The Biggest Oculus Rift, HTC Vive And Windows Releases Of The Week 01/14/17

The Biggest Oculus Rift, HTC Vive And Windows Releases Of The Week 01/14/17

We’re still really waiting for 2018 to kick into gear; nearly three weeks in and there’s still very, very little to talk about on the releases front. But there are a handful of interesting new releases on Steam this week if you’re desperate for something new.

If you missed last week’s releases, they’re right here. And don’t forget that UploadVR has a Steam community group, complete with a curated list of recommendations so that you don’t have to waste any money finding out what’s good in the world of VR. We also have a top list of the absolute best Oculus Rift and HTC Vive games at the corresponding links.

BlackShield: Upora Story, from V-Sensory
Price: $29.99 (Rift, Vive, Windows)

This is another one of those Chinese-developed VR games that’s appeared from seemingly nowhere but boasts impressive visuals. It’s a dual-wielding shooter in which you shoot down scores of enemies. We haven’t gone hands-on with it yet, though we’re hearing reports that it’s pretty short, especially for that hefty price tag.

Stunt Corgi VR, from Studio Roqovan
Price: $19.99 (Vive)

The studio that brought you World War Toons is back with something… slightly stranger. Stunt Corgi VR, as the name suggests, is all about getting your cutesy companion to pull off impressive tricks by piling up props in your backyard.

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Oculus Fixes a Few Serious Annoyances With Its Latest Update to Rift Core 2.0 Beta

Already in the wild for over a month now, Rift Core 2.0 Beta has seen its first substantial update since launch. The January update addresses performance and general ease-of-use of Home and Dash, but more importantly provides solutions to some rather niggling issues.

Considered a major overhaul to the platform’s underlying user experience, Rift Core 2.0 was only available through the Public Test Channel since launch last month. Now, Oculus says Rift users on the default branch will have automatic access to Core 2.0 beta without having to opt into the more incremental Public Test Channel updates. While classic Oculus Home is still the default for non-test-branchers, you can now toggle Rift Core 2.0 beta on an off in the Settings menu.

image courtesy Oculus

Oculus says a number of rendering, stability, and performance fixes have come to Home and Dash as a result of the update. Dash is the platform’s in-app menu system which also allows you to use desktop PC applications and switch apps while still interacting in VR apps. There’s also some updates to how Dash works when you’re running apps purchased through Steam or other app marketplaces—no doubt polishing Valve’s recent update to SteamVR that allows Rift users to use Dash in Steam-bought games.

Now, all of this is well and good, but what about the annoying bits?

One niggling issue that the update addresses is the ability to “lock” changes in your Home, so you can inhabit the space without accidentally moving that perfectly placed object. The Lock option can now be found in the Settings panel in the Home menu.

Image courtesy Oculus

Speaking of niggling issues, this is the granddaddy of them all. Ever since the launch of Rift in March 2016, users have been pleading for an official way to easily install and manage their Oculus apps outside the confines of the default C: drive location. With the January update, Oculus is now letting you install VR apps across more than one hard drive or Windows folder, meaning you’ll finally be able to shunt your apps to that extra SSD. Pure joy.

Smaller, less-niggling niggles: when you add games and experiences to you Wishlist, you’ll get notified when they go on sale, making it easier to wait on that game that may need a few months after launch to finally shape up, both content and price-wise. You’ll also be able to see playtime hours and achievements for any game in your Library.

If you’re got a great idea, or found a bug worth squashing, Oculus suggests joining UserVoice forum for all feature requests.

The post Oculus Fixes a Few Serious Annoyances With Its Latest Update to Rift Core 2.0 Beta appeared first on Road to VR.

Oculus Home 2.0 Is Getting A Music System

Oculus Home 2.0 Is Getting A Music System

Oculus Home 2.0, which arrived in beta for late last year, has gone down well with Rift fans, allowing them to customize their virtual spaces with minigames, achievements and decorations. Soon, users will be able to personalize their music, too.

Right now everyone using Home has the same relaxed music track. Soon, however, Oculus will give you the chance to change the music, with over 50 minutes of original audio on the way. Music in genres like electronic, orchestral, ambient, downtempo and atmospheric rock have been composed by Michael Bross. It doesn’t sound like you’ll be able to select your own music natively to play all the time but, then again, that’s only a Spotify click away thanks to Oculus Dash.

You can enjoy one of the tracks below, as exciting as that sounds.

No word yet on when Home and Dash’s full, non-beta release will take place but the system is already shaping up pretty nicely.

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The Biggest Gear VR Releases Of The Week 12/10/17

The Biggest Gear VR Releases Of The Week 12/10/17

In an interesting twist of fate, the biggest Gear VR titles this week just so happen to actually be ports of Google Daydream titles. The river of content flows both ways for mobile VR as it appears!

