The Best Gear VR Games of 2017

We’re at the end of the second (calendar) year where virtual reality (VR) head mounted displays (HMDs) have been commercially available. And whilst the majority of talk when discussing both the past, specifically that of 2017 as a whole, and of the future for VR going into 2018 has been about the PC based HMDs like HTC Vive and Oculus Rift and console VR in the form of the PlayStation VR that doesn’t mean smartphone-based HMDs don’t still have a place in the conversation.

Whilst the Samsung Gear VR is the elder stateman of commercial VR, and arguably of this generation as a whole it isn’t done yet. And whilst some would have you believe that it is purely of use for 360 degree video those with a Gear VR controller would likely in turn ask them what on Earth they were talking about.

For this year in review we’re going to be taking a look back at some of the best videogame titles VRFocus has come across during 2017 for Samsung’s headset. Who knows, you may see something that you want to get to experience on your own Gear VR. Please note the below are in no particular order of importance or recommendation, but do feel free to check them out.

Augmented Empire

It would have been quite impossible to do this list and not include the title from Coatsink Software, best known in VR circles for their work on Esper and Esper 2. Featuring a top notch voice acting cast and a tight script, Augmented Empire is a strategy role-playing game (RPG) that takes you, effectively, into a VR diorama from which the story of the
island of New Savannah and the dramas caused by a society split through a rigid class system plays out.

Augmented_Empire_Screenshot_3

SBK VR

If you are a racer at heart then it might not be four wheels you should be considering on the Gear VR but two. The 2016 FIM Superbike World Championship came to VR in the form of SBK VR, complete with official licences for all the bikes riders and circuits. So, if you’re a Kawasaki fan, you’re sorted. Ducati? No problem. Honda? Yamaha? All there. The game comprises three modes: Quick Race and Time Trial, both of which are self-explanatory, with the third being Championship mode. Races here even containing qualifying sessions – although they are skippable.  Almost surprisingly good in its immersion this is one racer well worth checking out.

SBK VR header

Spark of Light

Let there be light – Spark of Light, that is. A wave shooter from Dutch developer Pillow’s Willow VR Studio, Spark of Light is also available on a number of other HMDs, and recently featured in the reveal of the Vive Focus. On Gear VR though it remains a gem, with our only real criticism being that we’d have liked a lot more of it. A casual puzzler, in Spark of Light you take on the roles Nerow, a boy who lives with his sister in a magical land. Things are perfectly fine until the sun is stolen by the Moth King. It’s up to Nerow to use light to not only solve puzzles but bring it back to his world as a whole.

Spark Of Light 05

Skylight

When you’ve got a Gear VR title from the developer of Darknet and Tactera, E McNeill, you have an expectation that it will be something special – and VRFocus was very pleased to find that Skylight (which we gave a full five stars to in our review) lives up to the expectation. A turn-based strategy videogame, in Skylight you’ve got to control an armada of spaceships through a series of increasingly challenging levels. How you lay out your armada is up to you, capital ships, frigates, fighters, each have their own strategic strengths and weaknesses. Can you balance them all and lead your fleet to victory? With thirty missions in the  single player mode and multiplayer too you’ll have plenty to keep you occupied.

Skylight - SS6

Term1nal

From one sci-fi title to another now but leaping from the strategy genre to stealth in the form of cybercrime videogame Term1nal. From Force Field VR, the makers of Oculus Rift title Landfall, Term1nal follows the story of Flynn Lightman. A hacker specialising in remotely controlling androids from the safety of his secret hide-out. Hired to infiltrate STRIDE Industries, a data security and advanced robotics company, Lightman takes control of one of STRIDE’s prototype android’s and delves into the depths of the facility alongside an over enthusiastic robot dog. Part third-person stealth title, part puzzle videogame, Term1nal‘s story blurs the line between organic and synthetic.

