

Demos of Dr. Splorchy Presents: SPACE HEROES are currently available at the San Diego Comic-Con doing an informal ‘pop-up playtest’ outside of the venue this weekend. Squanch employees walking around with Lenovo Mirage Solo headsets will be tossing unwitting con-goers into what we suppose is a special demo build of the game.

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E3 2018: Justin Roiland’s Trover Saves The Universe Answers The Question “What If Your Eye Sockets Had Little Faces?”

E3 2018: Justin Roiland’s Trover Saves The Universe Answers The Question “What If Your Eye Sockets Had Little Faces?”

If you own a virtual reality headset and play games, chances are you’ve experienced something Rick and Morty creator Justin Roiland has had a hand – or at least a voice — in. From Accounting to Hover Junkers, The Lab to Rick and Morty: Virtual Rick-ality, Roiland is prolific in the VR scene, and even started his own VR-focused company: Squanch Games (formerly Squanchtendo but they changed the name after a small upstart with a similar moniker decided to get into video game development). Squanch’s next game — Trover Saves the Universe (TSTU) — was recently revealed at E3, where I had a chance to sit down with the Squanch team and get some hands-on and eyes-within-eyes time with TSTU.

The backstory to Trover Saves the Universe is one we can all relate to, whether we have kids or pets or neither. The power-hungry Glorkon has stolen your precious pups, scooping them up and placing them into his eye sockets so he can use their lifeforce in an attempt to take over the universe. You have to team up with Trover, a purple cosmic being with two little faces for eyes (sticking things in your eye holes is important in this universe, you see), to thwart Glorkon and get your doggos back safe and sound. Video games! Amirite?

You are “the man in the chair.” Literally a man who also just happens to be in a chair. I mean, what’s to get, right? It’s pretty much spelled out for you. Because of your chair-boundedness, you don’t walk around the colorful landscape yourself. Rather, you control Trover. While TSTU takes place in a first-person perspective from your chair, it plays very much like a third-person platformer as you move your purple buddy around the world and warp to him when he gets to certain defined points.

While primarily a 3D platformer, there are also myriad puzzles to solve in TSTU, both action-oriented and brain teasers. You might have to send Trover through a pack of ghastly gremlins, or solve a Witness-style tile puzzle. One such puzzle in the demo was a series of three grid sequences in which I had to light all of the corresponding squares to open a door. Trover isn’t all that patient during the puzzle parts though, and encouraged me to skip the last of the progressive sequences by screaming something along the lines of “Fuck it, let’s just bust through this thing!” while tearing the door off its hinges. Whatever works, right?

Since Roiland is involved, you can expect a lot of over-the-top humor driven by peculiar, rambling creatures who prattle on through a series of non-sequitors seemingly uninterested in your own plight to find your dogs. One character I met in my demo was the aptly named Mr. Pop-up, an annoying little orange guy with a band-aid over where his winkle would be if he follows the standards of human anatomy. But who knows, there might be a little face with two eyes for eyes down there. He continually popped-up and followed my gaze in VR, regaling me with tales of how his favorite spot on the hill was taken by Michael, who built a house on what was his favorite scenic viewpoint. As Mr. Pop-up puts it, “Michael is a real asshole,” and from the story I heard, I tend to agree. While I didn’t get to go through the full sequence of helping Mr. Pop-up deal with Michael, this seemed like one of the side quests you’re likely to encounter in TSTU.

In addition to his constant badgering, Mr. Pop-up also bestowed upon me the ability to rise up and down in my chair, allowing for a better perch for leading Trover around the map. In addition to your own powers, you’ll find “power babies” along the way that Trover can shove into his eye holes to gain their special abilities. Again with the eyes and things in eyes and things with eyes in eyes. It’s a very ocular-centric spot in the universe, but who am I to judge?

While we only got to see a very limited gameplay demo, it’s safe to say the game will entertain you if you’re a fan of Roiland’s comedic style. Trover Saves the Universe is coming to PSVR sometime in 2019, and you can play on the PS4 outside of VR, as well.

What do you think about Trover Saves the Universe and/or other game Justin Roiland has appeared in? Let us know down in the comments below!

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