Can VR Make You Smarter? The VR Games Designed to Educate

Virtual reality (VR) is a great place to while away a few hours in some fantastical universe, go on an adventure, shoot some bad guys, or just relax in some tranquil surroundings. The technology isn’t just for entertainment purposes though as it can be used as an educational tool if you want to get that grey matter fired up. So VRFocus has decided to compile a list of edutainment titles available today that are worth a look.

Number Hunt

Perfectly falling into this category is Number Hunt, a mathematical videogame which was recently launched on Steam Early Access by two-person indie team PaleBlue XYZ. The premise is very simple, all you have to do is shoot numbers wandering around a level. The difficulty comes by the fact that you’re given five specific numbers to achieve on each round, and a gun that can Add, Multiply, Subtract and Divide.

The numbers wandering around range from one to nine, while the target numbers can go all the way up to 900. So you have to use some arithmetic skills to shoot the right numbers and hit those targets as quickly as possible. Plus there’s a time limit so there’s no hanging around.

Featuring both single-player and multiplayer modes Number Hunt is still early in development but showcases one of the best ideas for combining mathematics and fun gameplay.

HoloLAB Champions

HoloLAB Champions

The latest VR title from Schell Games (I Expect You to Die), HoloLAB Champions isn’t actually out just yet as its due to be released on 10th July for HTC Vive. VRFocus decide to include the videogame as it was so close to launch and accurately fitted the edutainment profile. 

Created with support from the Institute of Education Science, HoloLAB Champions is focused on teaching chemistry via way of a game show layout. The single-player experience has each person interact with equipment and materials that they’d find in an actual lab, challenging them to scoop, pour, and burn their way through several mini-labs before the final lab challenge.

Whether you’re already learning Chemistry or just want to know more about the subject, HoloLAB Champions offers a fun approach to the subject.

VRobot robotics in VR

VRobot: Robotics in VR

Another Steam Early Access title, VRobot: Robotics in VR is a far more technological offering than the last two, providing a virtual engineering workspace with all the tools and educational materials needed to build your own mechanised being.

Inspired by the work of past projects helping children engage with STEM subjects developer VRobot decided to create a practical and informative experience to teach anyone across the world about robotic design, without the usual expense.

You’re not going to create a T-800 just quite yet with the software currently offering a basic design to learn about LEGO EV3 Mindstorms. You’ll learn not only how to build it but also the programming side as well. Then in future iterations of VRobot: Robotics in VR more robots will be added.

Brush Up VR Screenshot

Brush Up VR

One for the younger VR players among you, Brush Up VR is a humorous take on teaching children how to better brush their teeth.

Developed by GamesThatWork, Brush Up VR teams the player up with a friendly blue robot named Budd. Armed with a giant toothbrush, the player must brush all the green gunk from Budd’s teeth within the time limit. Failure to do so will be bad for your little blue buddy.

Titanic VR image

Titanic VR

Created by Immersive VR Education – the team behind Apollo 11 VR – Titanic VR takes you beneath the waves to learn about one of the most famous maritime disasters of the 20th Century.

The educational experience is set in the near future, but explores a more-intact 1985 model of the wreck. Players take on the role of Dr. Ethan Lynch, Associate Professor of Maritime Archaeology at the fictional University of Nova Scotia. With funding from a mysterious investor, Dr. Lynch and his PhD Candidate Jean Robinson have set out aboard a research vessel to dive the wreck and answer questions that have remained submerged for a century.

The Steam Early Access version features seven dive missions and seven lab missions, with additional content to be added over the course of the next 6 to eight months.

Star Chart

One of the earliest educational apps for devices like HTC Vive and Oculus Rift, Star Chart is a VR planetarium where you can look up at the night sky and through the solar system to see a real-time simulation. Explore all 88 constellations as well as out nearest planets, from the smallest moons of Saturn to the coldest, darkest, farthest reaches of Pluto.

Google Earth VR_user

Google Earth VR

For those interested in a more terrestrial journey then there’s always Google Earth VR. Launched for free in 2016 for HTC Vive, the app then came to Oculus Rift the following year. Allowing you to explore virtually anywhere on Earth, from the driest deserts to the busiest cities, the most recent update to the app also introduced Street View, so you can get an even better look at the world around you.

Discovery VR

The Discovery Channel doing what its does best, just this time in 360-degrees. A one stop shop for the channels many immersive productions, the app originally launched in 2015 with nine short experiences. Since then the content has expanded dramatically, showcasing films from shark-infested shipwrecks to freeboarding the windiest street in the world.

