Friday 31 December 2021

2022 VR Games: 40 Quest 2, PSVR And PC VR Titles To Look Out For

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Next year has a whole host of VR goodness to check out. Find out what to follow with our new 2022 VR Games list!

With Quest 2 out and selling well, PC VR continuing to grow and PSVR 2 on the horizon, VR has nowhere to go but up in 2022. As a result, there’s a long list of incredibly exciting games to look forward to no matter which headset you own. Here’s just 40 we’ve found to highlight, so get your calendars out.

As always, you’ll be able to find these titles on the Oculus Store, Steam and the PlayStation Store.

2022 VR Games

Among Us VR – Quest, PSVR, PC VR

What a pleasant little surprise this is. One of gaming’s biggest phenomenons is coming to VR with a full, native adaption from I Expect You To Die developer Schell Games. Whilst the core game is sure to be as fun as ever, we’re really looking forward to seeing how the tasks and player discussions are changed up in VR.


Assassin’s Creed VR – Quest

Splinter Cell VR Assassin's Creed VR Confirmed

First announced back in 2020, we’re hoping 2022 will be the year we finally see Ubisoft’s biggest franchise arrive on Quest. There’s still a lot to learn about this VR-exclusive chapter, including when and where it will be set and exactly how this new medium will change up the gameplay.


The Chewllers – Quest, PSVR, PC VR

Wave shooters may be a dime a dozen in the VR arena, but The Chewllers’ focus on four-player co-op, bright visuals and upgrade systems has us hopeful that this will be one of note. Defend your tower from hordes of cutesy enemies and wield different weapons in this promising indie effort.


Cosmonious High – Quest, PC VR

The newest game from Job Simulator developer Owlchemy Labs is a typically weird exploration of VR interactivity and character connections. You’ll be meeting a series of strange characters and solving puzzles with newly-bestowed powers in what promises to be one of the year’s most colorful adventures.


Cities VR – Quest 2 (Spring)

Fast Travel Games is bringing city-building hit, Cities: Skylines, to VR. This isn’t a direct port but an adaption with a new control scheme and scale designed for Quest 2. If it can bring the depth and complexity of the original game into headsets then it’ll be huge.


Devolver Digital’s VR Game

Devolver-Digital-logo

This one’s been teased for a little while now and Devolver is looking for testers. We don’t know anything else about the publisher’s latest VR effort but, seeing as its last game resulted in the excellence that is Gorn, we’re keen to see more.


Dyschronia: Chronos Alternate (Early 2022)

Altdeus and Tokyo Chronos developer MyDearest returns with the latest in its series of VR visual novels. Dyschronia’s name suggests we’ll be getting a new story that deviates from the series’ original timeline, but there’s still a lot to learn.


The Exorcist Legion VR: SIN

One of our all-time favorite VR horror games is getting a full sequel with co-op support. Other details aren’t known at this time, but developer Pocket Money Games is taking over from Wolf & Wood. How will the horror hold up when you’ve got a friend to help you out? We’ll find out later in the year.


Garden of the Sea – Quest, PC VR (Early 2022)

Neat Corp’s VR gardening game has been in early access for years now, but early 2022 will see the game launch in full on PC and get a full Quest port too. We’ve always loved the game’s soothing texture, but it’s time to see if there’s enough content to be worth your time.


Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas VR – Quest 2

Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas VR

Easily the biggest release on the radar for 2022 so far, San Andreas VR promises to bring the full Grand Theft Auto experience to headsets for the first time. After the shaky release of the Definitive Edition, we’re wondering how this one will turn out, but Meta’s excellent port of Resident Evil 4 VR gives us hope.


Green Hell VR – Quest, PC VR (Early 2022)

Polish studio Incuvo has slowly but steadily made a name for itself with good VR ports of good games. But its long-in-development port of this survival game looks to be easily its most ambitious yet with full motion controls. The PC VR and Quest versions are developed by different teams, but expect them both early in 2022.


Hellsweeper – Quest, PC VR

Sairento VR remains many people’s go-to action game and we’ve long wondered what developer Mixed Realms could do with a follow-up. Hellsweeper is the answer – a messy, demonic fighter with blood, guns and decapitations as far as the eye can see. Expect an early access release first.


Hitman 3 VR – PC VR (January)

Hitman 3 on PSVR was great but, with only DualShock 4’s shaky controller tracking to guide Agent 47, there was definite room for improvement. We’re hopeful that the PC VR version will be a big leap forward thanks to more stable, two-handed tracking and, hopefully, some quality of life improvements. If IO Interactive pulls it off, this will be huge.


Hubris – PSVR, PC VR

We’re always cautious of unknown studios promising big things from their debut VR projects but we’ve played Hubris for ourselves and what we’ve seen so far is actually quite promising. Immersive swimming, fun combat and gorgeous visuals mean we’re keeping an eye on this one as the year progresses.


The Last Clockwinder – Quest, PC VR (Summer)

The Last Clockwinder takes a tried-and-true concept of single-player co-op and promises to grow a wholesome experience around it. Work together with your past actions to establish an assembly line and grow fruit. The trailer above suggests this one will be an ingenious delight.