We also have a top list of the absolute best Gear VR games to tide you over.

Gunjack 2: End of Shift, from CCP Games

Price: $7.99

Wave shooters can only do so much, especially on a mobile VR headset. Without positional tracking in Gunjack 2 you’re relegated to rotating your head as if your face were a turret as you shoot down bad guys in space with big guns and powerful bullets. It’s quite pretty, but also very shallow.

Here’s our full review of the original Daydream version.

Wonderglade, from Resolution Games

Price: Free

Exploring a carnival was always one of my favorite things to do as a kid and now anyone can do it from anywhere in the world by playing Wonderglade from Resolution Games, the same studio behind fishing game Bait! It’s a collection of clever, fun mini-games that have a lot of replay value.

Show It 2 Me, from Titmouse

Price: Free

Show It 2 Me is one of those weird, off-the-wall VR experiences that kind of defy words. How do you describe something that the creators themselves refer to as “weird cartoon shit” in the first place? Just watch this trailer then go download it and relish in the sheer absurdity of it all.

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The Biggest Oculus Rift, HTC Vive and Windows Releases Of The Week 12/10/17

The Biggest Oculus Rift, HTC Vive and Windows Releases Of The Week 12/10/17

It may be one of the last weeks of the year but it’s a huge one for VR releases. That is at least if own an HTC Vive. Practically all of this week’s big releases are Vive-only save for a few others. Take a look; you won’t want to miss what’s out this week.

And don’t forget that UploadVR has a Steam community group, complete with a curated list of recommendations so that you don’t have to waste any money finding out what’s good in the world of VR. We also have a top list of the absolute best Oculus Rift and HTC Vive games at the corresponding links.

Fallout 4 VR, from Bethesda
Price: $59.99 (Vive)

Here it is; the entirety of Bethesda’s enormous 2015 RPG has finally made its way into VR. Make your way across the wasteland, taking down bandits and freakish mutants with your trusty companion, Dogmeat, at your side. Motion controls enable realistic aiming and transform the game’s UI. This is one of VR’s biggest games, but it’s not without its issues.

Here’s our full review.

L.A. Noire: The VR Case Files, from Rockstar Games
Price: $29.99 (Vive)

Another high-profile port, seven cases from the original L.A. Noire have been brought into VR with full motion control support. Take on the role of Detective Cole Phelps and interview suspects, scanning their realistic facial expressions for clues, and then take part in crime-scene studies and action sequences. The jury’s still out on this one but it looks promising.

Watch our 90-minute long livestream for more details.

Operation Apex, from Curiscope
Price: $19.99 (Vive)

This is a new Vive Studios release that does its part to prove how education can work inside VR. Explore life under the ocean as you investigate upsets to the food chain. Lure and scan fish to learn more about them and get lost in a highly-detailed environment. Just discount this one just because of bigger releases.

Here’s what we thought.

YouTube VR, from Google
Price: Free (Vive)

YouTube finally comes to your HTC Vive. Access the entirety of the video sharing platform’s catalog and immerse yourself in a wide range of 360 degree videos too. This is an Early Access version right now, with further optimizations planned for 2018.

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Oculus Plans to Let You Bring Your ‘Medium’ Sculptures Into Home

According to a recent entry on the official Oculus blog, the team has plans to allow sculptures from Oculus Medium (2016) to be placed into Home spaces. Customisation is already the central feature of the new Home, which makes up a key component of Rift Core 2.0, the underlying platform for Rift and Touch currently in beta.

“We’ll be adding tons of new content throughout the year, including new items and decorations built by the community,” writes Nate Mitchell, Head of Rift at Oculus. “We’ll also make it easy to bring your own content, like Medium sculptures, into Home in 2018.”

This brief mention of Medium in the first ‘Dev Diary’ for Rift Core 2.0 is about all we have to go on; it’s a logical step to allow user-created content in personal Home spaces. The team will continue to add decorative and interactive objects into the beta, and some games already provide physical trophies for displaying your achievements, in much the same way as SteamVR Home. Bringing Medium support could open the floodgates to much deeper personalisation, particularly if the sculpts can be scaled to any size, but that remains to be seen.

The post Oculus Plans to Let You Bring Your ‘Medium’ Sculptures Into Home appeared first on Road to VR.

The Biggest Oculus Rift, HTC Vive and Windows VR Releases Of The Week 12/03/17

The Biggest Oculus Rift, HTC Vive and Windows VR Releases Of The Week 12/03/17

It’s not a huge week for any of the three PC-based VR platforms, but there’s some interesting stuff to check out across all three platforms including that rarest of things, a new game on the Windows MR platform. Plus: Fallout 4 VR and LA Noire next week!