3D Organon VR Anatomy image 1

3D Organon VR Anatomy

Designed as a fully-featured VR anatomy atlas, 3D Organon VR Anatomy enables users to learn about the human body, with full 3D male and female body models and systems including: Skeletal, Connective, Muscular, Arterial, Venous, Nervous, Lymphatic, Heart, Respiratory, Digestive, Endocrine, Urinary, Reproductive, Sensory organs, and Integumentary (skin).

Supporting both HTC Vive and Oculus Rift 3D Organon VR Anatomy is one of those apps designed for users who want better sense at what makes the body tick.

Operation Apex

Time to head below the ocean waves again just this time for very different reasons. Operation Apex teaches players all about the underwater eco-system while on the hunt for a Great White shark. They play a marine scientist looking for the largest Great White ever known but in the process need to scan the local aquatic life to build up data and a better understanding of what’s being hunted.

Test: Operation Apex mit der Oculus Rift

Operation Apex ist bereits im letzten Jahr für die HTC Vive erschienen, jetzt steht auch eine Version für die Rift im Oculus Home Store bereit. Das Unterwasser-Abenteuer kommt ohne Waffen, Gewalt oder den eigenen Tod aus und will euer ökologisches Bewusstsein wecken. Geht die Rechnung von Curiscope und den Vive Studios auf?

Operation Apex – Das tauchende Klassenzimmer

In Operation Apex begebt ihr euch virtuell in die Tiefe des Meeres und bewegt euch mit kleinen Antrieben an den Händen fort. Mit den Flossen an euren Händen könnt ihr euch auch drehen, was sich aber leider sehr unrealistisch anfühlt. Viel besser: Operation Apex mit einem 360 Grad Tracking verwenden, denn dafür war es ursprünglich ja auch gedacht. Wenn man auf das Drehen per Controller verzichtet, kann man sich auch schnell fallen lassen und beginnt mit den ersten Scans der Meeresbewohner, um mehr über sie zu lernen. Das Scannen bereitet viel Spaß, denn teilweise müssen Fische  mit Hologrammen angelockt und mehrere Punkte innerhalb des Fisches oder Schwarms getroffen werden.

Wer jetzt aber auf eine Welt hofft, in der es jede Menge zu entdecken gibt, der wird enttäuscht. Mehr als ein bisschen Müll, eine Handvoll Arten an Meeresbewohnern und eine triste Flora erwartet den Forscher nicht. Hier verschenkt das Spiel großes Potential und kann mit der lebendigen Welt von Subnautica nicht mithalten. Spätestens wenn ihr diesen Umstand festgestellt habt, kommt euch selbst die viel zu kurze Spielzeit von knapp einer Stunde lang vor, denn ihr wiederholt stets die gleiche Aufgabe (scannen) und werdet mit dem Gesicht in die Umweltprobleme unseres Planeten gedrückt. Selbst die Fische sind so hölzern und einfach gestrickt, dass sie sich ineinander verhaken, hängen bleiben oder seltsam kollidieren. Bei drei unterschiedlichen Welten, wovon eines das Tutorial ist, hätten man mehr Liebe zum Detail erwarten dürfen.

Fazit

Operation Apex

Der Ansatz von Operation Apex ist sicherlich lobenswert und auch die ersten Scans und das Anlocken der Fische und Krabben bereitet viel Freude. Dennoch kann das Spiel nicht mehr als diesen einen Trick und die Entwickler verschenken viel Potential. Eine triste Welt mit Meeresbewohnern, die direkt aus einer kostenlosen 3D-Asset-Sammlung stammen könnten, muss man wohl nur als echter Biologie-Fan besuchen. Wer lediglich auf das Gefühl des Tauchens steht, der sollte sich Subnautica genauer anschauen, auch wenn die VR-Erfahrung vom Konzept her in eine völlig andere Richtung geht.

Operation Apex findet ihr für 20 Euro auf Steam und im Oculus Home Store.

Stark
  • Gewaltfreies und dennoch spannendes Konzept
Schwach
  • Zu kurze Spielzeit (rund 1 Stunde)
  • Animationen, 3D-Modelle und Verhalten der Tiere nicht ausgereift
  • Unspektakuläre Welt
1.5 / 5

 

Der Beitrag Test: Operation Apex mit der Oculus Rift zuerst gesehen auf VR∙Nerds. VR·Nerds am Werk!

