The Best Oculus Quest Games to Introduce to VR Newcomers

Virtual reality (VR) is an awesome entertainment medium which has dramatically improved over the last few years. While the original entry point wasn’t exactly cheap or necessarily practical for a lot of people the launch of Oculus Quest has opened up the technology to a much wider user base. Its portability, inside-out tracking and 6DoF controllers allow for instantly immersive gameplay, but for those fresh to VR choosing the right experience can mean the difference between a lifelong passion or instant nausea and dislike. Which is why VRFocus has chosen the following selection to start newbies off.

Oculus Quest - Hero / Lifestyle ImageThe important variables to consider are whether the title offers enough of that VR spark without causing any discomfort. So that pretty much means no locomotion to begin with or maybe some light teleportation, coupled with lots of interactive elements. Below are ten videogames which not only fit the bill but also happen to be some of VRFocus’ favourites.

Pinball FX2 VR

Released only a few short weeks ago, Zen Studios’ Pinball FX2 VR offers a beautiful mix of graphics, gameplay and an easy difficulty curve when it comes to controls. With highly detailed tables that you can peer into and explore their complex mechanisms, the simple gameplay is highly addictive with that old-fashioned highscore goal great to challenge friends with. Given a full five-star rating in VRFocus’ original reviewPinball FX2 VR retails on Oculus Store for £10.99 GBP.

Angry Birds VR: Isle of Pigs

Rovio Entertainment’s classic mobile title got a revamp this year by Resolution Games, Creating Angry Birds VR: Isle of Pigs in the process. Featuring over 50 levels, the experience allows you to teleport around the 3D buildings to fixed locations to unleash those destructive birds. Another simple yet very engaging videogame Angry Birds VR: Isle of Pigs can be found on Oculus Store for £10.99.

Angry Birds VR

Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes

Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes by Steel Crate Games was one of the earliest examples of local social VR multiplayer, highlighting the fact that VR doesn’t have to be a solitary experience. The VR player has to diffuse a bomb, unfortunately, they have no idea how to as each bomb is made up of different modules that have to be solved individually. To do this all the non-VR players have a bomb manual and must guide the person in VR to the correct solution. Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes can be found on Oculus Store for £10.99.

Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes - Touch

Racket: Nx

Racket: Nx takes the classic contained sport of squash and gives it a futuristic twist. Players find themselves inside a giant dome with hexagonal wall panels which light up according to the mode and difficulty. Great for those who wish to extert some energy without the worry of nausea thanks to staying on the spot, Racket: Nx can be found on Oculus Store for £14.99.

Racket: NX screenshot1

Electronauts

Developed by VR powerhouse Survios, Electronauts allows you to unleash your inner musician even if you’re tone-deaf. With two sticks in hand like a composer, the title gives players a massive array of sound-altering options to choose from. Record loops, sequences, layer filters and more (there are even musical grenades), to twist and distort a variety of songs across genres such as EDM, hip hop and dubstep. Achieving a five-star reviewElectronauts can be found on Oculus Store for £14.99.

Bait!

Another Resolution Games title, this was the studio’s first big success. A casual fishing videogame with a basic storyline to keep you catching fish, there are a selection of lakes each with their own particular fish to hook. What makes Bait! an instant purchase on Oculus Store is the fact it’s free.

bait vr screenshot1

Space Pirate Trainer

Originally released for PC VR headsets back in 2016, Space Pirate Trainer the only first-person shooter (FPS) on this list offering a range of modes and gameplay options. With a selection of weapon loadouts from shotguns to lazer beams, the title is another one to get you moving dodging energy bolts from the flying robot enemies. For those that like shooting stuff Space Pirate Trainer can be found on Oculus Store for £10.99.

Space Pirate Trainer

Moss

The most expensive title on VRFocus’ list, Polyarc’s Moss is a single-player, third-person puzzle adventure involving pint-sized heroine Quill. A great evil once befell her land and so all the mice now live deep in the forest, hidden away from danger. Of course, the situation arises where Quill finds herself chosen to go on a quest to help save her family and everyone else.  You play a benevolent being that not only controls Quill and her actions but the environment as well. This adorable little puzzle solver can be found on Oculus Store for £22.99.