And don’t forget that UploadVR has a Steam community group, complete with a curated list of recommendations so that you don’t have to waste any money finding out what’s good in the world of VR. We also have a top list of the absolute best Oculus Rift and HTC Vive games at the corresponding links.

Justice League VR, from Warner Bros.
Price: $9.99 (Rift, Vive)

Released to promote the recent blockbuster, Justice League VR features a set of minigames that allow you to take control of various members of DC’s flagship superhero team. Drive the Batmobile as Batman, speed down the subway as The Flash or, uh, fight a big fish as Aquaman. Sadly this isn’t the VR experience to bring our comic book dreams to life; it’s forgettable at best and frustrating at worst.

Front Defense: Heroes, from Fantahorn Studios

Price: Free or $4.95 (Viveport, Steam, HTC Vive “official” support only)

Front Defense was a mostly bland stationary wave shooter, but Front Defense: Heroes is an intense cooperative multiplayer FPS in the same vein as Call of Duty: WWII. It doesn’t have smooth locomotion yet, but it nails the thrill of 1940s firefights pretty well already. It’s free if you bought Front Defense previously or only $4.99 as a launch promotion.

Here’s our review-in-progress for more on the game.

Star Wars: Droid Repair Bay, from ILMxLAB
Price: Free

Easily our favorite release of the week, Droid Repair Bay arrives just ahead of The Last Jedi and might be the best Star Wars VR experience yet. In it, you help fix cutesy little robots aboard a resistance ship. It’s only a short piece but it’s genuinely charming and memorable, especially as you play with the robots like pets. This is one that kids will love.

We liked it and thought it was adorable.

Notes on Blindness, from Nove Lab
Price: $2.99 (Rift)

Tying into a movie release from a few years back, Notes on Blindness is a pretty stunning VR experience that first debuted on Gear VR and now arrives on Rift. You step into the shoes of a blind man and learn just a little of what it might be like to discover the world around you when you have no sight. As far as VR experiences go, this is absolutely one you should be checking out.

Read more about it here.

Danger Goat, from nDreams
Price: $9.99 (Windows)

We’re mostly putting this here because, as far as we can tell, it’s the first game to release for Microsoft’s new Windows Mixed Reality headsets since launch all the way back in October. It’s hard to tell since the story has next to no sorting options at all. A port of a Daydream launch title, this puzzle game has you navigating a goat through a dangerous world, manipulating the scenery by tilting your controller to clear paths. It’s a little on the easy side but not without its charms.

Here’s the Daydream review.

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The Biggest Gear VR Releases Of The Week 12/03/17

The Biggest Gear VR Releases Of The Week 12/03/17

Some interesting new releases on Gear VR this week, including some tie-ins to this season’s biggest movies and a new Oculus Studios game.

We also have a top list of the absolute best Gear VR games to tide you over.

Fail Factory, from Armature
Price: $4.99

A new Oculus Studios game and the VR debut of Armature. Take a trip of the Fail Factory and take part in a bunch of mini-games which you will undoubtedly fail at several times. This looks like a fun little game, great for picking up and playing with low stress.

Star Wars: Droid Repair Bay, from ILMxLAB
Price: Free

Easily our favorite release of the week, Droid Repair Bay arrives just ahead of The Last Jedi and might be the best Star Wars VR experience yet. In it, you help fix cutesy little robots aboard a resistance ship. It’s only a short piece but it’s genuinely charming and memorable, especially as you play with the robots like pets. This is one that kids will love.

We thought it was adorable and liked it!

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5 Amazing Things To Do Inside The New Oculus Home

5 Amazing Things To Do Inside The New Oculus Home

Oculus has an early Christmas present for all Rift users; the company’s huge 2.0 update arrived in beta this week and it brings some major new features with it. If you opt into the beta (or wait for a stable release likely next year), you’ll be able to customize your virtual home space like never before and utilize your PC with more efficiency in VR.

There’s a lot of fun to be had with the new Oculus Home now but, if you’re feeling a bit overwhelmed by it all, here are the five best things you can do inside your new space.

Design Your Space And Bend Reality

One of 2.0’s major features is the ability to finally decorate your home space how you want it. While everyone gets the same size and shape of area to play with, you can switch out the types of walls, ceilings and even the scenery around you. Once you’ve decided on all of that, there’s a huge amount of props, furniture, plants and other decorations to style your space with. Better yet, new decorations will arrive based on your purchases as time goes on, so your catalog will be ever-expanding.