The Last Worker – Quest, PC VR

The Last Worker really stood out to us at the Venice Film Festival last summer thanks to its story-driven focus, star-studded cast including Jason Isaacs, and confident visual style. Exactly how this satiric take on mega-corps like Amazon will flourish into a full VR game remains to be seen, but it’s one of our most anticipated new 2022 VR games right now.


Little Cities – Quest, PC VR

Yes, you read that right, two city-building VR games are coming in 2022. But, while Cities VR is drawing from an established foundation, Little Cities looks to deliver a VR-first experience with UIs and levels that were designed to work intrinsically with the platform. It might be the underdog, but Little Cities still looks worth your while.


Lost Recipes – Quest

Schell Games’ other new VR project on the way is quite different to Among Us. In Lost Recipes, you’ll be traveling through time and across the globe to learn ancient cooking techniques. As the name suggests, the game has a focus on recipes that you might not know how to make, suggesting this could be a genuinely beneficial experience.


Moss Book II – PSVR (Spring)

Quill’s return is long overdue but 2022 will finally see us return to the world of Moss. Picking up right where the first game left off, Polyarc is promising a longer adventure that explores more of the connection between player and the adorable protagonist. Here’s hoping the studio can go the extra mile.


Nerf Ultimate Championship – Quest

A VR-native multiplayer shooter in which you wield virtual versions of your favorite Nerf guns? Where do we sign up? Secret Location has earned our trust with releases like Blasters of the Universe and Nerf looks like a nimble VR shooter that will have plenty of twists and turns when it releases on Quest later in 2022.


Outlier – PC VR (Q1)

Another year, another chance for Joy Way to release a lot of games. But Outlier looks to continue the developer’s trend of launching great concepts that play incredibly well. This time it’s a superpowered rogue-lite shooter set on an alien planet. If Stride and Against are anything to go by, it’ll be one to watch.


Paranormal Hunter – PC VR

Channeling other co-op games like Phasmophobia, Paranormal Hunter is a horror experience with optional VR support that will see you searching for supernatural entities and then trying not to crap yourself as you capture them. One for fright fans to keep an eye on.


Peaky Blinders: The King’s Ransom

Peaky Blinders VR 2

Dr. Who: The Edge of Time developer Maze Theory returns to VR with a long-awaited Peaky Blinders game. The experience will let you become a member of the legendary crew, but the developer has also been touting an immersive new AI system that will see characters react differently to how you behave in-game. We’re eager to see how that will play out.


Propagation: Paradise Hotel – Quest, PSVR, PC VR (Late 2022)

Propagation was a surprise hit for VR developer Wanadev, offering a polished, free single-player zombie shooter experience with premium co-op DLC. Next year will see the studio return to the franchise with a new full game. Given there aren’t actually many zombie shooters scheduled for 2022, we’ll be interested to see how this one fares.


PSVR 2 Games

We could endlessly speculate about what titles Sony might be lining up for its much-anticipated PS5 VR headset (which still doesn’t have an official name). For now, we’ll just group those games into one and point to potential releases like Gran Turismo 7 and Resident Evil 8 as well as Sony-owned developers like Firesprite working in VR. If Sony pulls it off, this will be a huge year for PSVR 2.


Requisition – PC VR

Arcadia’s home-invasion zombie survival game stands out from the pack with its promise of makeshift weaponry assembled from everyday items. With full co-op support included, Requisition could be a lot of fun with friends in 2022.


Ruinsmagus – Quest, PC VR

Mixing elements of visual novels and JRPGs, Ruinsmagus boasts gorgeous art that will surely delight fans of the genre. The game may not have passed its Kickstarter crowd-funding campaign, but an international release is still very much on the cards.


The Shore VR – PC VR

A port of the original PC game from 2021, The Shore is a Lovecraft-inspired adventure that mashes many of the creator’s most vivid works. Expect a full native VR port with a lot of work put into it that, hopefully, will only enrich the original experience.


Splinter Cell VR – Quest

Splinter Cell VR

As with Assassin’s Creed VR, we know practically nothing about this new game in the Splinter Cell series. But, given just how natural a fit the stealth genre is for the platform, there’s a real opportunity to make something genuinely groundbreaking here. This is at the top of our most anticipated list right now.


Stress Level Zero’s Project 4

Project 4 Stress Level Zero

Truth be told we were hoping we’d have seen what was next from the developers of Boneworks by now, but hopefully our patience will be rewarded in 2022. We know that Stress Level Zero is working on multiple projects. We know at least one of those projects is set in the Boneworks universe and is coming to Quest, PC VR and very likely PSVR 2 too. Any other new information eludes us right now.


Tea For God – Quest, PC VR (Late 2022)

Though it’s been in early access for years now, 2022 promises to be the year this impossible spaces-based shooter gets a full launch. The magic of physically walking around an ever-changing environment still hasn’t waned when we play the game today, and we’re looking forward to seeing more people try it for the first time.