Moss Twilight

Beat Saber

One of the most popular VR videogames of the moment, Beat Saber is a rhythm action title where you slice cubes with light sabers. Fast, frantic and great for burning a few calories is one of those videogames where you instantly have to have ‘one more go’ to either try a new song, to beat your previous score or challenge yourself to a higher difficulty level. Another title which has received a five-star review Beat Saber can be found on Oculus Store for £22.99.

Beat Saber

Acron: Attack of the Squirrels

The newest videogame on this list, Acron: Attack of the Squirrels is a purely multiplayer experience, great for when friends and family are round. The VR player takes the role of a tree trying to protect its acorns from hungry squirrels. Up to eight players can then join in on mobile devices trying to steal those acorns and get them back to base. A really fun and exciting local gameplay experience where you can swap between VR and mobile, Acron: Attack of the Squirrels can be found on Oculus Store for £14.99 (the iOS and Android part is free to download from their stores).

Acron: Attack of the Squirrels

Pinball FX2 VR Quest Review: Returning to the Pinball Table

The venerable pinball game, Pinball FX2 VR, comes to the Oculus Quest but unfortunately little has changed.

Another VR platform launch means another pinball port. Pinball FX2 VR has appeared on every major piece of VR hardware and now the Oculus Quest is no exception. The game is much the same as it was when I reviewed it for the original Oculus Rift in 2016.

The game still presents three original pinball tables for you to play on: the underwater themed Secrets of the Deep, the fantasy themed Epic Quest, and the science fiction table Mars. As before, a table with suitably complex ball and flipper physics stands before you. Each table has a pixelated dot-matrix scoreboard like the days of old, in wonderfully antique-electronic colors like yellow, light orange, and light green.

Just as in the version for Rift, as you play the table, the artificial playroom you are standing in dims and polygonal shapes fill the air around you: meteors and spaceships surround you while playing Mars or sea creatures swimming around you during the Deep. Now on Quest, the resolution is sharper than the original Rift, which is especially nice when you lean forward to look at the faux-cardboard inserts under the glass of the tables.

Beyond the inherent changes that come with a port to Quest — better resolution, lack of wires, etc. — there is nothing different about this version of Pinball FX2 VR. It is the same game as three years ago. They did not even attempt to come up with a way to use motion controls or roomscale. The game is still played with the Touch controllers acting like normal joysticks, using the buttons to activate flippers or moving the analog stick to “push” the machine to effect the ball, but you don’t use them spatially at all.

When you load up the game and you stand at a pinball machine for the first time, you wonder why you can’t see your hands. You expect them to be there, to place them on the flippers and or to pull the plunger so the metal ball in the machine can spring to life. It feels strange after playing many other games where you see a pair of hands or the Touch controllers themselves.

I understand it would be awkward to expect a player to stand there with your hands floating in the same exact spot for 15 minutes if you had to actually press the flippers with your hands. But even a rudimentary moment where you grab the machine to start playing it, and then the motion controls fade away, would go a long way toward immersion.

In fact, the game wasn’t made for moving around the room at all. You can walk about the room, but for no benefit, except for looking at the faux furniture and to clip through walls. While standing at a pinball table, you can lean so close to it your head can go through it. You can also just walk straight through the tables, which is a weird and immersion-breaking feeling. Of course, this isn’t the first port that has this issue, as other games brought to Quest, such as I Expect You to Die or Moss, have this same issue since they were originally designed for stationary play on the PC–but those games at least featured motion controls that made the transition to Quest.

But, if you can get past how the game does not use the Quest’s unique ability of untethered presence, you will find a pinball game as solid as has ever been; the tables are fun and unique. Besides the three that the game comes with, you can buy another five tables with a season pass ($25). These have other themes like being a mad scientist making mutants (Biolab) or being a bounty hunter in the Old West (Wild West Rampage).