Term1nal - Screenshot3

Landfall Developer Force Field VR Secures €1m Investment in Series A Round

Force Field VR, the studio behind twin-stick virtual reality (VR) shooter Landfall on Oculus Rift and Term1nal, a puzzle title for Samsung Gear VR, has today announced the completion of a Series A funding round, securing the company an extra €1 million EUR of investment.

In a statement Force Field’s co-founder Arthur Houtman said: “Over the past year Force Field managed to acquire a leading position in the rapidly growing VR and AR industry, delivering a number of ‘best in class’ games and entertainment experiences. For the next years [sic] our aim is to further extend our lead into two strategic directions: the development of high-end location based VR and the creation of a series of unique new IPs for the home VR market. We will use this investment for those purposes.”

Term1nal - Screenshot2

The studio launched both aforementioned videogames over the last few months, and has now confirmed that six more titles are in the final stages of development. What these are and which platforms Force Field VR plans to support are still being kept quiet.

VRFocus reviewed Gear VR’s Term1nal back in May, giving it four stars and saying: “Featuring 12 missions, Term1nal is an enjoyable experience from start to finish. In fact you probably won’t notice the time fly by and complete it in one run though, over the course of around 3 hours or so. Term1nal showcases Force Field VR’s knack of creating a solid VR experience that’s a delight to play, making it a worthy addition to anyone’s Gear VR library.”

As Force Field VR reveals more details about its upcoming project, VRFocus will keep you updated.

Review: Term1nal

When you think of cyber crime – hackers infiltrating government institutions, banks, multinationals and so on – it likely equates to people sat behind a monitor going through lines of code, which doesn’t exactly make for a gripping videogame. So developers have thought of numerous ways to make the process far more interesting and engaging for the average player. Force Field VR, the team behind Landfall on Oculus Rift – has come up with an approach that mixes current tech with future tech in Term1nal, its first virtual reality (VR) title for Samsung Gear VR, and a cracking one to boot.

Term1nal is essentially a third-person stealth videogame for the mobile headset. Your task is to infiltrate a giant robotics corporation using one of their own robots, and download some data for the client that’s hired you. The entire title is viewed from CCTV cameras for a constant overhead  viewpoint, apart from when you have to interact with terminals to hack, at this point Term1nal goes first-person.

Term1nal - Screenshot1

The experience is essentially split into two, there are the environment puzzles to navigate and the terminal puzzles. As mentioned this is a stealth videogame, so you’re completely unarmed throughout the entirety of the experience. Running around the levels you’ll need to avoid stationary gun emplacements, flying drones and walking robotic guards, each has a viewable area which if breached means you’re going to get shot (which restarts the area). So it’s basically a case of duck and cover, using the environment to block enemies gaze, or dive into a locker to avoid being seen.

Not particularly amazing until the introduction of a small dog named R.EXE, who’ll be your companion on this journey. With the addition of your four legged friend, Force Field VR has ensured that wherever you go a challenge will await, and commanding the pooch takes as much thought as the puzzles themselves. R.EXE can pickup several enhancements on route that can disguise you, lure a robots attention away or simply stun them to get by. This means at points you’re constantly multitasking between controlling yourself and the dog on the more complicated puzzles later in the videogame.

It’s this interaction that sits at the heart of Term1nal, and makes for a fun experience. The terminal puzzles – of which there are four – consist of connecting green power nodes, matching up grids of numbers, disconnecting wires and hacking a location by holding down a button for a certain length of time, are basic and easily solved. Even towards the end of the title the main difficulty increase tends to be time, so there’s nothing fiendishly tough that you shouldn’t be able to crack on the first or second attempt.

Term1nal - Screenshot3

This is a linear, story-driven experience however. There’s nothing wrong with that, but it does mean longevity does suffer to a degree. Featuring 12 missions, Term1nal is an enjoyable experience from start to finish. In fact you probably won’t notice the time fly by and complete it in one run though, over the course of around 3 hours or so. That might put some people off, wanting more gameplay for their money but hopefully it won’t. Term1nal showcases Force Field VR’s knack of creating a solid VR experience that’s a delight to play, making it a worthy addition to anyone’s Gear VR library.