Trial By Teng – PC VR

2021 was a quiet one for this promising puzzling adventure which has been toiling away at Charm Games. The scope of the development cycle has us hoping this will be a longer effort from the studio that gives us some really innovative puzzles. Hopefully we’ll see more later in 2022.


The Twilight Zone VR

Another oddity from VR publisher Fun Train, The Twilight Zone VR promises to pay tribute to the cult TV show with a series of unique stories designed specifically for the medium. The idea might sound unconventional, but if each ‘episode’ can capitalize on something weird and fantastic for VR, it’ll be a real hit.


Ultimechs

We’ve only seen a short teaser of the next title from Resolution Games, but it seems pretty easy to grasp. Simply put, Ultimechs looks like Rocket League… with mechs. We’re still yet to see exactly how that will work, but the rocket-powered punch in the trailer suggests another active, engaging VR sport is in the making.


Ultrawings 2 – Quest, PC VR (February)

Building on everything that worked in the first game, Ultrawings 2 promises a host of content split across its open skies. Dogfighting is joining the series for the first time, and there are new aircraft types to master too. The Quest version of the game is shaping up well, and there’s a possibility of a PSVR release too.


Vail VR – PC VR

It’s been through extensive testing but constant updates have us hopeful that Vail will still see the light of day this year. A focus on tight, team-based battles might help this one stand out in the increasingly competitive online shooter space.


Vertigo 2 – PC VR

Zulubo Productions’ sci-fi shooter series is long overdue for its full sequel, but we’re hoping 2022 will be the year we finally get to play Vertigo 2. After the success of the demo and Vertigo Remastered we’re hoping this delivers the PC VR shooter experience that’s been missing for the past year.


Wanderer – PSVR, PC VR (28 January)

This escape room-style puzzler has us interested thanks to its focus on immersive interactions, story and lush visuals across a range of different times and environments. It’s ambitious to say the least but if it all works then Wanderer will be an early win for VR in 2022.


Zenith: The Last City – Quest, PSVR, PC VR (Early 2022)

We thought for sure that Zenith was biting off more than it could chew. A full VR MMO from a new developer running across all major platforms? Surely it couldn’t be done. Well, we’ve played the beta and it looks like Ramen VR might actually pull it off. If you’re looking for a traditional MMO hook with a VR twist, Zenith might be the biggest game of the year for you. Another beta is still to come before release.


Ziggy’s Cosmic Adventures – Quest, PC VR (Fall 2022)

Ziggy is one of those crucial VR efforts that looks to focus on immersion above all else. It’s got a fully interactive cockpit that you can physically walk around in, a sprawling set of features to maintain your spaceship and motion-based flight controls. Hopefully this will be one to really lose yourself in.


And that’s our list of 2022 VR games to look out for! What are you looking forward to? Let us know in the comments below!



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Thursday 30 December 2021

Developers Share Record VR Player & Sales Numbers Across Christmas

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Several developers have indicated Christmas 2021 was a big moment for the VR industry and Meta’s Quest 2 headset.

Over the last few years, the Christmas period has become an increasingly huge milestone day of growth for virtual reality and VR developers, particularly in the post-2019 Quest era. However, this year looks to be the biggest Christmas for VR yet, with developers sharing statistics that indicate the biggest day of growth yet.

Famously, Meta does not release any sales numbers for Quest headsets themselves at Christmas or at any other point in the year. This means we’re left trying to roughly estimate how the size of the Quest install base based on various other unofficial data points. This week’s developer tweets are a good example of that.

The Oculus app, which is required for new users to set up a headset, rocketed up to #1 on the Apple App Store charts on Christmas, beating out popular and near-ubiquitous social media apps TikTok, YouTube and Instagram. If the Oculus app chart position indicates strong new headset take-up, then app sales numbers and player base growth shows that those new owners were keen to get in on VR experiences as well.

Social VR experience Rec Room (which is available for free on VR and non-VR platforms and is consistently at the top of the Oculus Store charts) saw record numbers over Christmas, with over 1 million VR players logging into the platform across a 60 hour period. This is huge growth – it was only earlier this year that Rec Room hit the same milestone (1 million VR players logging in) across an entire month. The company is currently hiring for over 60 positions.

Dennys Kuhnert, developer of Hand Physics Lab, said that Christmas Day sales of the app were “unprecedented”. He also shared an unlabelled sales graph for Hand Physics Lab, showing a huge upwards spike that looks to be roughly double the previous high point of sales on the app’s launch day.

One developer of Golf+ noted that they had to “scale up to manage the CCUs [concurrently connected users]” on Christmas Day. Another Golf+ developer noted that sales across the 2021 Christmas period surpassed 2020 significantly, with December 24 2021 fleetingly becoming the game’s “best sales day ever”, only to be immediately (and significantly) surpassed the next day on Christmas.

Online players in Eleven Table Tennis across all platforms in the Christmas period, taken from www.https://11-stats.com/online on December 28.