There are three Universal Studio tables for $20, which includes E.T., Jaws, and Back to the Future. Strangely, these film-inspired tables were originally released for Pinball FX3. And the table based on Telltale’s The Walking Dead game series is available for $6, which was originally released 3 years ago, despite that company dissolving. That is over $50 more you can spend to get your collection up to an even dozen tables, if you like.

The game also has the usual engagement options as before: Leaderboards to compare yourself to your friends or the rest of the world, Achievements to strive for in each pinball game, and Options to tweaks the game’s physics or controls or graphics. These obviously help round out the package and keep you engaged.

Pinball FX2 VR For Oculus Quest Final Verdict

Despite Pinball FX2 VR’s lack of motion controls, it is nice to have another game for the Quest where you can just sit down and be immersed. Soon the minutes fade away, as you pursue the next high score. Perhaps Zen Studios will bring over more tables from the non-VR version of the game in the future, or maybe even bring Pinball FX3 to VR, but for now this is the only way a pinball wizard can show their magic while on the go.

Pinball FX2 VR is available as a base game with three tables for $14.99 with optional paid DLC for more tables. The game is also out on Steam for PC VR headsets and PSN for PSVR. For more on how we arrived at this score, read our review guidelines.

The post Pinball FX2 VR Quest Review: Returning to the Pinball Table appeared first on UploadVR.

The VR Game Launch Roundup: Five Great Titles Arriving Next Week

August is turning out to be a stellar month for virtual reality (VR) releases, especially when it comes to AAA videogame support from non-VR developers. Yesterday saw Codemasters suddenly surprise everyone by rolling out VR support for DiRT Rally 2.0after staying quiet for months – and next week is going to be a corker as well. There are five titles arriving by Friday 16th, covering a range of platforms and genres.

Red Matter - Screenshot 02

While five videogames may not seem like a lot, there are some rich pickings to be had. From old favourites coming to new platforms to entirely new experiences to be had in VR, if you’re not already engrossed in a VR experience of some sort you soon will be.

No Man’s Sky: Beyond – Hello Games

This is the most high profile launch of next week, with Hello Games updating this sci-fi epic to version 1.7, adding VR support. No Man’s Sky: Beyond will join the likes of The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim VR, Fallout 4 VR, Doom VFR and  Borderlands 2 VR, big-name videogames making the leap to support VR. Originally released in 2016, No Man’s Sky: Beyond will be more immersive than ever, as well as social, with the update also including the Nexus, a social space in this massive procedural universe.

Red Matter – Vertical Robot

Originally an Oculus Rift title released in 2018, developer Vertical Robot will be bringing this sci-fi puzzler to Oculus Quest.  Red Matter is set in a dystopian alternate future where an ongoing cold war ensues between two superpowers; the Atlantic Union and the People’s Republic of Volgravia. You play an astronaut dispatched to an abandoned base on Rhea, one of Saturn’s moons. Your mission is to recover top-secret information that could end the war.

  • Supported platforms: Oculus Quest
  • Launch date: 15th August 2019

PinballFX2VRSeasonOnePack_Wild West Rampage Screenshot

Pinball FX2 VR – Zen Studios

Another one for Oculus Quest, this is another port from VR’s past, 2016 in fact. Pinball FX 2 was one of the more surprising titles to feature on Oculus Rift’s launch day, demonstrating how a pastime like pinball can work really well in VR. Proving to be very addictive, the title achieved a full five-stars in VRFocusoriginal review: “Zen Studios has created some remarkable digital recreations of pinball and yet every other version now seems redundant: Pinball FX 2 VR is the way digital pinball is meant to be played.”

