Demeo, Paper Birds & Madrid Noir all win big at 2021 VR Awards

VR Awards 2021

Last night The Academy of International Extended Reality (AIXR) held its fifth annual VR Awards, with the 2021 event taking place virtually inside AltspaceVR for the first time. The VR spectacle – which you could also watch via Youtube and Twitch – celebrated virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR) technology across 12 categories, with the winners including tabletop multiplayer Demeo and interactive film Paper Birds.

Demeo

Ahead of the prestigious event, the VR Awards 2021 saw over 128 international nominations, 98 finalists judged by XR experts and almost 10,000 public votes cast in the VR Social Influencer of the Year, and VR Game of the Year categories. Resolution Games took home the coveted VR Game of the Year for Demeo, which is no surprise considering VRFocus’ review found the title excelled as a co-op, turn-based strategy experience.

VR Film of the Year went to 3DAR’s enchanting Paper Birds and VR Experience of the Year was awarded to Madrid Noir by ATLAS V & NO GHOST, two excellent VR titles. One of the big surprises of the night came from the VR Hardware of the Year, with HP Reverb G2 Omnicept Edition enterprise headset taking home the honours.

“Last night, we were delighted to have been able to celebrate the year’s achievements within the Metaverse once more and through our completely bespoke 5th-anniversary world-hop experience  – the amazing team here have created a one-of-a-kind virtual journey through the history of the VR Awards and the founders, an event like this is truly a world-first for an awards ceremony,” said Daniel Colaianni, AIXR CEO in a statement. “Our guests were transported into 5 distinctly designed worlds that represent the 5 years that the VR Awards have been recognising VR excellence all across the globe.”

Paper Birds

VR Awards 2021 Winners

  • VR Film of the Year – 3DAR – Paper Birds
  • VR Social Influencer – ThrillSeeker
  • VR Hardware of the Year – HP – HP Reverb G2 Omnicept Edition
  • VR Game of the Year – Resolution Games – Demeo
  • VR Experience of the Year – ATLAS V & NO GHOST – Madrid Noir
  • VR Marketing of the Year – Geometry Ogilvy Japan – Shibuya Virtual Halloween
  • Rising VR Company of the Year: triple A code
  • Innovative VR Company of the Year – Virtualware
  • VR Education and Training of the Year – NORCAT – Vale VR
  • VR Healthcare of the Year – Osso VR – Osso VR – Cinematic VR Surgical Training Platform
  • Out-of-home VR Entertainment of the Year – Figment Productions Ltd.- Current, Rising
  • VR Social Impact Award – Accenture – AVEnueS – Race Equity in Child Welfare 
  • VR Enterprise Solution of the Year – Masters of Pie – Hyperbat – World’s First VR Design Review over 5G
  • VR Lifetime Achievement Award by Accenture – Tom Furness

And that’s it for another year, did you watch and enjoy the show? For all the latest XR news, keep reading VRFocus.

Adorable VR Movie Madrid Noir Hits Quest This Week

There’s a new Oculus Quest movie in store for later this week – Madrid Noir hits platform very soon.

The movie, developed by No Ghost and Produced by Atlas V, arrives on the headset on July 1 and is now listed in the Coming Soon section of the Quest store. That’s a busy day for Quest; Tarzan VR and Chess Club also arrive that day. Madrid Noir, however, is a little different. Check out the trailer below.

In this 45 minute experience, you follow a young woman, Lola, as she searches for her missing uncle, who has been declared dead. You’ll dive deep into Lola’s memories and uncover an alarming mystery.

As the name suggests, the film takes a lot of inspiration from classic noir movies, set against a Madrid backdrop. It was first shown at the Tribeca Film Festival earlier this month but the project actually dates back to a few years ago when we saw a kind of prototype for the full experience called Madrid Noir: Prologue.

Will you be checking out Madrid Noir later this week? Let us know in the comments below!

Museum of Other Realities XR3 Exhibition: A Clear Vision For VR Film Festivals

This week, the Museum of Other Realities launched its XR3 exhibition — a joint project between Cannes XR, the NewImages Festival and the Tribeca Film Festival. Not only does the exhibition feature some fantastic immersive VR content, but it presents it in a way that feels fresh, appropriate and the right direction for VR film festivals.

With more and more immersive content appearing in film festival lineups over the last couple of years, there have a few attempts to create a cohesive immersive festival experience. However, it feels like the Museum of Other Realities (MOR) has properly cracked the code with its XR3 exhibition this year. It’s a joint exhibition staged by the virtual museum and three organizations — Cannes XR, NewImages and Tribeca — and it results in something that feels like a true vision and creative blueprint for the future of immersive festivals.