Twitter user @henrilatr pointed out to UploadVR Editor-in-Chief Ian Hamilton that Eleven Table Tennis experienced a large spike in online players on Christmas Day, going from peaks of roughly 800 players across the December 21-24 to new peaks of 1800+ players on Christmas Day. These new peaks have stayed roughly stable since Christmas through December 28.

Sam Watts, a developer at Make Real VR, indicated he was happy with the revenue chart for Loco Dojo Unleashed on Christmas Day, sharing an unlabelled chart with a line that spikes upwards in a similar fashion to the apps above.

Developer of popular multiplayer game Gorilla Tag indicated huge player numbers as well, citing an “absolutely bonkers” 344,000 unique users (and a peak of 26,000 concurrent users) across the Christmas weekend. It’s also worth nothing that Gorilla Tag isn’t even available on the Oculus Store for Quest 2 – it’s listed on App Lab, meaning new users on that platform would have to have found or searched for a link to the app somewhere online. Quest 2 users would not have been led to the app organically while in VR like the other apps listed above, making this a pretty significant achievement even when accounting for PC VR players, as the game is sold on Steam as well.

This is likely just a tiny snapshot of what has been one of the most profitable and huge periods of growth in VR history. Many of the apps above are available across multiple VR platforms including Quest 2, PC VR and PSVR. However, it’s clear that even if some growth is being driven by the latter two platforms, it’s Meta’s Quest 2 that is likely driving most of this insane growth. Anecdotally, more people than ever are sharing videos of new users (of all demographics but particularly younger children) unwrapping and playing with new Quest 2 headsets this Christmas.



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The 10 Best VR Games Of 2021

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You’ve seen our platform-specific lists, but now it’s time for the ultimate showdown. This is our Best VR Games 2021 list.

VR’s software line-up for the past year was interesting to say the least. The industry is still yet to attract bigger players and, as a result, bigger budgets and it definitely showed. But, with only a handful of full, AAA titles scheduled for the year, smaller, truly VR-focused developers were given the space to shine. The result is a truly varied and dynamic list.

If you want platform-specific lists, make sure to check out:

Remember that you can find these titles on Steam, the Oculus Store and the PlayStation Store.

Best VR Games 2021

10. Gorilla Tag

You cannot deny the impact Gorilla Tag has had on 2021. John Carmack himself put it best – there are more people playing this strange, unique exploration of multiplayer VR than there are some AAA efforts. Gorilla Tag caught everyone’s attention thanks to its active gameplay that essentially gave us a new way to play a real-world sport. It’s a rare example of something that can only be done in this medium, and a must-see experience.


9. After The Fall

2021 felt like just the start of the journey for After The Fall. What we got was a really enjoyable set of five levels to blast through with friends, taking down zombies across a frozen LA. It’s a great replication of the Left 4 Dead experience in VR and its cross-play support is truly groundbreaking. But, going forward, we need more. More levels, weapons, enemy types and rewards. If 2022 can deliver all of this, After The Fall will become a must-buy.


8. Lone Echo 2

Three years on from the first game’s release, Lone Echo 2 didn’t move the bar forward as much as we had hoped for VR gaming, but it certainly still measured up to the first game’s unmatched immersion and presentation. This is a hugely atmospheric adventure with a smart story and the same winning traversal mechanics that we’ve been enjoying for years in Echo VR. We definitely hope Lone Echo 2 isn’t the last we’ve seen of this series.


7. Hitman 3

Hitman makes perfect sense for VR. Each of the series’ many levels is a sprawling, open sandbox of consequences in which your every movement can set off a different chain of reactions. The VR implementation into Hitman 3 VR is a good realization of this, if somewhat held back by the limited tracking and platform performance. But you still won’t find a bigger, richer experience to throw yourself into in 2021. Bring on that PC VR release.


6. I Expect You To Die 2

It feels great to say that I Expect You To Die 2 is great. The original was one of the most thoughtful and overall best examples of how VR can change gaming when it released in 2016. Five years on, Schell Games followed up with a sequel that felt true to the first game’s core design philosophies, delivering more thoughtful puzzles and brilliantly interactive moments. I Expect You To Die 2 is a great showcase of VR gameplay.


5. Song in the Smoke

If you file down the categories, there’s a lot of ways in which Song in the Smoke is the best VR experience of the year. It’s the best single-player, VR-exclusive game that offers a familiar gaming setup with plenty of immersive elements. You’ll lose hours surviving in this harsh wilderness, crafting items and fending off beasts of different shapes and sizes. But even with the expert delivery of its gameplay mechanics, the game still has a beating heart connected to the ancient world it depicts. A real gem.


4. A Township Tale (Quest release)

While there’s still a ways to go for A Township Tale, the Quest release of this online town builder marked a hugely important milestone worthy of recognition here. You won’t find a VR game with more depth and mystery that somehow still balances a complex open world defined by realistic physics. The drip-feed progression and rewarding co-op really cement an experience worth investing in. We can’t wait to see what’s next for this one.