  • Supported platforms: Oculus Quest
  • Launch date: 15th August 2019

Time Stall – Force Field Entertainment

From the developer behind Term1nal for Samsung Gear VR and Landfall for Oculus Rift comes Time Stall, the only properly new videogame on this list. Loosely inspired by Quicksilver’s classic Pentagon kitchen scene from X-Men: Days of Future Past, the gameplay involves time manipulation and puzzles, freezing moments in time to complete challenges in order to save all the guests onboard a luxury spaceship.

  • Supported platforms: Oculus Quest
  • Launch date: 15th August 2019

Sairento VR – Mixed Realms

For the last videogame on the list, VRFocus has Sairento VR for PlayStation VR. Yes, Sairento VR has been available for over a month now via PlayStation Store and on retail shelves in Europe but next Tuesday Perp Games will be launching the title in physical form in North America. A badass combat experience filled with guns and swords, the main hook in Sairento VR is the free range of movement because you’re a deadly ninja who can effortlessly kill opponents whilst performing somersaults, triple jumps, side flips, wall runs, and power slides.

  • Supported platforms: PlayStation VR – North American retail stores
  • Launch date: 13th August 2019

Pinball FX2 VR Heading To Oculus Quest This Month

Oculus Quest is getting its first pinball game in Pinball FX 2 VR.

The Quest store confirms the game will arrive on August 15. Pinball FX2 is, well, pretty much what it says on the tin. The game includes a number of virtual tables for you to play on. This being VR, you’ll find hitting certain goals brings features to life, including UFO light shows and sharks.

Pinball FX 2’s real claim to fame, though, is its themed tables. Developer Zen Studios has worked in tie-ins to its own games like Castlestorm but also has DLC for themes like Universal movies. On Rift, these are available as in-game purchases. The Quest store says this version of the game will support ‘in-app purchases’, so it looks like they’re included here too.

We first reviewed Pinball FX2 all the way back in November 2016. We thought it was a faithful conversion of the classic game, though recycled content was a little disappointing.

“Undoubtedly fans of Pinball will be happy here,” we said. “They get a faithfully made three-dimensional replication of their hobby, albeit spruced up with modern-graphics that defy real life, albeit intruding to the purity of it all as a whole. Novices to pinball should enjoy the games for some time too, though the difficulty of pinball in general and the challenge of finding and trying all the events and missions in the games may discourage some.”

The game’s set to cost $14.99 on Quest, which is the same price it goes for on Rift. Hopefully that means there’s cross-buy support included but that’s not confirmed right now.

Also releasing on August 15 is Time Stall, a new Oculus Quest exclusive from Force Field Entertainment.

The post Pinball FX2 VR Heading To Oculus Quest This Month appeared first on UploadVR.

Pinball FX2 VR’s Movie-Based Tables Come to PlayStation VR and HTC Vive

Last month the rather excellent Pinball FX2 VR for Oculus Rift, Oculus Go and Samsung Gear VR saw an update adding three film inspired tables to the videogame. Today, Zen Studios has announced that the Universal Classic pack has been made available for PlayStation VR and HTC Vive.

The three-table pinball pack has been inspired by E.T. the Extra-TerrestrialJaws, and Back to the Future, with each one featuring unique design and gameplay elements that helps to bring the pinball experience to life.

On the E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial table players meet and greet the famous character before the fun begins, with E.T. giving you a little wave then as the game progresses the character will extend his neck and look over the table to see how you’re doing.

Then there’s the table with plenty of bite, as Jaws will have you hanging on for dear life. You find yourself at sea with a dorsal fin encircling you, the only thing to hold onto is the pinball table. Just when you least expect it you’ll get a nice pleasant visit from a great white shark.

Last (but certainly not least) is the Back to the Future table. Travel through time with Doc Brown and Marty on their epic adventures. Watch as the Delorean races off the table and around the floor approaching 88 miles per hour.

“The Pinball FX2 VR version features every bit of film-adapting gameplay that resonated so well with critics and fans alike, from E.T. collecting candy in a cornfield to Marty McFly showcasing his skills at arcade shooting and players braving the open waters in a shark cage for an exciting multi-ball mode,” states Zen Studios.