80%

Awesome

  • Verdict

Enter a World of Cyber Crime with Term1nal on Gear VR

Force Field VR, the studio behind Oculus Rift title Landfall, has launched its next virtual reality (VR) title, a stealthy puzzle experience called Term1nal for Samsung Gear VR.

Term1nal revolves around the story of Flynn Lightman, a highly skilled hacker, who specialises in remotely controlling androids from the safety of his secret hide-out. Hired to infiltrate a data security and advanced robotics company called STRIDE Industries, Lightman takes control of one of STRIDE’s prototype android’s and delves into the depths of the facility alongside an over enthusiastic robot dog.

Term1nal - Screenshot2

Rather than first-person, the majority of the video game is viewed from overhead – basically through the company’s CCTV cameras – with players having to solve a range of puzzles, such as cutting wires, deciphering codes or connecting nodes in first-person. There will also be area puzzles which need to be completed using the robotic dog, all the while avoiding stationary gun emplacements or mobile security robots.

Featuring 12 missions, Term1nal has been inspired by movies like iRobot, Ghost in the Shell, Ex Machina and The Matrix, where the lines between the organic and the synthetic are blurred. Built with Unity, Force Field VR estimates an entire campaign run though will take around two to three hours.

Exclusive to Samsung Gear VR, the title will support a standard gamepad as well as the newly released Gear VR controller. Term1nal will retail for $7.99 USD or €7.99 EUR.

VRFocus will continue its coverage of Force Field VR, reporting back with the latest announcements.

Preview: Term1nal – Hacking gets a VR makeover

Force Field VR, the studio behind the recently launched Landfall on Oculus Rift, debuted its next project at the Game Developers Conference (GDC) 2017, a stealthy hacking adventure that’ll support Samsung Gear VR called Term1nal. Rather than the all out action of LandfallTerminal goes for a far more thoughtful approach, demonstrating even at this early stage a nuanced approach to virtual reality (VR).

Set in a future of high tech robots and dangerous corporations, you play a hacker who’s been hired to infiltrate STRIDE Industries, a security and robotics firm. But rather than staring at reams of code on a computer screen, you remotely take over an experimental robot that’ll run through STRIDE’s security, sneaking past sentry robots, avoiding lasers, unlocking doors and hacking computer terminals.

Term1nal - WarehouseTransporter03

Term1nal is played from a lofty third-person viewpoint, essentially as the hacker you see everything through the building’s CCTV cameras. The videogame utilises a Bluetooth controller to move your character through the maze of rooms, hallways and traps in your path. As you navigate between them the camera angle will change depending on the room, but it’ll always provide the optimal viewpoint, there was never a moment in the demo where anything felt blocked.

This was an early build of Term1nal, and as such only one level was available to play through. But this was still enough to get a feel for the mechanics and the types of challenges that needed to be overcome. The goal of the demo was to locate a key in one area and bring it back to another. If you’ve played Landfall you’ll instantly be at home with running your character around, with the controls feeling precise. There are moments where you have to quickly duck around robots, hiding in lockers to avoid their gaze which never posed an issue.

Stealth is of paramount importance, you robot isn’t equipped with any weapons, get spotted and you’re restarting the area until you get it right. Once the key is found it turns out to be a small robotic dog that’ll follow you around and obey your commands. The dog can then be used to distract robots and unlock previously impassable doors. Term1nal certainly tries in this short period of gameplay to offer a variety of puzzle elements to keep you thinking on your toes, although that’s easy to do. The real challenge will be to see if Force Field VR can come up with a significant selection of puzzles without too much repetition, a trait titles in this type of genre can fall foal of.

Term1nal - CorridorOffice01

From this initial play though Term1nal has all the right elements to be a fun, engaging puzzle experience for Gear VR. Its looks nice, the challenges were varied and plentiful, with just the right amount of difficulty to make you stop for a second and think without being frustrating. For those that like this element in their VR videogames, Force Field VR looks to be on the right track with its first project for the mobile headset.