3. Resident Evil 4

Remember when we all said you couldn’t really port existing games to VR? Yeah, that didn’t really hold up, did it? Resident Evil 4 is an incredibly thoughtful transition to Quest that, whilst certainly a different experience, doesn’t sacrifice the original’s core thrills. In fact, a first-person perspective and realistic aiming help to enhance some areas of Leon’s adventure, making this an absolutely wonderful way to revisit an all-time classic.


2. Unplugged (Quest)

Unplugged doesn’t work perfectly. VR’s hand tracking technology still has a ways to go and it shows. But, for now, it works well enough to deliver a consistently fun experience that really shows you just how unique VR can be. This is a Guitar Hero game you won’t be throwing away a few months later, delivering an empowering, enriching experience without the need for plastic peripherals. Just make sure to grab the Quest version as the PC version’s Valve Index controller tracking doesn’t quite compare.


1. Demeo

Surprised? No, probably not. We’ve been waxing on about Demeo for the better part of a year now. We’re in love with the way it took a real-world concept — gathering around the table for game night — and brought it to VR in a way that not only replicated the in-person experience but also enhanced it. Demeo is a perfect multiplayer VR experience baked into a really, really fun strategy game, and our pick for the best VR game of 2021.


And that’s our list of the best VR games 2021! Agree with our picks? Think we missed anything? Let us know in the comments below!



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Wednesday 29 December 2021

Falconeer Dev Experimenting With Possible VR Version, Early Footage Shown

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The Falconeer developer Tomas Sala has been experimenting with possible VR support for the celebrated flight game.

For the past few days Sala has been tweeting about progress with VR implementation into the game, which first released on PC and Xbox in 2020. Traditionally, The Falconeer is played from a third-person perspective and sees players steer a falcon across oceans, engaging in combat across different campaigns.

The Falconeer VR?

In his most recent post, Sala even showed footage of the game running with VR head-tracking. It’s still played from the same perspective and, in the developer’s words, “everything is broken”, but it’s an interesting tease of what might be to come. That said, Sala hasn’t explicitly confirmed that the game will get a full VR port, so this work might not lead to a full release.

We’ll keep our fingers crossed, though. The Falconeer earned positive reviews across the board for its sweeping imagery and thrilling combat. Porting to VR would definitely take a lot of work, though, and Sala points out that moving to a first-person view would mean significantly restructuring the game’s aiming systems and comfort options. If it did happen then a PC VR version would be a likely candidate, but it’d be interesting to see Quest and PSVR versions too.

If it doesn’t work out, though, we’ll always have Falcon Age.



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The 10 Best Quest Games Of 2021

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Meta’s newest headset had a strong year, but what were its must-play games? Find out with our list of the Best Quest Games 2021!

Well it might be a bit confusing remembering how to name Quest after Facebook’s recent rebrand, but one thing is clear as day: Quest 2 is now the headset to beat. All signs point to an enormous debut year for Meta’s third standalone headset (yes, that’s right, we didn’t forget Oculus Go), and developers measured up to meet the demand for great games. Here’s our picks for the 10 best titles released on the platform this year.

As always, you can grab these games from the Quest store. Looking for more impressions? Head over to our reviews section!

Best Quest Games 2021

10. After The Fall (Quest 2 Only)

We’d have gladly waited another six months for After The Fall if it had meant launching with more than five maps, but Vertigo Games still delivered one of the most enjoyable and addictive co-op shooters of the year. The Quest version in particular is a small miracle given that it can handle cross-play with the PC VR and PSVR builds with the same number of enemies on-screen at a time. Hopefully it’s only up from here for After The Fall.


9. Blade And Sorcery: Nomad (Quest 2 Only)

Were it releasing in a more finished state, then Blade and Sorcery: Nomad would quickly catapult into the top five of our best Quest games 2021 list. But, as it stands, the game still offers just enough brutal VR combat to qualify for the top ten. The new dungeons mode really helps give the game a sense of progression, but we’ll never tire of the physics-driven arena combat. Look for more to come in 2022.


8. Larcenauts

Not everyone took to Larcenauts and that’s a bit of a shame. The game might’ve had a bit of a shaky start but we’d argue that you won’t find a deeper, more thoughtful team-based hero shooter anywhere else in VR. Larcenauts might wear its inspirations on its sleeves but the way each character type genuinely adds something new to the game is incredibly impressive. It’s still worth assembling a team for this gem.


7. Gorilla Tag

Our only App Lab entry for this year’s list, though it’s actually surprising Gorilla Tag isn’t on the full Quest store yet. It might not be a full game, but it’s proving to be even more popular than some of the platform’s most-marketed online experiences, and it seems to have struck a particular chord with younger audiences. Expect to hear a lot more about Gorilla Tag as VR continues to grow.


6. I Expect You To Die 2

Schell Games took its time bringing us a full sequel to 2016’s excellent VR escape room puzzler, but the wait was more than worth it. IEYTD hasn’t lost any of its trial and error charm in these past five years, and the sequel presents some of its most memorable puzzles yet. Hopefully we’ll hear about the possibility of more levels sometime in 2022.