In addition to the new DLC for PlayStation VR and HTC Vive Zen Studios has also introduced Oculus Touch controller optimization and support. The Universal Classic pack can be downloaded now, with a retail price on Steam of £15.49 GBP. For any further updates keep reading VRFocus.

The Movies Comes to Pinball FX2 VR With Universal Classics Update

Pinball FX2 VR has made its appearance on just about every virtual reality (VR) headset, and has been positively received by its audience. Today developers Zen Studios have announced that in collaboration with Universal, its popular film-inspired Universal Classics pack will be entering VR.

The Universal Classics Pinball pack includes several tables which are beloved by the fans, all of which have been inspired by classic films such as E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, Jaws and Back to the Future.

The E.T. Pinball table lets players see E.T. greet players with a friendly wave at the start of each game, and levitates around the table as you play, even elongating his neck to get a closer peek at how your game is progressing.

In the Jaws table, a fully animated VR model of Jaws himself will circle ominously around you as you rack up the points, and players will be able to get a close-up look at his terrible teeth as he takes a bite out of your virtual pinball cabinet.

Over on the Back to the Future table, you can check out the flying Delorean as it flies around your virtual table, changing with the time period as you switch through the decades. A model of the iconic clock tower that players a vital role in the film stands in the play field, complete with sound effects taken directly from the film.

“For Zen Studios’ first-ever VR tables inspired by popular films, we’re offering up three of the most popular ones we’ve created in recent memory,” says Mel Kirk, Zen’s Vice President of Publishing. “We know that VR players are as hungry as a great white on the Fourth of July for quality new content, and Zen is happy to deliver with Universal Classics Pinball.”

Universal Classics Pinball is available for Oculus Rift, Oculus go and Samsung Gear VR, priced at $19.99 (USD). For other news on new and upcoming VR title,s keep checking back with VRFocus.

Something for the Weekend: An Oculus Winter Wonderland

With just over a week to go until Christmas those that are prepared might be sitting back this Sunday afternoon with a nice warm mug of mulled wine, happy in the knowledge all the presents are sorted. Or you might be in the same boat as everyone else, planned nothing, going on a mad flurry of shopping next weekend instead – nothing like doing everything last minute. Whatever you decide to do today, at some point you may want to grab your Oculus Rift and enjoy some virtual reality (VR) gaming. And with the Oculus Winter Sale in full swing a Sunday afternoon is the perfect time to play a new videogame. So VRFocus has chosen ten of the best that you should consider.

EVE: Valkyrie - Warzone art

EVE: Valkyrie – Warzone

Compatibility: Oculus Rift, HTC Vive, PlayStation VR

The granddaddy of VR space combat shooters, CCP Games’ EVE: Valkyrie originally launched back in 2016, and was one of the pioneers of cross-platform multiplayer across headsets. The Warzone update expanded that reach even further by including standard PC players in the ranks as well. Currently EVE: Valkyrie – Warzone has a 50 percent discount on the Oculus Store, dropping the price from £22.99 GBP down to £10.99.

Pinball FX 2 VR (W10 HMDs) - Epic Quest Table Screenshot

Pinball FX2 VR

Compatibility: Oculus Rift

Pinball FX2 VR is another 2016 original, featuring three core tables: Secrets of the Deep, Epic Quest and Mars. An additional five tables can be purchase via the Pinball FX2 Season 1 downloadable content, adding CastleStorm, Wild West Rampage, Paranormal, BioLab, and Earth Defense. Pinball FX2 VR is currently discounted from £10.99 down to £5.99.

Killing Floor: Incursion screenshot

Killing Floor: Incursion

Compatibility: Oculus Rift, HTC Vive

In Killing Floor: Incursion, players take on the role of an elite Horzine Security Forces soldier as they team up with allies to fend off the horrific hordes of monstrous creatures called Zeds, using a formidable arsenal of weapons including pistols, shotguns, blades and more. Players are able to freely explore their environment – although the levels do have a linear design to them – scavenging for weapons and ammo while searching for the best locations to fight the monster onslaught.