XR3 exhibition museum of other realities

The focus of XR3 is allowing discovery of immersive festival content in a seamless and accessible way — a task in which it overwhelmingly succeeds. It’s the best structure and presentation of any immersive VR festival content I’ve seen to date.

Each immersive experience comes in its own separate app that runs independently from the MOR app on your PC. In the past, redeeming codes, downloading individual experiences and switching apps with no cohesive hub could make some immersive festivals feel a bit disjointed. MOR’s XR3 exhibit circumvents these problems by installing an entire festival selection as DLC, and then allowing you to discover them in a festival hub within the museum.

Everything is handled by MOR, including switching between experiences and apps, without the need for you to remove your headset. The idea of a festival world or hub has been done before, but XR3 feels like the best version to date and should be the standard going forward.

Each festival is given it’s own wing in the museum, pictured above, with portals on either wall that lead to introductory rooms for each experience. Each room is customized by the creators to thematically fit with their experience, and features a glowing blue shaft of light in the center, pictured below. When you touch the light, MOR will load up the experience’s app and move you into the standalone experience, without you having to do anything. Likewise, once it’s over, you’re sent back to the museum, right where you left off.

It’s a elegant solution, executed perfectly. More importantly, it brings the immersive festival experience closer to how we experience art in real life, while still also preserving the uniqueness of VR as a platform.

XR3 Festival Access, Pricing and Dates

In terms of pricing, festival passes are available to purchase for $15 each on Steam as DLC content for the Museums of Other Realities app. Without the DLC pack installed, you can still walk around the festival area, but any attempt to start the content will be met with a prompt to buy and/or download the DLC festival pass content first. If you’re downloading all 3 festival selections, it comes in at a hefty 60GB add-on to the regular museum app, so leave time for downloading.

Only the NewImages and Tribeca selections are available at the moment. They’ll be around until June 20, after which XR3 will shut down briefly. On July 6, it reopens with access to the Cannes XR portion of the exhibit until July 17. To make the festival more accessible and encourage participation, the base Museum of Other Realities app is available for free until July 20 (usually priced at $20). If you redeem it now, you’ll be able to keep the app and retain access to the museum after XR3 is over as well.

XR3 Museum of other realities

XR3 Tribecca and NewImages Impressions

We had a chance to check out some of XR3 a few days early. I haven’t been able to try everything due to time constraints, but what I did try was quite compelling. More than ever, experiences seem to be honing in on elements that are unique and elevated by the VR medium. Many also seem to be finding the right balance between interactive elements and passive viewing — an area I’ve previously found to be a precarious tightrope that some fail to walk.

Madrid Noir

A personal highlight was Madrid Noir, available as part of Tribeca, which was already on my radar before the festival. This latest immersive experience from Atlas V (the same group behind the Colin Farrell-narrated Gloomy Eyes) is a delight. It follows a young girl Lola, living in Madrid in the early 20th century, as she investigates the strange comings and goings of her uncle as he travels across the city at night.

madrid noir xr3

Directed by James A. Castillo, Madrid Noir truly stuns from a composition and visual perspective. Some sections are staged and presented like theater — encouraging passive viewing — while others are framed and set up in a manner closer to a traditional video game, often requiring you to interact with the environment as the story plays out around you. The animation and artwork is superb and aesthetically delectable, while the story keeps things simple but nonetheless intriguing. Overall, it does feel a little on the long side at around 45 minutes, but there’s an intermission about two thirds of the way through, so you could break it up into two sessions if need be.

My experience was marred by quite a few consistent visual bugs — some objects would only render in one eye from certain angles, and moving my head often messed with a scene’s lighting effects. I can’t say whether the glitches were unique to my experience or whether they’re a common occurrence.

Despite this, it remained an enjoyable ride and is a fantastic experience overall.

Jailbirds

Jailbirds VR

Jailbirds is another fascinating experience on offer, available as part of both the NewImages and Tribeca selection. Directed by Thomas Villepoux, it’s a short immersive film, roughly 5 minutes, with very little interactivity. Following two cellmates who are paid a visit by the prison’s warden, Jailbirds features a breathtaking and creepy aesthetic that looks almost like it was all drawn with a lead pencil. The experience is short, intimate and quite unsettling at times — highly recommended.