5. Song in the Smoke

The Quest version of Song in the Smoke is a real triumph. Yes, some visual effects are lost in the transition, but this still feels like perhaps the least-compromised port of the year, with a gameplay experience that’s virtually identical to playing on PC or PSVR. It makes this version of the game, which offers some of the most engaging and immersive survival VR mechanics to date, the one to seek out if you have the option.


4. A Township Tale

Technically still in early access, but A Township Tale already has endless hours of content to dive into with friends. The physics-driven crafting and resource gathering offers finely-tuned mechanics, but it’s the sense of adventure as you risk diving into another layer of the game’s mines that really has us coming back for more. We can’t wait to see what 2022 has in store for one of our favorite Quest games.


3. Resident Evil 4 VR (Quest 2 Only)

We didn’t think Armature would be able to keep the spirit of Resident Evil 4 intact in the transition to VR. Boy were we wrong – this is an incredibly considerate port that accommodates a lot of play styles and, even though much of its 2D design remains, the core thrills of the classic game are alive and well. With San Andreas also due to come to Quest, Resident Evil 4 VR sets a high bar for what we should expect from future efforts, making it one of the best Quest games 2021.


2. Demeo

If Demeo were a flatscreen game (which, incidentally, it will be in 2022), it’d be a fun, if flawed tabletop dungeon crawler. But it really comes to life in VR, offering a social experience that not only matches meeting up in real life with friends but also augments the fun by letting you scale down into the board, watch attack animations and highlight points of interest to friends. There’s a lot of talk about how VR is a social medium that can change how we interact with each other, but we rarely see that in action. Demeo’s fantastic blend of tactical co-op is the perfect demonstration of where this platform is headed in the future, making one of the best Quest games 2021.


1. Unplugged

Unplugged’s hand-tracked controls aren’t perfect but, when you consider most people expected the game to be an unplayable mess, ‘not perfect is actually a surprising success. And, once you settle into the game’s feel, you’ll discover one of the most innovative and best-presented titles of the year. There are few sensations more empowering than shredding notes in this controller-less Guitar Hero VR game, and it’s got a surprisingly robust tracklist from a huge number of great artists to bolster the experience. As such, Unplugged takes the crown as our best Quest game of 2021. More, please!


And that’s our list of the best Quest games 2021! Agree with our picks? Think we missed anything? Let us know in the comments below!



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No New PC VR Games Breached Steam’s Best-Selling VR Titles For 2021

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Valve has released is annual list of the best-selling SteamVR games in 2021, but there are no truly new titles in its top category.

Every year Valve releases a list of the top-performing titles on its digital storefront based on the amount of revenue generated, not numbers of copies sold. It divides games into categories like VR or controller-based games and then splits games into Bronze, Silver, Gold and Platinum categories based on performance, without revealing actual specific sales stats. But the Platinum category, which holds the games that made the absolute most revenue of 2021, doesn’t feature a single title that originally launched in 2021.

SteamVR’s Best Of 2021 Revealed

Instead, we have a list of the usual top performers like Superhot VR, Beat Saber, Half-Life: Alyx and Blade And Sorcery. Even Valve’s own blog highlights this, pointing to Into The Radius, the STALKER-like VR shooter that got a full release in July 2020 after launching in early access in 2019, as the only new entry in the Platinum category since 2020.

Things get a bit more interesting in the Gold category, where actual new games like Cooking Simulator VR and Vertigo Games’ After The Fall join other staples like Job Simulator and Onward. Moving into Silver, Sniper Elite VR, Demeo, Legendary Tales and I Expect You To Die made their debut, whilst plenty of others like Walkabout Mini Golf, Cosmodread and Ancient Dungeon VR featured in the Bronze category.

It’s not too surprising to see a lack of new titles in the Platinum category for 2021 given that many of the year’s highest profile releases like Resident Evil 4 and Lone Echo 2 didn’t launch on Steam. Perhaps had it released earlier in the year then Vertigo Games’ After The Fall might’ve been able to climb the categories given it’s outperforming Arizona Sunshine (which, yes, was in the Platinum category). This category also doesn’t include games with optional VR support, so titles like Phasmophobia won’t show up here despite likely doing well in this context.

2022 is just around the corner, though, and there’s a lot of hopeful new releases on the PC front. We’ll be looking to see if games like Wanderer, Vertigo 2 and Cosmonious High can make their mark. In the meantime, you can check out our list of the best PC VR games for 2021 right here.



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Tuesday 28 December 2021

15 VR Games We Can’t Wait to Play in 2022

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We’re looking forward to a ton of new games in 2022, as newcomers and trusted names in VR development alike are prepping to release bigger and better VR experiences.

Here we look at our top 15 most anticipated games that are confirmed to arrive in 2022. We’ve ordered games according to their confirmed release dates, starting in January and ending with a rash of titles sporting the ever-nebulous ‘coming in 2022’ release window.

Wanderer

  • Platform: SteamVR, PSVR
  • Developer: M Theory, Oddboy
  • Release date: January 28th, 2022

Studio description: Built from the ground up for VR, Wanderer has a unique blend of escape room style puzzles, tactile hands on interactions and action arcade sequences to bring you the ultimate time travel adventure. Are you ready to walk in the footsteps of those who have gone before you?