Another one with big savings, Killing Floor: Incursion has a 50 percent discount on the Oculus Store, dropping the price from £29.99 GBP down to £14.99.

Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes

Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes

Compatibility: Oculus Rift

As it’s Christmas it’s time to bring out the party games and one of the best local VR multiplayer’s is Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes. The idea is simple, one person wears the headset with a bomb to diffuse – but no idea how to – while everyone outside of VR has a manual with the instructions on how to complete each module.

Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes is available on the Oculus Store for £6.99 rather than £10.99.

Blasters of the Universe

Blasters of the Universe

Compatibility: Oculus Rift

First-person wave shooters are very common in VR. One of the most recent to hit Oculus Rift – and one of the best – is The Secret Location’s Blasters of the Universe. Set in a neon rich, 80’s inspired universe, there’s a modular weapon system to unlock, helping you get through those difficult high stages.

Blasters of the Universe is available on the Oculus Store for £5.99 rather than £10.99.

 Tethered - Screenshot18

Tethered

Compatibility: Oculus Rift

Tethered is a strategy videogame casting players in the role of a Spirit Guardian looking to restore balance to the world. All the other guardians have been imprisoned inside ancient totems by an evil consuming the world, and by gathering enough Spirit Energy players will be able to free their fellow guardians. This is accomplished by aiding the inhabitants of the world, called Peeps, who in turn help the quest.

Tethered is available on the Oculus Store for £6.99 rather than £18.99.

Xing: The Land Beyond Screenshot 3

XING: The Land Beyond

Compatibility: Oculus Rift

For those that enjoy big puzzle adventures, White Lotus Interactive released its long awaited title XING: The Land Beyond  back in September. The videogame is littered with environment-based puzzles which require powers and abilities gained along the way to solve them, such as rain and snow.

XING: The Land Beyond is available on the Oculus Store for £11.99 rather than £14.99.

 Wilson's Heart_E32016 (2)

Wilson’s Heart

Compatibility: Oculus Rift

VRFocus’ first horror entry, Wilson’s Heart is a first-person thriller putting players in the body of Robert Wilson, a 1940’s hospital patient who makes a grim discovery upon waking up. His heart has been replaced by a mysterious device. As players wander the hospital they’ll discover increasingly maddening corridors, environmental hazards, and sinister inhabitants whilst trying to recover their heart and the reasons for this craziness.  

Wilson’s Heart is available on the Oculus Store for £8.99 rather than £22.99.

The Unspoken Acolytes image 2

The Unspoken

Compatibility: Oculus Rift

The ideal experience for those that want to wield magic like a powerful sorcerer, The Unspoken is a multiplayer combat title pitting players against one another around the world. The recent Acolytes update further enriches the experience with a single-player mode.

The Unspoken is available on the Oculus Store for £14.99 rather than £22.99.

Racket_fury_screenshot5

Racket Fury: Table Tennis VR

Compatibility: Oculus Rift

People tend to eat quite a lot over the festive period so you need a way of burning those excess calories off. So why not play a few games of table tennis on Racket Fury: Table Tennis VR. Racket Fury:Table Tennis VR features a range of single-player and multiplayer modes. Solo there are four cups to play through, pitting your skills against 16 AI opponents. While multiplayer is your classic one-on-one match of table tennis with players from around the world.

Racket Fury:Table Tennis VR is available on the Oculus Store for £5.99 rather than £7.99.

Windows MR: Pinball FX2 VR erhältlich

Nach Veröffentlichung der Windows-MR-Brillen hoffen Käufer auf mehr spielbare Inhalte für die Brillen von Acer, Dell, HP, Asus, Lenovo und Medion. Kein Grund zur Sorge, denn der Steam-Support ist als Preview bereits erhältlich und von Zeit zu Zeit werden immer mehr VR-Titel für die Windows-Brillen adaptiert. So nun auch die virtuelle Flippersimulation Pinball FX2 VR von Entwicklerstudio Zen Studios, welches bereits für diverse weitere Plattformen verfügbar ist.