Operation Apex: Update integriert Rift-Support und weitere Features

Das Unterwasserabenteuer mit Tiefgang Operation Apex ermöglicht das virtuelle Erforschen der Tiefsee und möchte zeitgleich mit einem edukativen Setting über das Ökosystem der Ozeane aufklären. Seit Dezember 2017 dürfen Besitzer einer HTC Vive bereits auf Tauchgang gehen, nun kündigten die Entwickler ein anstehendes Update an, das auch Rift-Spieler ab dem 22. Februar in die immersive Unterwasserwelt eintauchen lässt. Zudem bringt das Update einige neue Features und Funktionen mit sich.

Operation Apex – Update bringt Support für Oculus Rift und neue Features

In Operation Apex dürft ihr mit den Haien schwimmen, denn euer Ziel ist es, als Meeresbiologie Informationen über die Lebewesen der Ozeane zu sammeln. Allen voran gilt es die gefährlichen Haie zu erforschen, in dem ihr mit Scannern die Fische und Säugetiere erfasst. Die frisch gewonnen Daten lassen sich daraufhin direkt anzeigen und liefern interessante Fakten über das Ökosystem und die damit verbundenen Nahrungsketten der Unterwasserlebewesen.

Operation-Apex-Update-Oculus-Rift-HTC-Vive-SteamVR

Ab dem 22. Februar erwartet die Spieler das erste große Update für das VR-Abenteuer, das neue Features mit sich bringt. Der wichtigste Punkt ist sicherlich der Support ist für Oculus Rift, wodurch auch Besitzer einer Oculus-Brille mit Touch Controllern in das Tiefseeabenteuer eintauchen dürfen.

Außerdem integrieren die Entwickler freie Fortbewegung in der Spielwelt, wodurch dem Forscherdrang keine Grenzen mehr gesetzt werden. Spieler dürfen auch in frühere Level zurückkehren und sämtliche Ecken der blauen Ozeane erforschen. Zudem ist es möglich, den Komfort-Modus ein- und auszuschalten, wodurch die Vignettierung verschwindet. Damit möchten die Verantwortlichen vor allem Streamern entgegenkommen, um ein verbessertes Zuschauerlebnis zu gewährleisten.

Neben diesen neuen Funktionen wird Cloud-Saving aktiviert, die Grafik an vielen Stellen verbessert und es finden Fehlerbehebungen statt. Außerdem erhält der VR-Titel Support für chinesische Sprachen.

Die genauen Patch Notes findet ihr hier.

Operation Apex ist für 19,99 Euro auf Steam für HTC Vive erhältlich. Ab dem 22. Februar ist der VR-Titel ebenso mit Oculus Rift kompatibel.

(Quellen: VR Focus | Operation Apex | Video: Curiscope Youtube)

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Delve into the Deep When Operation Apex Arrives on Oculus Rift Next Week

Sharks don’t particularly have a good reputation – especially Great White sharks – mainly due to how they’re portrayed in the media. Aiming to challenge this misconception is Curiscope and Vive Studios with Operation Apex taking you beneath the waves to look for the largest Great White ever seen. Launched in December 2017 for HTC Vive, Curiscope will be releasing a new update later this month adding Oculus Rift support.

Operation Apex

In just over a weeks time Oculus Rift owners will be able to explore Curiscope’s underwater VR adventure with full support for Oculus Touch. Operation Apex’s story revolves around you playing a citizen scientist, who takes control of a research rig in order to learn about the current state of the oceans. As you do so you observe a massive Great White Shark, following the animal to learn more. Operation Apex isn’t just about sharks, with plenty of other sea creatures to find and learn about.

The 1.1 update doesn’t just add Oculus Rift support, the studio has added plenty of other additions. The next big feature is Free Roam, opening up the entire experience so you can wander at your leisure. Thus allowing you to return to previous levels whilst accumulating mimics. All explorable outside of the main narrative.

Comfort mode can now be toggled on and off, enabling the vignetting to be removed – handy if you’re recording a video. Smaller additions include Cloud saving on Steam, Chinese language support, and various graphical improvements and bug fixes.

Operation Apex will be one of the few Vive Studios titles to make it to Oculus Rift, the others being Arcade Saga, developed by 2 Bears Studio and Beamz Interactive’s Jam Studio VR. As Curiscope continues to expand its content library of VR titles VRFocus will keep you updated on the latest announcements.

Vive Studios’ Operation Apex Getting Rift Support This Month

A screenshot from Operation Apex

Curiscope’s effective educational VR app, Operation Apex, is the latest Vive Studios-published VR experience to find a new home on the Oculus Rift.

Last week Curiscope revealed an update for the underwater adventure that will be hitting in just under two weeks’ time on February 22nd. The update will add in full Oculus Rift support to the game, complete with the Touch controllers. While support will be available through a free update over on Steam the app will also be launching on the Oculus Store (and is currently featured on the site’s ‘Coming Soon’ section).