Ultrawings 2

  • Platform: SteamVR, Quest
  • Developer: Bit Planet Games
  • Release date: February 2022

Studio description: Welcome back to Ultrawings, Pilot! Take to the skies using your virtual hands (or HOTAS and gamepad) to fly 5 unique aircraft as you complete a diverse set of engaging, hand-crafted missions across an island-themed world in this made-for-VR, aerial-themed, action-adventure game!

Green Hell VR

  • Platform: SteamVR, Quest 2
  • Developer: Incuvo
  • Release date: Q1 2022

Studio descriptionGreen Hell VR is an Open World Survival Experience set in the Amazon rainforest, based on the successful PC game Green Hell. You are left alone in the jungle with no food or equipment. To survive, you must learn real-life survival techniques, and crafting weapons can be a matter of life and death.

Zenith: The Last City

  • Platform: SteamVR, Quest 2, PSVR
  • Developer: Ramen VR
  • Release date: Early 2022

Studio description: Fight, craft, explore, and lose yourself in a massively multiplayer world built for VR. Forge alliances and friendships in guilds and parties. Join epic raids and world events, and blaze your own path. How will you use your power?

Cities VR

  • Platform: Quest 2
  • Developer: Fast Travel Games
  • Release date: Spring 2022

Studio descriptionBe the mayor in Cities: VR, the ultimate VR city-building and management simulator. Design neighborhoods, construct buildings, direct the flow of traffic – all while you handle economics, emergency services, and more. Step inside this VR adaptation of the leading city-builder, Cities: Skylines.

Moss: Book II

  • Platform: PSVR
  • Developer: Polyarc
  • Release date: Spring 2022

Studio description: Lined with dangerous terrain, challenging puzzles, and enemies twisted in fire and steel, Quill’s journey will be trying—filled with triumph and heartbreak alike—but new allies, old friends, and the very nature of the castle itself can help as she works to save the world from a great unmaking.

The Last Clockwinder

  • Platform: SteamVR, Quest 2
  • Developer: Pontoco
  • Release date: Summer 2022

Studio description: A VR game about building contraptions out of your own clones in a cozy sci-fi world.

Propagation: Paradise Hotel

  • Platform: SteamVR
  • Developer: WanadevStudio
  • Release date: Late 2022

Studio description: Live an intense VR survival horror adventure with gripping storytelling, in which you will explore dark environments, make terrifying encounters and get your adrenaline pumping. Will you find your way out of the Paradise Hotel alive?

Ziggy’s Cosmic Adventures

  • Platform: SteamVR, Quest 2
  • Developer: Stardust Collective
  • Release date: Late 2022

Studio description: ZIGGY’S COSMIC ADVENTURES is a fully immersive cockpit VR game set in a stunning universe. Fight your way through the solar system amidst intense arcade combat, navigate through treacherous space environments, and feel the rush of scrambling to manage your ship’s systems.

Coming in 2022

Vertigo 2

  • Platform: SteamVR
  • Developer: Zulubo Productions
  • Release date: 2022

Studio descriptionVertigo 2 is a single-player VR adventure. Explore the depths of the vast Quantum Reactor as you descend to finish your journey home.

Ultimechs

  • Platform: “major VR platforms”
  • Developer: Resolution Games
  • Release date: 2022

Studio description: Ultimechs is the multiplayer VR gaming experience from Resolution Games that will be coming to major VR platforms next year. As the thrill of professional athletics meets the precision of purpose-built machines, Ultimechs welcomes players into the sport of the future to compete for victory. If you don’t have the speed, precision and rocketry that it takes to defeat your opponents, you’re done for.

Cosmonious High

  • Platform: SteamVR, Quest
  • Developer: Owlchemy Labs
  • Release date: 2022

Studio descriptionWelcome to Cosmonious High, new kid! Owlchemy Labs presents an out-of-this-world VR experience with their hallmark interactivity and distinctive humor. Meet a colorful cast, adapt outrageous alien powers, and discover the source of the school’s malfunctions to save Cosmonious High from chaos.

Nerf Ultimate Championship

  • Platform: Quest 2
  • Developer: Secret Location
  • Release date: 2022

Studio description: NERF Ultimate Championship is a competitive multiplayer game that brings NERF battles into an electrifying competition only possible in virtual reality. Gear up with a wide range of new and classic blasters as you leap around fantastic arenas in intense 4v4 team matches. Soak in the sound of roaring fans and master your skills as you begin your journey to become the Ultimate NERF Champion.

Samurai Slaughter House

  • Platform: SteamVR, Quest 2, PSVR
  • Developer: Tab Games
  • Release date: 2022

Studio description: VR-only physics-based combat game. Use stealth and creativity or brute force to take on your foes in a vast physics based sandbox. Battle both humans and demons while exploring a large metroidvania-style open world. Collect items and power up your character. Explore towns and interact with NPCs.