Pinball FX2 VR für Windows-MR-Brillen

Die Windows-MR-Version von Pinball FX2 VR vom Entwicklerstudio Zen Studios bringt die Spieler in eine virtuelle Umgebung, in der ihr auf verschiedenen Tischen immersiv Flipper spielen könnt. Dafür stehen drei verschiedene Tische – Mars, Epic Quest und Secrets of the Deep – zur Auswahl. Doch während einer Partie steht ihr nicht nur am Tisch, um Knöpfe zu drücken, sondern dürft in eine beeindruckende Spielwelt voller Effekte eintauchen.

Epic Quest Flippertisch

Epic Quest || Quelle: Zen Studios

Jeder Tisch offenbart eine andere Welt mit eigener Atmosphäre, so ist der Mars-Flipper im Weltraum mit Asteroiden angesetzt, während ihr bei Secrets of the Deep von Haien und Unterwassertieren umkreist werdet. Neben dem immersiven Erlebnis bestehend aus Spiel, Effekten und Soundkulisse steht außerdem ein Leaderboard zum Vergleich mit anderen Spielern weltweit zur Verfügung.

Mars Flippertisch

Mars || Quelle: Zen Studios

Zusätzlich zum Hauptspiel kann man das Pinball FX2 VR: Season 1 Pack kaufen, das insgesamt fünf weitere Tische ins Spiel implementiert. Dazu zählen die Flipper CastleStorm, Wild West, Rampage, BioLab, Paranormal und Earth Defense. Am CastleStorm-Tisch stellt ihr euch einem Ritterabenteuer, während ihr am Wild-West-Tisch mit Cowboys in einen Western eintaucht. In BioLab dürft ihr eine neue Alienrasse erforschen, Paranormal offenbart eine Serie von übernatürlichen Ereignissen und Earth Defense bietet die Verteidigung gegen außerirdische Invasoren.

Pinball FX2 VR ist für 14,99 Euro im Microsoft Store erhältlich. Das Addon Pinball FX2 VR: Season 1 Pack kostet zusätzlich 24,99 Euro.

(Quellen: VR Focus | Microsoft Store)

Der Beitrag Windows MR: Pinball FX2 VR erhältlich zuerst gesehen auf VR∙Nerds. VR·Nerds am Werk!

Pinball FX2 VR Makes its Debut on Windows Mixed Reality

Microsoft launched its series of Windows Mixed Reality (MR) headsets in partnership with Lenovo, HP, Dell and Acer last month with the Samsung Odyssey arriving in November. After the first spate of launch titles other videogames have slowly begun appearing, the latest being Pinball FX2 VR by Zen Studios.  

Pinball FX2 VR has appeared on numerous head-mounted displays (HMDs) over the past year, featuring on Oculus Rift, Samsung Gear VR, HTC Vive and PlayStation VR. The Windows MR edition features the same three core tables as the other versions: Secrets of the Deep, Epic Quest and Mars. An additional five tables can be purchase via the Pinball FX2 Season 1 downloadable content, adding CastleStorm, Wild West Rampage, Paranormal, BioLab, and Earth Defense.

Pinball FX2 VR has been a hit virtual reality experience for Zen Studios, mixing old school pinball gameplay with modern immersive technology. Just like you’d be able to do in real life you nudge the tables if needed whilst strategically activating the flippers to get the ball where you want it.

Each table is highly detailed, with all sorts of action taking place beneath your nose. You can lean right in to check out the artwork or analyze the table, looking for the best way to score points or uncover new areas that you may not have noticed. Adding that good old VR twist to it all, whilst playing each table the characters and imagery come to life around you, with aquatic sea monsters appearing from behind the table or a spaceship suddenly flying over your head.