Preview: Term1nal – Hacking gets a VR makeover

Force Field VR, the studio behind the recently launched Landfall on Oculus Rift, debuted its next project at the Game Developers Conference (GDC) 2017, a stealthy hacking adventure that’ll support Samsung Gear VR called Term1nal. Rather than the all out action of LandfallTerminal goes for a far more thoughtful approach, demonstrating even at this early stage a nuanced approach to virtual reality (VR).

Set in a future of high tech robots and dangerous corporations, you play a hacker who’s been hired to infiltrate STRIDE Industries, a security and robotics firm. But rather than staring at reams of code on a computer screen, you remotely take over an experimental robot that’ll run through STRIDE’s security, sneaking past sentry robots, avoiding lasers, unlocking doors and hacking computer terminals.

Term1nal - WarehouseTransporter03

Term1nal is played from a lofty third-person viewpoint, essentially as the hacker you see everything through the building’s CCTV cameras. The videogame utilises a Bluetooth controller to move your character through the maze of rooms, hallways and traps in your path. As you navigate between them the camera angle will change depending on the room, but it’ll always provide the optimal viewpoint, there was never a moment in the demo where anything felt blocked.

This was an early build of Term1nal, and as such only one level was available to play through. But this was still enough to get a feel for the mechanics and the types of challenges that needed to be overcome. The goal of the demo was to locate a key in one area and bring it back to another. If you’ve played Landfall you’ll instantly be at home with running your character around, with the controls feeling precise. There are moments where you have to quickly duck around robots, hiding in lockers to avoid their gaze which never posed an issue.

Stealth is of paramount importance, you robot isn’t equipped with any weapons, get spotted and you’re restarting the area until you get it right. Once the key is found it turns out to be a small robotic dog that’ll follow you around and obey your commands. The dog can then be used to distract robots and unlock previously impassable doors. Term1nal certainly tries in this short period of gameplay to offer a variety of puzzle elements to keep you thinking on your toes, although that’s easy to do. The real challenge will be to see if Force Field VR can come up with a significant selection of puzzles without too much repetition, a trait titles in this type of genre can fall foal of.

Term1nal - CorridorOffice01

From this initial play though Term1nal has all the right elements to be a fun, engaging puzzle experience for Gear VR. Its looks nice, the challenges were varied and plentiful, with just the right amount of difficulty to make you stop for a second and think without being frustrating. For those that like this element in their VR videogames, Force Field VR looks to be on the right track with its first project for the mobile headset.

Force Field VR announce Third-Person Stealth and Hacking Game Term1nal

Virtual reality (VR) videogame developer Force Field VR have announced a new game exclusively for the Gear VR called Term1nal. Force Field VR have had previous success with Landfall and are now branching out into action-stealth gameplay.

In Term1nal the player has to hack into the controls of an experimental robot and use it to sneak around a top-secret corporate facility to collect information on a secretive robotics company called STRIDE. The game is played using a bluetooth gamepad, largely played from a third-person perspective as the player can only see the robot they are controlling from CCTV cameras dotted around the complex.

WarehouseTransporter03

Term1nal - CorridorOffice01

The rest of the gameplay involves solving puzzles and avoiding robot patrols – sometimes at the same time. People who have played the game have described the puzzles and challenging and engaging.

Term1nal is currently in early development, but is expected to be released sometime in Q2 of 2017. You can watch the announcement trailer below. VRFocus will keep you updated on further news from GDC.

 

Oculus Reveals 6 New VR Titles for Gear VR & Rift at GDC 2017

Debuted at GDC 2017 and announced via their official blog, Oculus offer a first look at some of the titles coming to Rift and Gear VR in 2017. This includes 6 new game reveals across multiple genres, with 4 optimised for Touch and 2 “must haves” for Gear VR.

Having recently teased ‘months of high-profile VR content’ starting with Rock Band VR, Oculus have begun to deliver on that promise at this week’s Game Developers Conference, revealing a list of 2017 titles, including 4 new games for Touch and 2 for Gear VR.