Little Cities

  • Platform: Quest
  • Developer: nDreams
  • Release date: 2022

Studio description: Get ready to escape to the charming world of Little Cities, the cozy VR city creation game. Start with a simple road, carefully place your residential, commercial, or industrial zones and then watch the citizens move in! But keeping them happy is the only way to help your cities grow.

Release Dates TBA:


What VR game are you looking forward to? Let us know in the comments below!

The post 15 VR Games We Can’t Wait to Play in 2022 appeared first on Road to VR.



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The 10 Best PC VR Games Of 2021

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VR’s most powerful platform had another good year, but what do you need to play? Find out in the best PC VR games 2021 list.

Meta might have shifted its focus away from Rift and Valve might have turned its attention to Steam Deck, but the PC VR ecosystem still benefited by borrowing from other platform libraries, along with delivering a handful of experiences that you really could only get on PC.

Take note that, though we didn’t include early access titles in our Best VR Of 2021 awards last week, we decided to include them in this list to help highlight the full breadth of content on offer on PC VR this year.

We’re listing the best games on each VR platform all this week at UploadVR, and you can catch our list of the best PSVR games of 2021 right here, too. Remember you can find these games on SteamVR and the Oculus store, unless marked otherwise.

10. Floor Plan 2

I Expect You To Die 2 might’ve stolen the crown for the best VR puzzle game this year, but there’s still a lot of reasons to give Floor Plan 2 a chance. Whether it’s the adorably surreal Sesame Street-like characters or lightbulb-moment solutions to some of the game’s most devious problems, there’s a lot of memorable moments that could only be done in VR. This is a real treat of a puzzler.


9. Eye of the Temple

When PC VR headsets first released in 2016 there was a lot of talk about room-scale tracking and how physically walking around your environment was the most effective means of immersion. But focus on this design has long since faded given the amount of space it requires players to have. Eye of the Temple, though, recaptures some of that magic with its tomb-raiding exploits in which you step between moving stones, using a whip to solve puzzles and fight enemies. This is a great reminder of just how powerfully immersive VR can really be.


8. Sweet Surrender

Roguelites are starting to make a name for themselves in the VR space between In Death and Until You Fall, but Sweet Surrender is the first full shooter-focused entry in the genre that’s really worth a look. A finely-balanced gameplay loop, fantastic weapons and just the right amount of environment variety makes this a game that’s easy to get caught up in. We’re looking forward to future expansions in 2022.


7. Legendary Tales

Everyone wants Boneworks or Saints & Sinners with co-op support, but Legendary Tales has beaten them to the punch a bit. Granted there’s a lot to add to the early access version of this VR dungeon crawler, but even in its current form there are some genuinely great RPG mechanics and a physics-driven combat system that really helps you feel like you’re actually wielding a sword. Legendary Tales will hopefully only get bigger from here.


6. Against

Yes, we know, another VR rhythm game. And, yes, Against borrows liberally from both Beat Saber and Pistol Whip. But somewhere in between this mash-up is a little something for Against to call its own, be it the super-stylish tone or the compelling flow established by changing up weapons and gameplay styles every few seconds. Even if you’re not into rhythm games, Against is one to check out.


5. After The Fall

Considering After The Fall released on both PSVR and Quest as well it’s genuinely surprising to see just how visually rich the game is on the PC platform. It really is a AAA product for the platform that pushes the power of PC VR. And, yes, we were hoping there’d be more game to it at launch, but you’d still be hard-pressed to find a more engaging co-op experience with friends.


4. Lone Echo 2 (Oculus Exclusive)

When you look across the gamut of PC VR games released this year, very few of them are really pushing the limits of visual fidelity and technical complexity on the platform. Lone Echo 2 does both, delivering arguably the best-looking VR game to date. Granted we found its glacial campaign to be one of diminishing returns, but you still won’t find a more immersive adventure out there.


3. I Expect You To Die 2

Puzzle games are hard to get right when it comes to VR, but I Expect You To Die 2 absolutely sets a template for others to follow. With a handful of snappy, varied challenges that have you thinking outside the box across a wide variety of locations, the game is in constant search of fun, engaging activities that really sing in VR. Even if you’re not into puzzle games, I Expect You To Die expertly communicates the power of VR.


2. Song in the Smoke

Song in the Smoke is a really great survival game. It’s got the perfect blend of hunting, crafting and resource gathering on a schedule that doesn’t frustrate, and there’s also a linear structure that ensures the game isn’t just about surviving a set number of days. Then you throw in the VR elements, like aiming your bow and arrow, or crushing up petals to make potions, and you have something that feels directly connected to the platform. If you’ve been sleeping on Song in the Smoke, now’s the time to dive in.


1. Demeo

The best strategy games are always on PC, so it’s at least a little fitting that the best turn-based dungeon crawler VR has yet seen works so well on PC headsets. With full cross-play on Quest, Demeo is a stunning social VR achievement with deep, difficult gameplay that will hook you for hours on end. If you’re missing that game night feeling in the middle of the pandemic, you simply cannot afford to miss Resolution’s best game yet.


And that’s our list of the best PC VR games 2021! Agree with our picks? Think we missed anything? Let us know in the comments below!



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