Operation Apex is a great example of entertaining VR that blends in educational elements to create impactful moments the player will remember. You’re cast as a deep sea diver that explores the ocean floor, uncovering various types of fish and baiting them towards you with holographic projects of what they would usually eat. It teaches you not only about the food chain under the ocean but also shows you some of the negative effects of mankind’s tampering with that chain.

Elsewhere in the 1.1 update users will be able to toggle the comfort settings for the first time and jump into a free roam mode that allows you to explore the game’s three environments without any objectives to push you along. You’ll also see a few visual updates and a number of other bug fixes.

Operation Apex is available now for $19.99.

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Hands-On: Operation Apex Is Like Blue Panet: The Game For VR

Hands-On: Operation Apex Is Like Blue Panet: The Game For VR

Educational VR doesn’t have to be for the classroom. In fact, it doesn’t even have to be confined to museums, art galleries and installations; it can exist right at home on your headset, not as a 360 video or experimental app but a full gaming experience that teaches you about the world around us through your own actions. Operation Apex is a perfect example of that.

Apex is the latest project from Curiscope, an educational company best known for its Virtual-Tee product, which uses AR to teach you about the human body. For its first VR game, the company teamed up with Vive Studios to produce an underwater adventure in which you’ll follow the law of the ocean, discovering its food chain and the devastating impacts humanity can have on it.

Whereas staple VR apps like theBlu and Ocean Rift allow you to marvel at the wonders of life under the sea, Operation Apex introduces interactive elements that will help you learn through repetition and engagement. That’s not to say the game doesn’t have its own impressive sights; the underwater world is lavishly detailed with crisp textures and convincing models of aquatic life. There are moments of amazement, bewilderment and just a little intimidation.

Over the course of four levels (including a brief introduction), you’ll swim around the seabed using two handheld propeller-like devices that make movement seem natural and immersive. Each level has you leading an investigation into what’s upsetting certain aspects of the food chain, and you’ll need to scan various fish and more to make important discoveries. They last around 20 minutes each if you just complete the main objectives but you’ll also be able to explore each scene for bonus content, meaning there’s anywhere between one to three hours of content here.

Where Apex really sets itself apart is with its bait system. While some wildlife can be scanned with ease, others need to be lured over with the relevant types of food. You create the bait using holographic projections known as mimics, which you’ll gain when you scan creatures. To attract a tuna, for example, you’ll first have to scan a smaller swarm of fish that look tasty, like sardines. While the game’s UI will give you some hint as to what eats what, you’ll eventually memorize the best fits in the food chain simply through repetition. There; you learned something and you didn’t even mean to. That’s the power of interactivity.

Crucially, the mechanics behind Apex are simple fun. Scanning a group of fish means maintaining a distance close enough for your scanner while also far enough away not to scare the fish, and you’ll have to scan multiple specimens very quickly, otherwise you’ll need to start over. Luring other fish can also be tricky, and a smooth and steady hand is required to capture the lot.

The other side of the game’s educational aspect is the story it tells and the discoveries you’ll make along the way, some of which, to be frank, left me feeling angry and confused. Apex does a wonderful job of not preaching to the player but instead just showing them the brutal, honest truth of humanity’s actions, and in the process creating one of the most impactful moments I’ve yet experienced in VR.

While a little on the short side, Operation Apex is a great example of how VR can be used for good, make an impact and yet still provide the same simple thrills of a solid videogame. Fallout 4 VR may be about to drop hours of content onto your HTC Vive but, in many ways, this is a much better demonstration of what VR is really capable of.

Operation Apex is available now on Steam and Viveport with HTC Vive support for $19.99.

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Operation Apex Out Now On Steam

The depths of the Earth’s oceans are still mostly a mystery to us, and there have already been several virtual reality (VR) titles that explore the seas, varying in tone from serious to comedic. VR content creators Curiscope have now launched its own VR experience to take a closer look at the creatures of the ocean, Operation Apex.

Operation Apex expands on the work done in the first immersive work Curiscope produced, called Great White Sharks, which was a 360-degree video that aimed to show how important sharks are in the food chain, and also to correct the prejudices and misinformation that exist about the species. Operation Apex takes this idea several steps further by crafting a room-scale adventure.

The experience puts players in the role of an assistant to a marine scientist, taking a research vessel into the open sea to find the largest great white shark ever recorded. Players will be able to don diving gear and scan the ocean depths for marine life. Players will be able to view and interact with marine life that are rarely seen outside their native habitats. There are dangers in the deep ocean, however, so players will need to keep an eye out for predators and hazards.