Oculus Rift Games

Blade & Soul

The way of battle is simple: summon the units by grabbing them with your hands. Choose your units wisely, have a strategy of your own and fight until the end. Strong units are crucial to winning the battle. Strengthen your units by training and upgrading them in the lab.

  • Designed by: NCSoft
  • Genre: TCG, RTS
  • Platform: Touch
  • Release Date: TBA
  • Price: TBA
  • Comfort: TBA

Brass Tactics

Brass Tactics takes real-time-strategy to the next level by placing you in the middle of the action on a fantastic clockwork battlefield. Experience the thrill of directly moving and interacting with your clockwork creations: grab structures and place them on the battlefield, and direct your units with the sweep of your hand. Just when you think you’ve mastered the game, raise the stakes by teaming up with other players in co-op mode or go head-to-head in PvP mode.

  • Designed by: Hidden Path Entertainment
  • Genre: Classic Real-Time Strategy (RTS)
  • Platform: Touch
  • Release Date: Fall 2017
  • Price: TBA
  • Comfort: Comfortable

From Other Suns

Your own ship. A crew. Steady work. Things were going well until the Collapse. Now you and half of humanity are trapped on the far side of the wormhole with ruthless pirates, scheming corporations, and worse—new threats from outside known space.

There’s danger at every jump on this side of the wormhole. You and up to two of your friends will tour the sector, upgrading your ship, stockpiling weapons, and fighting for your lives. And when you all die, you’ll discover new challenges in your next playthrough.

Fight and try to save humanity, or just joyride through the galaxy until its extinction. Your call.

  • Developed By: Gunfire Games
  • Genre: Action Adventure
  • Platforms: Oculus Rift and Gear VR
  • Release Date: Fall 2017
  • Price: TBA
  • Comfort Rating: Comfortable

Mage’s Tale

Welcome, apprentice. Don your wizard’s robe and become a mighty conjuror. The corrupted wizard, Gaufroi, has kidnapped your master, Mage Alguin, and it’s up to you to save him. To win the day you must conquer eleven dungeons, from the stinking sewers of Skara Brae to the living tombs of the evil Charn. Mind bending puzzles, terrifying traps, and deadly monsters stand in your way, all perfectly capable of sending you to an early grave.

But worry not. You wield raw elemental power in the palm of your hand, allowing you to sling gouts of flame, javelins of ice, arcs of lightning, and swirling tempests which can finish off any fiend that stands in your way– from the snarkiest goblin to the burliest giant. And as you delve deeper into the depths you’ll find forgotten secrets, ancient lore, and powerful spell reagents with which you can craft increasingly exotic spells to defeat even greater foes. Yes, you may be an apprentice now, but to save your master, this must become your Mage’s Tale.

  • Designed by: inXile Entertainment, Inc.
  • Genre: VR Adventure, Puzzle Solving, Action RPG
  • Platforms: Rift
  • Release Date: TBA
  • Price: TBA
  • Comfort: TBA

Gear VR

Augmented-Empire-5Augmented Empire

Augmented Empire is a story-driven tactical RPG set on the island of New Savannah, an isolated neo-noir city divided into three tiers by a social grade system. While the citizens deemed of high societal value live in luxury at the summit, outliers and criminals are forced to live in squalor at the island’s depths.

From the armchair of your secluded hideout, command a team of 6 bioelectronically-enhanced misfits in ‘augmented reality;’ a diorama-scale version of the city rendered before your eyes. Explore the city, develop your skills and battle law-makers and law-breakers alike to mastermind the Revolution.

  • Designed by: Coatsink Software
  • Genre: Strategy, Action, Adventure
  • Platform: Gear VR
  • Release Date: TBA
  • Price: TBA
  • Comfort: Comfortable

Term1nal

You are Flynn Lightman, a highly skilled Avatar Pilot who can control androids from the safety of his apartment using advanced VR hardware. You are contacted by a client to infiltrate STRIDE Industries, a company that specializes in data security and advanced robotics. Your journey takes you into the depths of a heavily defended, high-tech facility as you discover its darker intent.