VRFocus reviewed the Oculus Rift version of Pinball FX2 VR back in 2016, giving a full 5 stars, saying: “Pinball FX 2 VR is a hugely pleasant surprise not in that a VR edition of the franchise has been created, but that it’s of such a high quality. Zen Studios has created some remarkable digital recreations of pinball and yet every other version now seems redundant: Pinball FX 2 VR is the way digital pinball is meant to be played.”

Pinball FX2 VR is available now on Windows MR for $14.99 USD, with Season 1 Pack DLC also available for purchase for $24.99.

For any further updates from Zen Studios, keep reading VRFocus.

Something for the Weekend: Oculus Rift & Gear VR Discounts

For those who find themselves looking for something new to play over the next week on their Oculus Rift or Samsung Gear VR, VRFocus has just the thing. Take a look below at the Oculus Store’s library of virtual reality (VR) titles to find what discounts are currently available.

Zero Days VR screenshot

Zero Days VR

Compatibility: Oculus Rift

Based on the Oscar short-listed Participant Media documentary Zero Days, Scatter’s award-winning, immersive documentary Zero Days VR visualizes the story of Stuxnet in a new way: placing you inside the invisible world of computer viruses, experiencing the high stakes of cyber warfare at a human scale. It’s currently on sale this weekend costing £3.99 GBP rather than £7.99 through Oculus Store.

PLANNES screenshot

PLANNES

Compatibility: Oculus Rift, HTC Vive

PLANNES is a zero-gravity game of tennis featuring both single-player and multiplayer modes. The title is currently discounted on Oculus Store, dropping the price fro £10.99 to £5.99. There’s no discount for its Steam listing.

Raw Data

Compatibility: Oculus Rift, HTC Vive

One of the biggest and best known wave shooters around, Raw Data has now left early access and to celebrated its release developer Survios has knocked a nice healthy 25 percent of the price. So instead of spending £29.99, now its just £22.49.

Chernobyl VR Project 1

Chernobyl VR Project

Compatibility: Oculus Rift

Ever wanted to visit the site of the worlds worst nuclear meltdown, just didn’t fancy a dose of radiation. Well those lovely folks at The Farm 51 have done the hard work, creating Chernobyl VR Project. Normally £7.99 on Oculus Store, at present it’s £3.99. The HTC Vive version on Steam isn’t on sale.

Rush screenshot

Rush

Compatibility: Gear VR

Take a dive into the adrenaline-pumping world of wingsuit flying with Rush. Weave through canyons, dodge outcrops, and plummeting down sheer drops as you race towards the finish line. Currently on sale for £2.99 rather than £5.99.

Omega Agent 1

Omega Agent

Compatibility: Gear VR

Become a super-spy on the Omega Island training facility, featuring your very own nuclear-powered jetpack. Currently on sale for £1.11 rather than £2.29.

Pinball FX2 VR Gear VR Screenshot - 5

Pinball FX2 VR

Compatibility: Gear VR

Become a mobile pinball wizard as Pinball FX2 VR comes supplied with three tables Mars, Epic Quest, and Secrets of the Deep. Then if players want more content in-app purchases are available, with Paranormal, CastleStorm, Earth Defense, Wild West Rampage, Biolab and The Walking Dead tables on sale individually. Currently on sale for £1.99 rather than £3.99.

Monzo VR-CoverArt

Monzo VR

Compatibility: Gear VR

Featuring over 30 model making kits Monzo VR covers a wealth of designs, from dinosaurs and ships to cars, helicopters and more. Just like normal model making kits users are given instructions on how to build each one, after which they can then add their own artistic flair with a range of colour options and decals to choose from. Currently on sale for £2.79 rather than £4.99.

Daedalus

Compatibility: Gear VR

Daedalus is a platformer and an exploration game set in a spectacular oneiric and surrealist world. Currently on sale for £1.99 rather than £3.99.

Disc League screenshot

Disc League

Compatibility: Gear VR

A fast paced, physics based, game of throwing glowing discs featuring single-player and multiplayer modes. Currently on sale for £1.99 rather than £3.99.