Crisis VRigade 2 essentially delivers the experience of being sucked into a 90's action movie based on the premise of being sucked into a 90's arcade game.
Gorn puts you into the leather sandals of an arena fighter who can wield various blades, hammers, and ranged weapons to dispatch your enemies.
Sitting somewhere between a platformer, a puzzle game, and a shameless Spider-Man clone, Yupitergrad is simple, swinging fun.
Whether you're familiar with Tsuro or not, you will likely find it easy to jump right in, with the simplistic controls and gameplay being quick to grasp.
Jurassic World Aftermath is the latest videogame in a number of movie tie-ins. Like the later entries in the film series itself, most have eluded critical success but are pretty popular nonetheless.
In Myst, there are locations to explore, books to read and switches and levers to pull, all opening up more of the same and revealing greater mysteries.
Warhammer 40,000: Battle Sister sees the player take on the role of Sister Ophelia, a battle-scarred veteran of the order.
It might have its feet in the real world, with grimy war-torn present-day environments and realistic weapons, but Contractors VR deliberately aims for a more immediate, Call of Duty-esque style of play.
Prison Boss VR starts off funny enough. The tutorial has you watching some black and white "movies" via projector, which will walk you through the basics of crafting contraband smokes.
Star Wars: Tales from The Galaxy's Edge offers a single-player, story-driven campaign. It sees the player take the role of a humble droid technician on a routine mission to deliver some cargo.
In Death: Unchained is the Quest iteration of one of PCVR's best-kept secrets. It's a spooky archery game that's been given a lick of paint and additional content and has shaken off its earthly cables.
Star Shaman sees you take on the role of a mystical crusader battling to defeat the "Architects of Entropy" and thwart their attempts to homogenize life into static, geometric shapes.