I was walking around downtown Provo Utah and some college kids had a VR shop, so we paid five bucks for ten minutes and put on HTC headsets connected to gaming PCs. The first demo has you go up an elevator and when the doors open you are faced with a plank that extends about three feet over the city. My wife refused to walk off of it, and I mocked her. Then it was my turn, and I screamed when the doors opened, then had to force myself to inch my way along it until I plummeted to my death and then saw white light and heard angels singing. The other demo has you flying around the city in a jetpack, putting out fires. Once this looks lifelike it's going to be amazing.
The group also wanted to go play a boardgame at the new cafe, but said there's no way that I'm selling my collection and then going to pay some strangers five bucks to play their games.
We have the PSVR and it is pretty damn cool. There is a game where you are fighting space spiders on an alien planet that was unsettling for me since I am not a fan of spiders. In Skyrim VR. you can go underwater and when you look up, but can't surface for whatever reason, I had drowning fears come to the forefront of my mind.
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I have had a HTC Vive for a year, and while it doesn't see a lot of use, it is pretty amazing when it all works out. When playing the Counter-Strike-like Onward, the first time you take your hand up to your head and "pull down" your night vision, it's a damn cool thing.
I have resisted purchasing Fallout 4 in hopes that the VR version will be good.
I'd like to have a setup where I do all of my work related tasks on the computer by walking through a high resolution VR forest, and all of my tasks are converted to a game interface that interprets those tasks and converts them into actually interesting activities. So grading papers would be transformed into getting into a sword fight with the Black Knight. Or comma splices would show up as minor threats, and when I kill a minor baddie, the AI would paste the correct comment into the paper.
If VR is really triggering fears of drowning, that’s pretty frickin incredible. It sounds like it finally is getting where it should be.
And I love the idea of these board game cafes , it’s like renting cars instead of owning. You save a ton of space and there’s no overhead inventory cost. Plus, i hate hosting people over for some reason. I’m always worried they’ll run into my pr0n DVDs
I have PSVR, and the X-Wing mission in the first Star Wars Battlefront is awesome. I'm generally disappointed in the available content, though. I just got a new PC that can handle VR, is there anything good for Oculus? I think I'm most interested in cockpit games. Something like Mechwarrior would be awesome.
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Black Barney wrote: And I love the idea of these board game cafes , it’s like renting cars instead of owning. You save a ton of space and there’s no overhead inventory cost.
I dunno man, haven’t you been reading the politics thread? If you rent a car, it will be completely covered in shit and puke. Why would board games be any different?*
*might improve some games
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I'd love, love, love to try VR games, but it's not going to happen. I can't justify the expense for something that I'd never play. With kids on the TV or the computer all the time and my attention being pulled this way and that, I have almost no opportunitues to sit and focus my attention on play for any extended period of time.
gversace wrote: I have PSVR, and the X-Wing mission in the first Star Wars Battlefront is awesome. I'm generally disappointed in the available content, though. I just got a new PC that can handle VR, is there anything good for Oculus? I think I'm most interested in cockpit games. Something like Mechwarrior would be awesome.
Have you tried the Eve space combat game? I have it, but haven't loaded it up yet. I saw that Dirt 3 should be on PSVR and I am eager to try that. I want to sit in my Sumo beanbag and drive/fly. If a WW2/WW1 combat game came to PSVR, heaven.
I tried VR once at GenCon, back in the early/mid-'90s. It was the game where you shoot pterodactyls. I could see the potential, but the actual experience was only mildly interesting.