What’s great about the new feature, though, is that you don’t have to obey the laws of our world when decorating, because why should you? Want to fit a chair to the ceiling? Be my guest. Make a block sculpture in mid-air? Go for it. It’s a liberating inclusion, but we want Oculus to take the personalization further; wouldn’t it be great if we could import Blocks, Medium, and Tilt Brush creations at some point?

…And Do It Whilst Listening To Spotify

Nothing complements your spring cleaning more than a good Spotify playlist. While you could have had this in VR before, you’d have to jump out of the Rift to open it up and switch between songs. With 2.0’s other big addition, Dash, that’s no longer an issue. Dash allows you to summon a virtual desktop within Home and Oculus apps (once they’ve been patched to support it). Hanging out in your own virtual space feels much more relaxing when you can put a little acoustic music on in the background.

And it’s not just Spotify; your entire desktop is available to you with Dash, so you can surf the web, watch videos, and more. Again, though, we can see plenty of room for expansion. How about virtual speakers that emit positional audio when you’re playing music, or TVs that automatically play the YouTube trailers you select? This is just the beginning for Home, so we can’t wait to see if Oculus implements some of these ideas.

Display Your Achievements For All To See

When the Xbox 360 first released in 2005 it introduced an achievement system that allowed players to add to a pool of points tied to their Xbox account. PlayStation later aped the system with trophies, and now virtually every gaming platform has its own alternative, including Oculus. But, so far, Oculus achievements have been largely inconsequential, buried away in user profiles most of us don’t often check. That changes with 2.0.

One of my personal favorite additions to this update is the ability to display the achievements you’re most proud of in VR. They appear as plaques on your wall that others will see when they visit your space. Scored Superhot’s Speedrun prize? Tell the world by showing it loud and proud. The achievement game may have grown stale over the last few years, but meaningful additions such as this could breathe new life into it.

Turn Your Games Library Into A Retro Collection

Another awesome little touch inside the new Home is to display your game library as a physical collection. You can have them as boxes stacked up on your shelf but, even better, you can also summon them as retro game cartridges that you plug into an old console, then grab a virtual Rift to boot up. It feels like VR has come full circle; 25 years ago we were plugging in these lofty boxes and dreaming of VR, and now we’re doing it all again inside of VR. Inception, much?

Set Up A Shooting Gallery

Oculus has also taken some of the staples of VR mechanics and implemented them as adorable minigames inside Home. The laser pistol from First Contact, for example, is available along with virtual targets for you to set up your own shooting range. Or you can pick out a bow and arrow to practice your archery before a game of Vanishing Realms.

Those aren’t the only minigames you’ll find; you can also grab a golf club and fine-tune your swing with an unending driving range and other interactive objects. These kinds of activities really make Home stand out from other VR spaces right now, and we’re hoping to see them grow too. Imagine, for example, game props like Arktika.1’s vast array of weapons to replace the toy pistol.

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The Biggest Oculus Rift, HTC Vive and Windows VR Releases Of The Week 11/26/17

The Biggest Oculus Rift, HTC Vive and Windows VR Releases Of The Week 11/26/17

A small, but good week this week. While Vive owners finally get to sink their teeth into one of the year’s biggest shooter (as do Rift owners, after some last-minute confusion), both headsets also get some great new immersive and educational experiences.

And don’t forget that UploadVR has a Steam community group, complete with a curated list of recommendations so that you don’t have to waste any money finding out what’s good in the world of VR. We also have a top list of the absolute best Oculus Rift and HTC Vive games at the corresponding links.

Doom VFR, from id Software
Price: $29.99 (Vive)

id Software’s legendary shooter series comes to the HTC Vive as a gory shooting spree. Featuring remixed content from the 2016 Doom with a fresh story, you’ll be tasked with killing as many demons as possible as you make your way through an overrun facility on Mars. Doom VFR can be a ton of fun on Vive even if we miss smooth locomotion, and it’s at a pretty good price for what it is, too.

Home: A VR Spacewalk, from BBC and Rewind
Price: Free (Rift, Vive)

An immersive space-set VR experience from the BBC and Rewind. Home allows you to explore the International Space Station using your hands to navigate through zero-gravity. It’s an utterly engrossing, albeit short, experience that gives you just a taste of what it might be like to become an astronaut. Look for more from the BBC with the recent launch of its VR hub.

Titanic VR, from Immersive VR Education
Price: $24.99 (Rift, Vive, currently discounted)

A long-in-development educational experience for the Rift and Vive finally hits Early Access this week. Take on the role of Dr. Ethan Lynch, who sets out to search the wreckage of the legendary vessel. Explore the shipwreck from underwater and learn all about the historic events (Leonardo DiCaprio not included).

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