There are a lot of dead ends in technology, gaming technology is no different. A device often seems amazing and innovative in theory but when that concept gets put to paper the sheer logistics of it seem impossible so it ends up a being a buggy, bulky, broken piece of junk that slinks its way back into the shadows of history. This is what many imagine the Oculus Rift would be when they first saw it. Virtual reality is still a pipe dream after all, right? Seeing as many of the previous other virtual reality device attempts failed and spiraled into obscurity. However, the Oculus Rift has something those other devices did not--Games. The Rift has a surprisingly large amount of games that have already been created or are being created for the device. Some of these games are enough to make any sort of gamer, even the most skeptical, excited about the Oculus Rift.
Morels: Homestead, a relaxing game in which you can create your own unique homestead, is available now for PC VR.
Electronic Arts has confirmed that while F1 23 will support PC VR it will not support PSVR 2 on PlayStation 5.
That's fine. GT7 would overshadow it anyway at it has open wheel and regular cars.
Should have been spending their time updating Squadrons with better resolution, frame rate, haptics, etc as there isn't a game like that on PS VR 2 yet.
But it's EA. They don't think.
A wasted opportunity, but I don't buy EA / Codemasters stuff anyway. Grid Legends just came out on Plus and I haven't touched it. Why would I when I have GT7 and PSVR2?
Here's a forgotten VR gem for you from 2019. Epic Games' action-packed Robo Recall, which is also available for Quest 2.
Although I never owned an oculus, I played the demo for this at an electronics store. Pretty impressive in an early goings of VR title.