Marco and Polo Go Round

Marco and Polo Go Around

Another fantastic experience from the NewImages selection is Marco and Polo Go Round, directed by Benjamin Steiger Levine. It follows a frustrated couple through a 10-15 minute conversation navigating their complicated relationship. As time goes on, things start getting weird — the conversation continues but the gravity of objects in the room begins to invert. Things go flying up to the roof in what feels like a metaphor for the chaos of the still-continuing conversation.

This creative imagery and storytelling feels so appropriate to witness in VR, taking proper advantage of the different ways we can experience narrative in the medium. There’s no interactivity here either, but it’s not to the experience’s detriment — the dialogue is well-written and, along with the increasingly wacky environmental antics, it keeps your interest throughout. To cap it all off, it uses a beautiful, soft watercolor-like aesthetic that fits the melancholic mood perfectly.

If you’ve got time, give Marco and Polo Go Round a look.


Will you be checking out the XR3 exhibition at the Museum of Other Realities? Let us know what your favorite experiences are in the comments below.

Tribeca Film Fest VR Short ‘Madrid Noir’ Coming to Oculus Quest Summer 2021

Madrid Noir

There are some wonderful virtual reality (VR) animations available, providing short interactive experiences for all ages. With the Tribeca Film Festival returning in June, one project set to premiere is interactive VR mystery Madrid Noir, with creators No Ghost and Atlas V publically launching the short during the summer for Oculus Quest owners.

Madrid Noir

The 45-minute animated caper takes place across two acts, where a young woman called Lola returns to Madrid in the 1930s, to the apartment of her estranged uncle who was recently declared dead. Presented in a theatre production style, Madrid Noir sees her unexpectedly thrown back into the past to relive a summer she spent with him as a child, ultimately leading her to uncover a long-buried secret.

Madrid Noir is a VR spinoff of a 2018 title created by the same director, James Castillo. “I went into Madrid Noir with the idea to create a film that wasn’t just for kids or VR fans, and engaging enough for grown-ups,” Castillo told Variety. “Very often, VR content works as exhibitions or as realistic documentaries, or even games, and while these are all great, I was more interested in making a narrative-driven film that belongs to the VR space, but is accessible and taps into different aspects, since I’m a fan of storytelling.”

Like other VR shorts of this type, Madrid Noir’s immersive elements will be narrative-led. So rather than having gameplay moments like puzzles to solve, you’ll simply get light interactions that’ll involve you in, and move the story along at a set pace.

Madrid Noir

Being in the hands of Atlas V, Madrid Noir will be joining an illustrious group of VR films. The French company has helped create the Rosario Dawson narrated Battlescar, the Colin Farrell narrated Gloomy Eyes, and the cosmic Spheres.

Created using Unreal Engine, Madrid Noir will be released for the Oculus Quest platform in summer 2021. For further updates on the VR animation as well as the other immersive experiences coming to Tribeca, keep reading VRFocus.

Atlas V’s Next VR Movie Is Madrid Noir, Coming Soon to Quest

Atlas V and No Ghost announced that their latest immersive VR movie, Madrid Noir, is coming soon to Oculus Quest.

Madrid Noir is “staged as an awe inspiring theatre production” in VR and is presented in two acts, totaling roughly 45 minutes. It’s set at night in the beautiful city of Madrid, showing a version of the city that has now been “lost to time.”

Directed by James A. Castillo, Madrid Noir will star Godeliv Van Den Brandt as Lola Petit and Fernando Guillén Cuervo as Manolo Monreal. The film has been selected as part of multiple film festivals, including the 2021 Tribecca Film Festival.

You can check out a short teaser trailer below.

If the art style feels familiar, that’s probably because Atlas V previously worked on Gloomy Eyes, one of my personal favorite immersive movie experiences available on Quest.

Here’s a more detailed synopsis of what to expect from Madrid Noir:

After her estranged uncle is declared dead, a disenchanted young woman arrives in Madrid to empty the apartment that he left behind. Lola is soon compelled to dig into her memories, where she’ll pick up her uncle’s shadowy trail and attempt to piece together the puzzles of the past. 

The Quest is now home to a number of fantastic immersive movies and experiences that go beyond gaming. If you want to check out the Atlas V back catalog before Madrid Noir, try out the excellent Battlescar and Gloomy Eyes. Otherwise, Paper Birds is another great option – we’re still waiting for part two.

You can check out our list of the best non-gaming immersive experiences for Quest here.

Madrid Noir releases Summer 2021 for both the original Quest and Quest 2.