Operation Apex features three complete underwater environments, and Curiscope have aimed to create an immersive environment that is as realistic as possible in an effort to help people understand and interact with the world in a new way, taking users on adventures to places they might otherwise never see.

The title is now available on Steam for HTC Vive, priced at £15.49(GBP).

Curiscope have also been involved with other VR and augmented reality (AR) projects, such as The Virtuali-Tee, an AR t-shirt that lets users see their internal organs. Curiscope are also working with publisher Dorling Kindersley to produce a book covering the history of VR technology that also includes a free Google Cardboard headset and five VR experiences.

VRFocus will bring you further news on Curiscope and Operation Apex as it becomes available.

HTC Vive: Operation Apex erscheint am 11. Dezember auf Steam

Wir berichteten erstmals im Sommer über das Unterwasser-Abenteuer Operation Apex vom Entwicklerstudio Curioscope für HTC Vive, das seine Spieler auf eine Reise durch den Ozean einlädt. Nun gibt es mit dem 11. Dezember ein Veröffentlichungsdatum sowie ein neues Video zu der VR-Erfahrung. Operation Apex lässt euch die Ozeane erkunden und will spielerisch zur Aufklärung über die Meeresbewohner beitragen. So lernt man ihr Verhalten in freier Wildbahn kennen, die Gefahren, die auf sie lauern, sowie die Auswirkungen auf Mensch und Tier.

Operation Apex – Unterwasserabenteuer in VR mit Mehrwert

In Operation Apex dürft ihr als wissenschaftliche Hilfskraft die besten Meeresbiologen der Welt in ihrer Forschung unterstützen, indem ihr in die blauen Ozeane unserer Erde eintaucht. Dort sammelt ihr zunächst Erfahrungen als Taucher, um daraufhin mit der Vielzahl an Meeresbewohnern zu interagieren und verborgene Geheimnisse in tiefen Riffs und Schluchten zu entdecken.

Operation-Apex-HTC-Vive-SteamVR

Euer Ziel ist das Sammeln von Informationen über die Lebewesen im Ozean. Allen voran Haie, denn ihr sucht den größten lebenden weißen Hai. Mit einem Scanner bewaffnet dürft ihr alles erforschen, was euch während eurer Tiefseereise begegnet. Dadurch könnt ihr euch stets neue Daten über eure Funde anzeigen lassen. Die Unterwassertiere reagieren währenddessen auf euch und ermöglichen interaktive Spielelemente.

Dank dem edukativen Setting des VR-Abenteuers erfahrt ihr während des Spielens eine Menge über die verschiedenen Arten der Unterwasserbewohner und ihr Verhalten. Zudem werden eine Menge Informationen über das Ökosystem der Ozeane sowie den damit verbundenen Nahrungsketten der Fische und Säugetiere erläutert.

Die Entwickler versuchen mit ihrer VR-Erfahrung, mehr Aufmerksamkeit auf den brutalen Haifang durch Tierwilderer zu richten, welcher nicht nur die Anzahl an lebenden Exemplaren reduziert, sondern auch Auswirkungen auf klimatische Bedingungen und Lebensräume im Meer hat.

Operation Apex erscheint am 11. Dezember für HTC Vive auf Steam und kombiniert ein spaßiges Tiefseeabenteuer mit edukativen Fakten, um zusätzlich auf ein reales Problem aufmerksam zu machen.

(Quellen: Operation Apex | Upload VR | Video: Curioscope Youtube)

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Vive Studios Underwater Adventure Operation Apex Launches Next Week

A screenshot from Operation Apex

As if next week didn’t have enough big launches for the HTC Vive, the headset’s publishing arm, Vive Studios, is releasing its next project then too.

That project is Operation Apex from UK-based developer Curiscope, which focuses on educational experiences for both VR and AR. You may remember them for the children’s book on VR we reviewed last week, or the Virtual Tee that uses a smartphone and t-shirt to show you someone’s digitized organs. Check out the trailer below.

Apex sees Curiscope head in a decidedly more game-orientated direction, with a piece in which players will learn about the food chain under the ocean and the dangers that man places on it. You explore the seabed, hunting for various fish and luring them out with bait.

Steam lists a December 11th release for Operation Apex (that’s next Monday), putting it a day ahead of the launch of Fallout 4 VR and four days before the releases of L.A. Noire: The VR Case Files. It’s set to cost $19.99. We’ll have more on the game soon, but don’t let this one fly under your radar even with those big releases on the way.

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