Dual-character 3rd-person stealth gameplay and immersive 1st person puzzles designed exclusively for Gear VR.

  • Designed by: Force Field VR
  • Genre: Action Puzzler
  • Platform: Gear VR
  • Release Date: Q2 2017
  • Price: TBA
  • Comfort: TBA

The new titles add to a list of compelling upcoming content for the Oculus platform, promising to deliver ‘depth and polish’, covering genres such as RTS, RPG, stealth, puzzle and shooter. Announced via the Oculus Blog, the ‘Year of VR Gaming’ is showcased in this new montage, with more news coming tomorrow.

The post Oculus Reveals 6 New VR Titles for Gear VR & Rift at GDC 2017 appeared first on Road to VR.

GDC 2017: Landfall Team’s Next Game is Term1nal – A Stealthy Gear VR Adventure

GDC 2017: Landfall Team’s Next Game is Term1nal – A Stealthy Gear VR Adventure

I’ve always wanted to be a hacker. No, not a boring, real life hacker that has to spend hours writing competent code and squashing bugs. I want to be the kind of hacker that types fast and breaks the firewall all while wearing sunglasses and a black leather jacket. Fortunately for me, that’s the exact kind of hacker you get to play as in the newly revealed Gear VR stealth, action video game from Force Field Studios: Term1nal.

Force Field VR’s first foray into the VR scene, Landfall, has already been launched and received well by critics and fans alike. That game was a twin stick shooter that focused on strategic gunplay and quick reflexes. Term1nal for Gear VR, however, is more of a thinking man’s game.

In Term1nal, you play as Flynn Lightman, hacker extraordinaire. You are contracted by a mysterious woman to infiltrate the offices of STRIDE Industries — the world’s most successful (and well guarded) data security and robotics firm on the planet. Getting the information you need from STRIDE can only be done by taking over the controls of a temperamentally experimental new robot model. Operating her remotely, you’re able to use this robot to sneak past STRIDE security, hack terminals, unlock doors and maybe even unlock something even more important: the truth.

I had the chance to play Term1nal in its first ever public demo at GDC 2017. The games designer’s emphasized that the game was still quite early in development, but from what I saw its already shaping up to be one of the most polished and enjoyable campaigns available on a mobile VR platform.

You play Term1nal on the Gear VR using a bluetooth gamepad. Once you’ve assumed control of your new robot host, you play the game from a variety of changing perspectives. The in game reason for this is that the optics of your vessel are malfunctioning so instead you have to observe her through the office’s CCTV cameras. Walking from room to room triggers new camera angles but, for the most part they will all be from a birds eye view. Certain actions will also trigger a first person viewing mode as well.

Your main obstacles in Term1nal are STRIDE’s seemingly never ending army of robot patrols. There were at least four or five different types of guards that I saw in just my demo alone. Each of them has a limited view, represented by a red cone that you’ll need to avoid in order to make it to the next objective unscathed. Your robot doesn’t have any weapons, however, so you’ll need to use smart strategies and your enviornment to bypass the security.

Towards the end of the demo I also found the “key” I had been searching for. This key was actually an adorably eager robot dog that, once I introduced myself, became bonded to me and would follow my every command. I could use my new, synthetic K9 friend to distract guards, unlock previously inoperable doors and otherwise go wherever I ordered him to. He wasn’t given a name in the game but I like to call him Joe Jr. I love him.

There were also a variety of puzzle terminals that I needed to access and complete. Often times these logical brain-teasers had to be completed while keeping one eye on and avoiding the gaze of a lumbering robot guard. The few that I saw were creative and satisfyingly challenging and indicate that Term1nal should end up being an enjoyable game for the more intellectually minded VR gamer.

Term1nal is currently slated for a release sometime in Q2 of this year. No price has been set yet for the experience.

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